Posted on 05/27/2018 1:20:10 AM PDT by EinNYC
Travelers killing time at Tampa International Airports Gasparilla Bar got an unexpected show Friday when a dog gave birth to eight puppies near Gate F81.
The 2-year-old golden retriever, Eleanor Rigby, owner Diane Van Atter, and the puppies father, Golden Nugget, were waiting to board an afternoon flight home to Philadelphia when the dog went into labor.
They missed the flight, and for the next three hours created a fuzzy spectacle as crowds gathered with phones trying to capture the scene.
The puppies were delivered with assistance from Tampa Fire Rescue paramedics stationed at the airport, as well as a nurse who had to leave halfway though the delivery to catch her own flight.
Other passengers came and went, casually sipping their coffees and charging their phones as they watched puppy after puppy delivered on the carpet, airport spokeswoman Emily Nipps said.
"Ive never seen anything like this in an airport, or otherwise," she said.
Van Atter said she has mobility and pain issues, Nipps said, and the dogs were service dogs, though Eleanor Rigby was still in training.
Van Atters stepmother, Karen James, of Bradenton, was also set to fly to Philadelphia. She said they knew Eleanor Rigby was pregnant, but believed the excitement of being in the airport around so many new people may have triggered the early birth.
James was talking to the Tampa Bay Times by phone from the airport when people started cheering in the background.
"Another one just came out!," she said.
She was holding Golden Nugget on a leash.
"I have to go, the father is getting excited," she said. "Every time shes ready to deliver another one he starts jumping around."
James said the plan was to find a dolly somewhere in the airport to carry the pups and mother out. Then theyd go back to Bradenton where everyone would get some rest before figuring out how to drive to Philadelphia with a new litter.
No planes were delayed and all the puppies were successfully delivered. Seven males, and one female.
Im against the people that use them for fake reasons.
That’s exactly how I feel. People using them for fake or flimsy reasons will actually end up hurting people that need such animals for real reasons.
My daughter had 2 roommates that had `service animals. One was totally fake.
The other was for her roommate that had autism that was legit. The dog and her roommate went through 3 months of training. I don’t know what the do was trained to do to help her roommate. I do know it was very well trained as well as her roommate. My daughter could not play with that dog. The dog was always by her roommates side. It never barked or got unruly.
The other roommate with the fake service animal was the total opposite. Terrible owner with an untrained dog.
We were dog-sitting DD’s college friend’s elderly retriever. She had been at our house for about a week so she wasn’t our dog at all. She started to fuss at supper time. We went into the living room to see if she needed out — but we found DS2 in a full-blown seizure. He was crunched up in a position that was cutting off his air. We laid him out on the floor until it passed.
If that wonderful dog had not alerted us we are sure he would have died.
We already told DD if that dog ever needs a new home we will roll out the red carpet for her.
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