Six Tiny Puppies Dumped On A Deserted Road Rescued Just In Time

Six Tiny Puppies Dumped On A Deserted Road Rescued Just In Time

Last year, a rescue group called Bakersfield Strays took on a mission to save six little puppies abandoned in the middle of nowhere.

Luckily, they found them in time and the ending was a happy one.

 

Lost and Alone Searching For Help

In the middle of a country road, surrounded by vineyards and orchards in Kern County, California, six small pups wandered aimlessly, searching for help.

But there wasn’t a single human in sight.

 


Yesenia Giles, a volunteer from Bakersfield Strays, described them as “cold, wet from the rain, and incredibly scared.”

When the Friends of Abandoned Dogs group, a coalition partner of Bakersfield Strays, heard about these six puppies, they jumped into action.

The rescue team was quickly dispatched to the desolate area, hoping to find the pups before it was too late.

 

“When I saw the puppies darting down the road, my heart sank with fear,” Yesenia told The Dodo. “I was terrified that they might get hit by a car or become prey for a coyote. But I also felt an overwhelming urge to help them and give them a fighting chance.”

 

Scared and skittish after their ordeal, the puppies scattered even more when they noticed the rescuers.

The mission was challenging, lasting almost an entire day. But, eventually, the team managed to gather all six pups and bring them to safety.

 

Quickly Recovered And Adopted

Exhausted, frightened, and starving, the puppies were finally safe. One was so terrified that he couldn’t even look at his rescuers.

 

the puppies after rescue

Source: Facebook

The pups were taken to Pups Without Borders, where they were given thorough checkups, plenty of food, and lots of water.

After just a couple of days, the puppies made remarkable progress in learning to trust humans again.

 


Pups Without Borders provided a temporary home for the six puppies and managed to find each of them a loving forever family.

Their days of wandering are over, and they’re now perfectly safe.