BISS Ch Windwood's Heart to Heart
Garrett

Am/Can Ch Ruffian's Alleged  x Ch Windwood's Pride N Joy

Group Two

 



Garrett’s Story

This story is about Ch. Windwood’s Heart to Heart, Garrett to his friends. Garrett is a “once in a lifetime” dog. Thirty-five years of careful breeding and sacrifice came together in that cocky brindle and white package. He finished with several Grand Sweeps, a second place in the 12-18 month brindle male class at ABC, and two majors at the Reliant Park series of shows. I talked to Ike Liotto, who handles all my dogs, about specialing Garrett and trying for the Top 20 in 2007. Into this plan came another friend, Evalyn Martin, who grew to love Garrett as much as I do. The three of us became a team to campaign Garrett towards this goal.

He gave us so many wonderful moments: BOB at the Dallas Boxer Club under esteemed breeder judge Dr. David Abraham, back to back BOB at the Boomer Boxer Club and Boxer Club of Oklahoma, Group One in Hattiesburg, MS, and the last BOB in Monroe, LA under Beverly Capstick with his Boxer Club of Louisiana friends cheering him on. He was in the Top 20 every month until our world came crashing down in September.

His problems had started in March of 2006 with a urinary tract infection. When I took him to a vet other than my normal one, he told me that Garrett had very enlarged tonsils. I finally got to see my vet after the round of antibiotics for the tonsils and urinary tract infection, and he had no answers for the abnormally large tonsils. He just told me that boxers do not normally have this condition. It is quite common in poodles. Even though Garrett seemed well and showed in some shows that spring and summer, there was an uneasy feeling that something was not right. Then he had the infection mentioned at the end of this passage, where the joint of his left back leg was swollen. He had a fever and stayed curled in a ball. You could tell he felt really bad. See the fifth paragraph from the end.

On September 17, Ike called to say that Garrett had gotten up that morning sick and bent over in pain. He was taking him to a local vet. The night before, he was playing, ate well, and seemed fine. The local vet immediately sent Ike to LSU with Garrett, saying he might not even make the 30 minutes drive. LSU did a battery of tests, X-rays, and wanted to do an echocardiogram. He had been holtered twice with 0 VPC’s and was SAS cleared by auscultation by a Houston, TX cardiologist and by echocardiogram by Dr. Kate Meur at ABC in May. You can imagine our shock when we were told that Garrett now had a grade 4/6 murmur. It just wouldn’t compute with us that his heart had anything to do with his illness. The echocardiogram showed vegetative endocarditis, caused by an unknown infection. An abdominal ultrasound showed everything normal except a lesion on his spleen. His kidney levels were frightening. His urea nitgrogen levels were 53. Normal is 6-25. His Creatinine level was 2.8. Normal is 0.5-1.6. He was losing protein through his kidneys at an alarming rate. How could a seemingly healthy animal win one weekend and be at death’s door two weeks later? Unfortunately, the specialists at LSU had no answers. I was two and a half hours away, so his friend Karen McCrory, who takes care of him on the road, went to visit him every day. She boiled chicken to coax his appetite. He was not eating and throwing up what little he did eat. Each day he seemed to get worse. I visited on Friday, September 21st. He was so thin, his eyes were bloodshot, and edema had made his head huge and ran down his chest and forelegs. I cried all the way home.

The LSU vet and specialists did not give us any hope throughout his stay. On September 24th, his doctor called me and said that his kidney levels were worse. He also could not keep anything down and was a very sick puppy. She said there was nothing else they could do for him. Even if the found out what was causing the infection, they would not be able to save him. He was too ill and had very little kidney function. She was asked point blank, “Are you saying it would be kinder to put him out of his misery?” She said yes. I was adamant about Garrett NOT being taken straight from ICU to be put down. I also did not want him to die at LSU. That is where he had been born by C-section three and a half years before (another nightmare in itself). Karen McCrory offered to meet me at LSU, take us to her house to spend some time, go with us to her vet to put him down, and then back to LSU for necropsy and cremation. When they brought him out to us, it was shocking to see bad he looked. He was down to 47 pounds from 67 a week before. The front part of his body was full of edema. Even as thin and sick as he looked, he was so glad to see us and his tail started wagging when he saw us. When we got to Karen’s, she made a pallet on the floor for us and ran out to get him something to eat, not imagining that he would eat after what LSU had told us. Garrett and I lay on the floor on a comforter. He slept a lot. At one point he opened his eyes and saw me. A look of surprise came over his face and his tail started wagging. I will never forget that moment. He ate a hamburger patty and chicken nuggets like he was starved.

