A Christmas Miracle: Winter’s Tale
One of the best parts about working with animals is witnessing their inspirational response to adversity. Indeed, most animals are so stoic that it can be very difficult to tell they are ailing at all. Sure, this tendency to suffer in silence may be rooted in an instinctual unwillingness to show weakness to potential predators. After all, a limping, moaning sheep is perceived as easy pickings by a hungry wolf. Nevertheless, injured or disabled animals often display remarkable endurance and adaptability which can be a model for our own behavior in the face of adversity.
This week I met a dolphin named Winter at Clearwater Marine Aquarium in Florida. You may know Winter from the 2011 film Dolphin Tale. In December 2005, Winter was merely a few months old and still dependent on her mother when she became tangled in a crab trap line. Rescued in the nick of time, Winter was rushed to Clearwater Marine Aquarium for veterinary assessment. The lacerations on her face and body would heal with time, but the blood supply to her tail had been cut off by the rope for too long. In spite of all efforts, Winter’s devitalized tail fell off.
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Dr. Kim Everson watches Winter swim effortlessly “like a fish.” Notice the lack of Winter’s tail fin . |
Countless volunteers worked around the clock in Winter’s tank supporting her weight to keep her from drowning, bottle feeding her a homemade concotion that approximated dolphin milk, treating her injuries and keeping her company. Soon Winter grew strong enough and surprised everyone by learning to “swim like a fish” by moving her tail stump from side-to-side. Over time, however, Winter’s care givers noticed her posture changing. She was developing scoliosis of the spine due to her undolphin-like swimming.
Necessity is the mother of invention. And none understand this better than veterinarians and animal caregivers. A marine biologist cannot pick up a gallon of dolphin milk at the corner grocery. Dolphin milk must be created on the spot from a sound understanding of a baby dolphin’s nutritional needs. How much fat, how much protein, which vitamins and minerals a sea mammal needs is vastly different from what a heifer calf or human baby needs.
Inventiveness is not only practiced by biologists in exotic settings of course. Take, for example, Jack,* a nearly 200-lb Bull Mastiff dog with two bad knees. Following surgery to repair one of his knees, Jack needed a lot of help getting around with steady support of his weak but massive hind-quarters. Not even the super-sized commercial sling could be coaxed up around his large thighs, so his dedicated owner invented his own sling from a tow-strap and some fleece. Now Jack is recovering comfortably and preparing for surgery in his other knee.
When Winter’s caregivers noticed her cramped posture, they too began to brainstorm. If only they could help her swim like a dolphin… Businessman and inventor Kevin Carroll heard about Winter’s problem and set to work engineering a prosthetic tail for Winter that was secure and comfortable. In the mean time, aquarium staff had to train Winter to accept the strange pressure and weight of a prosthetic tail. Once Winter was used to wearing the prosthesis, she had to relearn how to swim dolphin-style. Winter’s adaptability endured. The ingenuity and dedication of her caregivers coupled with her own animal instincts to thrive have allowed Winter, now seven, to swim like a dolphin again.
Winter’s amazing story does not end there with her overcoming her own physical obstacles. Winter now helps motivate disabled children, veterans and other amputees to remain positive and continue to heal. Winter appears to understand and connect with fellow amputees, and they certainly respond well to her.
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North American River Otter Cooper in the water is not hindered a bit by his hindlimb paralysis. Here he drags himself from his nest of blankets for a swim in his private pool. |
Clearwater Marine Aquarium is home to many other remarkable residents besides Winter. There is Panama, Winter’s tank-mate, an elderly dolphin suffering from bad teeth and deafness that prevented her from hunting. In order to survive, Panama had learned to beg for food (not all of it nutritious) from humans in the harbor. Then there is Cooper, a North American River Otter found in a citizen’s garage with spinal injuries (perhaps he was hit by a car). Although over time Cooper has regained some motion in his hind legs he cannot be released back into the wild, so he lives quite comfortably at the aquarium where he naps, eats and plays as he sees fit. You would never guess he is paralyzed as you watch him glide effortlessly through the water!
Even dogs and cats with disabilites can surprise and inspire us. You may have seen dogs with hindlimb abnormalities trotting along in their doggie wheelchairs. Trauma or disease resulting in partial paralysis can be overcome with time and ingenuity. And these dogs don’t feel self-conscious about their apparatus…just gleeful to be out on a walk! The idea of amputating a pet’s limb is horrifying initially to many pet owners, but the ease with which these amputees get around following surgery is astounding. When there is no hope for its recovery, the damaged limb is often more of a hinderance than a help and there is real relief for the pet to be rid of it. Many dogs and cats become blind or deaf as they age. They adapt incredibly well. So well it might take months for the owner to recognize a change. Then the real challenge is helping owners learn to adapt with them!
*Name changed to protect privacy.
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A sting ray allows Dr. Kim Everson to caress its fin. Dozens of friendly, curious sting rays swim in the tank. |