Tied to a guardrail, a dog named Dog
Anyone who reads this website – or its companion website, “Travels with Ace” — with any regularity knows I can’t pass up a homeless dog and homeless person duo, especially when I have my camera.
This week, I was accompanying a friend who was shopping for a car when I noticed this gentleman and his dog seeking handouts on an Interstate 40 exit ramp in Winston-Salem.
Given the alternative was dealing with a car salesman, I left Ace and my friend at the dealership, explained that I had to go take some photos and walked down the road to meet the man with a cardboard sign and his dog, tied to the guard rail.
When I asked if his dog was friendly, he said, “No, she can be a little temperamental,” which, he added, is how he wants her to be. He was fine with me taking some pictures, though.
When I asked what her name was, he said, “I just call her Dog.”
He explained that he got Dog in Wytheville, Virginia, where he “camped” — his preferred term — before he and Dog hitchhiked down to Winston-Salem.
Dog was among several dogs that were being transported from a southern shelter to a northern one, where they had a better chance of being adopted.
She wasn’t part of the original shipment, but apparently was picked up as a stray along the way, he said.
He admired her for a while and felt a connection — “She was a stray and so was I,” he said — and he asked the driver if he could have her.
They’ve been together ever since, about a year and a half now.
She’s a barker, and helps protect his sleeping bag and other belongings, he said.
Dog barked nearly the whole time I was taking her picture, and when she wasn’t barking at me, she barked at trucks that passed by.
Posted by jwoestendiek September 26th, 2012 under Muttsblog.
Tags: animals, cardboard, dog, dogs, exit ramp, guard rail, guardrail, handouts, hitchhiker, hobo, homeless, money, north carolina, panhandling, pets, photography, photos, sign, winston-salem
Comments
Comment from Sam
Time September 30, 2012 at 9:38 am
I know some people say homeless folks shouldn’t have dogs, but how can you deny someone a friend?
Sam





























































Comment from Pamela
Time September 26, 2012 at 11:33 am
I’m really surprised the person transporting the dog allowed the man in your story to have him. But it seems the two have found a “home of the heart” together if not four walls and a roof.
I wish them all the best of luck.