Ike came over to spend some time with his boy. We talked about the wonderful ride we had this year, cried, and said goodbye to our boy. Fifteen minutes before we had to leave for out appointment, Tina Starr called. Karen had emailed her the summary that LSU had given us. Tina begged us not to put Garrett down. It was the meds that LSU was giving him that was making him throw up and feel bad. Ike begged me to let him take him home, and he and Tina would work out a medication program with the local vet. I called my vet for advice, and he told me that a week of antibiotics was not enough to see any results. Garrett needed at least ten days to two weeks worth before giving up on him. He told me that it was not cruel to keep Garrett alive a few more days if he was not in pain. He said we could reverse the decision not to put him down, but we could not reverse euthanasia. We cancelled the appointment, and Ike took him home. The next morning the local vet took out the catheter, and the three of them put together a program of medication for him. Ike cooked chicken and rice and fish and potatoes for Garrett and stayed home from work to take care of him. He made sure that he was drinking and got his medication. Tina, Ike, and Karen became the “G Team”. A few days passed, and Garrett started eating everything in sight. Ike could not fill him up. His edema went away, and he became more energetic. After a week, he came home to me. He has been going to school with me. He has a crate in the vocational agriculture teacher’s office. We have lunch together and play around in the baseball field. He has made an amazing recovery considering how sick he was.

We took him from LSU on Tuesday, September 25th and on that Friday, the vet called and said that Garrett had tested positive for Lyme disease. The other tick diseases were negative. The Bartonella tests were still pending. The next week she called again to say he was positive for Bartonella and had an active infection. That was the cause of the endocarditis.

I frantically began to research Bartonella and found that there are 15 strains, 5 of which are in the US. Which one(s) did he have? Bartonella henselae is very easily transmitted by bites, scratches, and fleas. Bartonella vinsonii is tick transmitted and often piggybacks on other tick diseases. As it happened, I had found North Carolina University with their vector borne disease laboratory, and Garrett’s blood was there. They were the ones who had done the initial testing. How fortunate! He has a high titer level for Bartonella henselae, but the PCR test was negative. He has a high titer level for Bartonella vinsonii, and the PCR test was positive. It was explained that the titer level means he has been exposed and the PCR test shows active infection. The B. vinsonii very often causes endocarditis. At last we had someone who could give us advice and help us with further testing. It so happened that Dr.Ed Breitschwerdt was one of my vet’s professors in vet school and they had a long talk about Garrett and these diseases. Lyme, Ehrlichia canis, and Rocky Mountain Spotted Tick Fever were the ones I knew. Once I started researching, I was horrified at how many there were and how many people I knew that had dogs with these three diseases. Bartonella was a WHOLE new world. Then a rescue of Louisiana Boxer Rescue had a rescue with Babesia, another tick borne disease that I had just learned existed. I know that I have no medical background, but I swear that we have not had these problems until the hurricanes hit Louisiana. But that is just my humble opinion.

We were advised to keep Garrett on doxycycline and amoxicillin for three months. At that point, he looked absolutely wonderful except for a slight fullness through the flank area. At his first visit with my vet after he came home, his kidney levels were so much better that we were elated. My vet said that his murmur was much softer, probably a 2. His visit a month later showed that his kidney levels had gotten a little worse, so we put him on a phosphate binder. It is so hard to go backwards when you have come so far.

Of course when something like this happens, you rack your brain trying to think...how did this happen…when did this happen…could I have prevented this??? The answers to these questions are still beyond our reach. The only thing I can come up with is the possibility that this started in September of 2006. Garrett had a severe infection: high fever, stiff gait, swollen joints, no appetite, etc. I didn’t get to see my regular vet. The vet that I saw was very concerned about Garrett. She told me that it was a really bad infection and put him on Baytril. She drew blood to send to the lab. I asked her at that point to test for tick diseases, and she said that she would. When I took him back for a follow up, I asked about the tick titers from a different vet. She told me that the tick diseases had not been test for and the Baytril would skew any tests done now. I spent the rest of the year feeling that something was not right with Garrett. Tina Starr helped me test for Ehrlichia and Rocky Mountain Spotted Tick Fever at a later date but they were negative.

I could become very bitter thinking that Garrett might be okay if they had sent the blood for tick tests, but the vets all tell me that there is no Lyme disease here. They probably would not have tested for that anyway. I can’t change the past. BUT I can warn people like myself so that no dog or owner has to go through what we have these last months. If you have a gut feeling that something is wrong with your dog, don’t let them brush you off. One of the sites that I found was http://www.vintagegoldens.com/tick.htm . She has a very profound statement in her first two paragraphs. Don’t hesitate to have your vet test for tick borne diseases, even if they roll their eyes at you. It is better to be safe than sorry. These are devastating diseases and WILL KILL YOUR DOG. Also, collect your dog while they are young. You never know when something is going to happen to him as he gets older. If he doesn’t pass health tests later, you can always destroy the semen.

