logo
#

Latest news with #Pflueger

Senior Rescue Dog Who 'Lived Outside For 15 years' Making Up For Lost Time
Senior Rescue Dog Who 'Lived Outside For 15 years' Making Up For Lost Time

Newsweek

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Newsweek

Senior Rescue Dog Who 'Lived Outside For 15 years' Making Up For Lost Time

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. A rescue dog who has spent almost all of her life living outdoors is finally getting to experience some much-deserved home comforts. Veronica Pflueger, a development director at Hope Animal Rescue, a non-profit in North Carolina, shared footage to her Instagram, @wethreepitties, showing the moment she found 17-year-old rescue dog Sheba enjoying a nap on her bed. It's well-earned to say the least. "Sheba was surrendered to a local county animal in May of 2023 after her previous owner unfortunately lost his housing and couldn't take her with him," Pflueger told Newsweek. "She was 15 at the time and had spent her entire life living outside prior to being surrendered. The first half of her life was spent on a chain. Then another local non-profit provided and built a metal run and enclosure for her outside so she would at least be unchained." Sheba has fully converted to becoming an inside dog who loves nothing more than napping. Sheba has fully converted to becoming an inside dog who loves nothing more than napping. wetheepitties/instagram Pflueger first met Sheba after the local shelter reached out to Hope Animal Rescue for help. "Given Sheba's age at the time she was surrendered and the condition she was in—she had skin issues, oral issues, and was heartworm positive—she was an urgent placement need for the shelter so they reached out to see if we had a foster home available," she said. Pflueger has been fostering dogs for a decade but had never taken on a senior dog before. She found herself drawn to helping Sheba though. "For whatever reason I couldn't get her out of my head and no one else or any other rescues were willing to take her so we said yes," Pflueger said. Having initially agreed to foster Sheba, within months Pflueger had decided to adopt. They recently celebrated two happy years together with Sheba, now 17, transformed from a struggling senior shelter dog to an "indoor couch queen that enjoys the finer things in life." Those finer things include frequent naps, regular snuggles with one of Pflueger's other dogs and being petted by her husband. "I think she might be in love with him," Pflueger said. Sheba also helps look after any of the new fosters that arrive in the house. Read more Most popular dog breeds with Gen Z, X, millennials and baby boomers Most popular dog breeds with Gen Z, X, millennials and baby boomers "Sheba is in retirement," Pflueger said. "She had never had a comfy dog bed before, let alone a couch or human bed to sleep on. Once we introduced her to these comfy spots, she decided that's where she was always meant to be and we'd often find her jumping up on the couch or choosing to wander down to our bedroom for an afternoon nap in our bed." Pflueger shared heartwarming footage to her @wethreepitties Instagram showing Sheba making up for lost time with a nap on his mom's bed. On the clip, which has been viewed 2 million times since being shared in February, Pflueger can be seen going over to pet her pooch companion and, for a brief moment, it looks as if Sheba is smiling. "There is honestly nothing better than seeing a dog who lived outside for 15 years sleep peacefully on a comfy, cozy bed," she said. "It may seem like an insignificant thing for lots of other dogs, but for her those moments are everything because she quite literally never had that before." Sheba might have lived much of her life as an "outdoor dog" but most experts agree there is no such thing. As Rob Halpin from Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals explained to The Dodo: "Keeping pet dogs outside consigns them to a life of loneliness and frustration. "Dogs are highly social animals whose ancestors and cousins—the wolves—live in packs. Wolves hunt together, sleep together and play together," he said. "Dogs don't have packs. They only have us. Depriving dogs of human companionship by forcing them to live outside blunts their natural desires and is its own form of animal cruelty." The thought of Sheba spending all that time outside is difficult for Pflueger to contemplate. "It honestly breaks my heart to think that she spent 15 whole years sleeping on the ground or in a plastic igloo... especially given how much she LOVES all of the comfiest spots in our home," she said. Thankfully, that's all in the past now. "When we took her in, we vowed to make sure she was comfy and cozy and in a peaceful and warm environment for the rest of her life," she said. It's a promise Pflueger has certainly delivered on.

Part II Of Edens Antique Fishing Lure Collection Reels In $863K At Morphy's May 17 Auction
Part II Of Edens Antique Fishing Lure Collection Reels In $863K At Morphy's May 17 Auction

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Part II Of Edens Antique Fishing Lure Collection Reels In $863K At Morphy's May 17 Auction

