Rescuing Rhodesian ridgebacks is a normal thing to do, apparently.
I'm not the only one.
People tweet about it and post photos.
Marci Liroff, for example, tweeted this stunning photo of her 10-year-old ridgeback:
I'm now following her: @marciliroff
That could be Na'ilah in that picture. Identical dogs. Big and sweet.
I had no idea when I picked up Na'ilah on that rainy day in the Arizona desert that she was anything but a stray.
I just saw her standing on a large flat chunk of red sandstone in the distance and thought: "What a noble looking dog--all alone out here in the desert in the rain. Whose dog is it? Why is it out here?"
And from that moment on, things just happened.
I'm not the only one.
People tweet about it and post photos.
Marci Liroff, for example, tweeted this stunning photo of her 10-year-old ridgeback:
I'm now following her: @marciliroff
That could be Na'ilah in that picture. Identical dogs. Big and sweet.
I had no idea when I picked up Na'ilah on that rainy day in the Arizona desert that she was anything but a stray.
I just saw her standing on a large flat chunk of red sandstone in the distance and thought: "What a noble looking dog--all alone out here in the desert in the rain. Whose dog is it? Why is it out here?"
And from that moment on, things just happened.
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