It is still hard to believe that this has happened to Garrett. I have waited for him all my life. Thirty five years of breeding and sacrifice came together in my beautiful, sweet boy. This has been a humbling experience. Mother Nature can pull the rug from under us any time. NO ONE ever saw a tick on him. We took the very best care of him. We all love this dog. He gave 100% to us; I’m sure many times when he didn’t feel like it. I thank God for every minute that we had with him.

The week before Thanksgiving, Garrett developed a cough. His heart murmur was worse and his lungs were filling with fluid. His kidney function became progressively worse. On Thanksgiving morning at 1:30 a.m., I let my beautiful boy go at the emergency clinic in Lake Charles. I buried him beside his great-grandmother Callie and the swing where I sit on nice days. I couldn’t help ask why. Callie lived to be 13 ½. Garrett’s grandmother is 12 ½. It just brings home that life is not always fair, and we should savor every moment we have with our loved ones, human and canine.

Garrett’s story would not be complete without thanking all the wonderful boxer friends who said prayers for him and sent encouraging messages every day. One of the friends even wanted to do a kidney transplant for Garrett. I think he would have offered his own if they would have done the surgery. Thank you is such a small thing to say to people who have been your backbone through a nightmare. Having Tina, Karen, Ike, and all our wonderful friends made such an incredible difference.

So, this is Garrett’s story. Please learn from his experience as we have. Test your dogs. Those ticks are so tiny and fall off after a blood meal. You may never see them, as it happened with us.

Please visit Garrett’s Memorial Page that Karen McCrory put together. What a great friend she is. http://www.liottoboxers.xbuild.com/#/garrettmemorial/4517748077

Below is the wonderful poem that Karen composed when she learned that Garrett was at peace. Thanks, Karen for everything.

What am I thankful for?

I’m thankful I had an owner who brought my mom to the emergency vet and stayed with her until the wee hours of the morning so that I could be born.

I’m thankful that she saw the potential in a brindle and white squirming bundle and decided she couldn’t part with me.

I’m thankful for the wonderful puppy-hood that I had running and playing with my siblings under the warm summer sun.

I’m thankful that she introduced me to my best friend who said “this dog will finish in no time”.

I’m thankful that once finished, he was so proud of me that he took me into his home so that we could become one in the show ring for the entire world to see.

I’m thankful that another friend loved me from afar and although she only got to see me show one time, she was so sure that I was that “Special One” she wanted to call me her own too.

I’m so thankful that I got to meet her and spend a whole week telling her how much I loved her.

I’m thankful to all my supporters who cheered me on and clapped really loud when the judge would point at me for that Best of Breed ribbon…because I was “really” one of the Best of the Breed.

I’m thankful that when the time came, and I needed them most of all, they were willing to sacrifice so that I would have the best care possible and I could count on them to do what was best for me.

I’m thankful they didn’t listen to LSU and I got 2 of the most glorious months to spend with my mom and once again, run and play under the warm sun.

And I’m most thankful that when it was time, my mom gave me the most precious gift you can give…….she let me go home……..

I’m thankful my name is Ch Windwood’s Heart To Heart, Garrett to my friends, and I could call Shirley and Evalyn and Ike my own.

And I’m thankful that when the time comes…..I will be standing at the end of The Rainbow Bridge to welcome all who pass through and one day will see their faces again.

CH Windwood’s Heart To Heart

March 21, 2004 – November 22, 2007

 

Show's

 

i

3/05/2005
New Iberia, LA
Judge: D. A. Gill
1 point in dogs and bitches

03/06/2005
New Iberia, LA
Judge: Mrs. Ruth H. Zimmerman
1 point in dogs and bitches

Houston Boxer Club, Inc. 3/18/2005
SWEEPSTAKES BOXERS
JUDGE: Mrs Illona J Chu
Best Puppy in Sweepstake
Grand Sweepstake Winner

Shreveport Kennel Club Inc.
4/22/2005
JUDGE: Mr Richard L Bauer
WD/BW for 1 point

D'Arbonne Kennel Club (1)
4/24/2005
JUDGE: Mr Henry L Gregory
WD/BW for 2 points
 

ABC 2005 12-18 month
Judge: Dixie McCauley

 

July 21,2005 Houston Boxer Club Sweepstakes
Judge: Miss Lew Olsen
Grand Sweepstakes Winner
 

 

July 21, 2005 Houston Boxer Club
Judge: James Reynolds
Winners Dog
3 points
 

 

July 24, 2005 Galveston County K C
Judge: Lowell Davis
Winners Dog
3 point Major
 

 

Oct 8, 2005 Greater Humble Area K C, Inc
Judge : Sam Burke
Winners Dog
1 point
 

 

Nov 12, 2005 Cypress Creek K C Of Texas, Inc
Judge: Mrs Jane E Trieber
Winners Dog
1 point
New Champion
 

 

 

 

Garrett's Pedigree

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