Top lot: One of very few known brown-spotted Wilcox Wigglers, Near-Excellent with clear solid-glass eyes and beautiful hardware, sold with its equally rare factory box for $39,600 DENVER, Pa., June 5, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- There wasn't a fishing pole in sight, but it was clear that guests who gathered at Morphy Auctions' gallery on May 17, 2025 were there to land the catch of the day. It was time for Part II of Wayne and Lori Edens' acclaimed collection of antique baits to cross the auction block, and no serious collector of fishing paraphernalia was going to miss it. Five months after Morphy's debut sale of selections from the Florida couple's extraordinary assemblage of lures (12/9/2024, total $900,000), interest was just as high for the follow-up offering, which rang the register at $863,000. The top lot of the day was also one of the rarest combos in the Edens collection – a brown-spotted Wilcox Wiggler graded Near-Excellent with clear solid-glass eyes. One of few of its type ever found, it came with an equally rare VG-condition paper label box from The Wiggler Mfg. Co., Elmwood, Indiana, with its extremely rare paper insert still intact inside the lid. Its hardware was noteworthy, as it appeared that it probably had never seen water. The lure claimed a winning bid of $39,600 against a pre-sale estimate of $10,000-$20,000. Another popular entry was a brown and gold Enterprise Mfg. Co. (Pflueger), Akron, Ohio, Trory Minnow. A very early model dating to 1900 or 1901, at the latest, its details included large, blemish-free glass eyes, a crudely-formed wooden tail, gold perch bars on a natural brown body with dark back, and a silver belly with fine hand-painted gill marks on either side. This lure had been discovered in a tackle box in the Canton, Ohio area and presented in Excellent Minus condition. Against an estimate of $6,000-$12,000, it proved its merit with a $23,400 selling price. A Heddon Introductory Model 155 all-brass Dowagiac Minnow, graded Excellent with solid yellow paint and black gill marks, featured perfect white iris glass eyes and three belly weights, each completely sealed. All five non-nickel-plated hooks appeared original. It came with a box that was of the correct era for the lure, a type II with thicker panels and a thumbnail notch on lid, bearing the phrase NOTICE HOW THE HOOKS ARE HUNG! Morphy's specialist who wrote the catalog description for this lure noted that "very few Heddon Minnows combine this magnitude of rarity with such beautiful condition." It sold above its high estimate for $20,900. An especially historic entry was an example of the first American wooden minnow characterizing the link between the rotary and cedar plugs of the late 1890s and the first commercially offered minnows from just after the turn of the century. The auction example was the exact bait famously found in Twin Lakes, Ohio, resident Hiram C. Rice's tackle box. The hand-shaped bait displayed natural wood grain, a dark back, slightly curving gill marks, striking copper-colored 'perch' stripes, and a golden belly. Its "File Maker" spade-shaped props were original and identical to those on a similar bait shown in an Arlan Carter reference book. In strong VG Plus condition, it changed hands for $14,100. An extraordinary 1905 Heddon Hi-Forehead 150 Minnow Combo bait, complete and correct with immaculate glass eyes and solid yellow paint with hand-painted sweeping red gills, sold with its correct wooden box for $23,400 against an estimate of $10,000-$20,000. Visit Morphy's online at Media Contact:Dan Morphy877-968-8880396284@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Morphy Auctions

Corona del Mar boys' tennis still on top in the Sunset League
Corona del Mar boys' tennis still on top in the Sunset League

Los Angeles Times

time03-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Los Angeles Times

Corona del Mar boys' tennis still on top in the Sunset League

Meet the new (Sea) Kings, same as the old (Sea) Kings. The Corona del Mar High boys' tennis team lost its top two players, Niels Hoffmann and Jack Cross, to graduation. But a deep and talented lineup has squashed any doubts this season. CdM swept in singles and beat Marina 12-6 on Wednesday afternoon at its home courts, clinching at least a share of the Sunset League title with three matches remaining. The Sea Kings had dominated the four-team Surf League in recent years, splitting the league crown with Fountain Valley in 2021 before three straight undefeated league campaigns. Now, even with the move to the larger, seven-team Sunset League, CdM is still on top. Corona del Mar (11-2, 9-0 in league) has advanced to the CIF Southern Section Open Division title match in each of the last three years, falling to rival University every time. 'The goal is always to win a league title, and then to be in the Open Division playoffs,' CdM coach Jamie Gresh said. 'That's the goal every year, and I think we are playing Open-level tennis. We have good depth in doubles, and the singles guys are playing some good tennis right now as well.' CdM junior Ivan Pflueger and freshmen Henry Dennison and Blake Fraley easily swept in singles against Marina (9-3, 4-3), as the Vikings put each of their top four players in doubles. The CdM doubles teams of Mason Nguyen and Tristan Pham, Jack Barnes and Justin Pamer, as well as Roger Geng and Brody Jao, won one set each. Pflueger, who is 6-foot-6, has had to stand tall as the top returning singles player. 'Definitely a little more pressure, because I'm kind of expected to win now,' he said. 'Niels and Jack kind of carried it at singles the last couple of years. But yeah, I just have to deal with that and get my wins, do my best.' Pflueger added that the team camaraderie is good this year, echoing his coach that winning league and making a deep playoff run remains the goal. CdM had the match wrapped up early against Marina, allowing seniors Pham and Ansel Lee to skip the third round in preparation for Wednesday night's Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce Scholarship Awards dinner. Pham and Lee are two of CdM's valedictorians this year. Senior Trevor Nguyen and junior David Pham, who won the CIF Individuals doubles title last year, swept in doubles for Marina. Vikings coach Chuck Kingman said they played together for the first time this season, getting ready for what they hope is a deep run at the Ojai Tournament later this month. Last year, Nguyen and Pham lost in a tight three-set match in the Ojai semifinals. Junior Alejandro Hill and freshman DJ Buchfeller also swept in doubles for Marina, twice coming back from 4-1 deficits. The Vikings are getting toward full strength as the season enters the stretch run. Hill, a transfer from Servite, recently became eligible to compete. Buchfeller has missed time with a shoulder injury that forced him to serve underhand on Wednesday. 'CdM just has so much depth,' Kingman said. 'Good players and depth, which is a pretty tough combination to beat.' Hill will be playing in singles at the prestigious Ojai Tournament, which starts on April 24, for the VIkings. Pflueger will be playing singles for CdM, with Geng and Jao in doubles. Corona del Mar returns to Sunset League action after spring break on April 14, when it hosts rival Newport Harbor in the Battle of the Bay match. The Sea Kings beat the Sailors 16-2 in the teams' first league meeting. Marina traveled to Newport Harbor on Thursday for another league match.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store