Homicidalheathen Posted January 22, 2009 Posted January 22, 2009 Fetch goes wrong: 18-inch dog swallows 16-inch stick LONDON (AFP) — In a feat that put human sword swallowers to shame, a British dog managed to gulp down a stick only two inches shorter than its own body, and escape unscathed, a report said Thursday. Millie, a two-year-old Staffordshire bull terrier, swallowed the stick by accident while on a walk with her owner, John Hurst, in fields behind his home in Portsmouth, southern England, the Daily Mail newspaper said. Hurst threw the 16-inch stick for Millie to retrieve, but it stuck in the ground like a javelin and the sprinting dog managed to effectively impale herself on it, swallowing it whole. Fearing the worst, Hurst rushed his pet to a vet, where micro-cameras found the stick had somehow worked its ways down Millie's throat and deep into her stomach without hitting any vital organs on the way. After a two-hour operation, the only injury to Millie was a small scratch inside her stomach, the report said. Dogs receiving treatment for swallowed sticks was common, vet Matthew Tyler told the newspaper. "But for a dog to get a stick stuck this far down is unheard of," he added http://www.usatoday.com/news/offbeat/2005-03-10-fetch_x.htm http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_kmaf...03/ai_n13272022
TomCat Posted January 22, 2009 Posted January 22, 2009 Fetch goes wrong: 18-inch dog swallows 16-inch stickLONDON (AFP) — In a feat that put human sword swallowers to shame, a British dog managed to gulp down a stick only two inches shorter than its own body, and escape unscathed, a report said Thursday. Millie, a two-year-old Staffordshire bull terrier, swallowed the stick by accident while on a walk with her owner, John Hurst, in fields behind his home in Portsmouth, southern England, the Daily Mail newspaper said. Hurst threw the 16-inch stick for Millie to retrieve, but it stuck in the ground like a javelin and the sprinting dog managed to effectively impale herself on it, swallowing it whole. Fearing the worst, Hurst rushed his pet to a vet, where micro-cameras found the stick had somehow worked its ways down Millie's throat and deep into her stomach without hitting any vital organs on the way. After a two-hour operation, the only injury to Millie was a small scratch inside her stomach, the report said. Dogs receiving treatment for swallowed sticks was common, vet Matthew Tyler told the newspaper. "But for a dog to get a stick stuck this far down is unheard of," he added http://www.usatoday.com/news/offbeat/2005-03-10-fetch_x.htm http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_kmaf...03/ai_n13272022 this brings a whole new meaniing to "Deep Throating!"
Homicidalheathen Posted January 22, 2009 Author Posted January 22, 2009 gawd dont give anyone ideas lol
Rev.Reverence Posted January 22, 2009 Posted January 22, 2009 ...ow...OW...WOW! No...really...weird man..really...weird.
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