Day three. Or maybe it is day 2.2-7? It’s a blur. Truly. Too
many airports and too many people.
I’m going to do my best to sit down every night and record
the day’s events. Many days start with overly ambitious plans that are quickly
thwarted by mucky, meddling bureaucrats and their tedious paperwork bound
permission slips. The weather seems to waiver between wet and cold and windy
and cold. Layers are important, but, running water and washing needs are absent.
Dirt is everywhere. Veterinary work comes with dirt, feces, urine and disease. Hoses,
showers, and washers are the waterways and weapons of our disease prevention. It
is not a luxury we are able to afford here.
This place, Ukraine, is a rainbow of colors, feelings, new
experiences, new and vastly peculiar people, and a far-away place that actually
fits the gilded Reese’s kiss-topped churches. Huge ornate, church-like facades
perch at front gates of simple small one-story homes as proclamations of religious
devotional deities met by small portly women walking down narrowly beaten dirt
sidewalks in long dirty dresses, blackened knee-high wellies and brightly
kerchiefed heads. The land is a stream of verdant ribbons. Manicured farmland,
and fruit trees blooming tiny pink flowers from their writhing skeletal outreached
branches. There are no mechanical sounds. No lawn mowers, weed whackers, or
small engine of any sort. It is a peaceful, humble, simple and quiet place,
save for the speeding daredevil cars racing haphazardly without regard to the
suggested passing center lines.
The compound that I am staying at is about 6 hours inside
Ukraine from Romania. It, the compound, is about as charming as the name
implies. The entry is a large industrial era door, painted steel grey, with a
poorly welded handle and in need of considerable greasing. The effort required to
open it insures its bomb proof. The room it opens into houses 7 dogs, all unneutered
and all unhappy to be caged near to each other. The veterinarian in me is
having a terribly difficult time managing the messiness. The clutter from
having donations of all shapes, sizes, and species coming to and fro. The animals
in cages as if suspended at the border or airport. Sort of in transit and sort
of hopeful there is a destination ahead that might add permanence. It is that
way within chaos. The chaos of being prepared to flee. Grab and go is made
inherently more challenging with pets and their varying ailments, invalidities
and apprehensions.
The first room is first filled with audible requests from
the dogs. They all have human attentions to demand and they don’t take no for
an answer. They bark until they aren’t heard. The second feature of note is the
darkness, this is a warehouse. Converted to be a home for dogs, cats, people. The
people range from the crew of women who care for the pets. They name them, walk
them, clean and feed them. They also cuddle many of them in the undefined hours
between interacting with the outside world, and the rest of the days tasks. There
is no clock here. There is no sign of time having fluidity. There is no start,
stop or circadian rhythm.
The second room is storage. It’s a cluttered mass of boxes
and bottles. A make shift pharmacy for all. I'm sure that we could treat or cure
anything, but, I’m not sure we could find it.
A large, heavy tarp is strung up to provide a barrier for
human living spaces and dogs. Before traversing into the displaced Winnebago
kitchen and the living room of pallets and towels, there is a pop-up tent for a
bathroom. Women’s facilities are a bucket. I may have foul smelling armpits,
hair and body odor, but, I will have massively muscular thighs.
Meals, well, this leaves much to be figured out. I’ve been
here for 3 days and had one meal. A random snack bar and as much tea as I can
find hot water for.
P.S. I will add photos as I can. We take great care in
maintaining security and not disclosing anything that might bring Russians
knocking. I will share photos and videos from the groups we are working with to
add color to the stories.
Be well, love your pets, krista
here is part of the rescue efforts from yesterday; day 1, the bear and the wolf
Elza the wolf |
Bolik the bear |
Be well and our best to you and your human and animal companions!
ReplyDeleteThank you for having the strength to immerse yourself in the horror this war has brought to the poor unfortunate animals. It takes a special person.
ReplyDeleteThank you, from the bottom of my heart.
ReplyDelete