This past January, Goat was living in a landfill in Corum, Turkey, along with about 800 other dogs. Life is tough for the dogs at the dump — they have to search for scraps of thrown-away food, and bury themselves in the garbage to stay warm.
For the last four years, a woman named Gokce Erdogan has been visiting the dump to feed the dogs and treat their injuries, and last year, a group of American women formed Rescuers Without Borders to help Erdogan with her efforts. They also started pulling dogs from the dump to rehome them in the U.S.
“We noticed in one of the pictures that her ear was bleeding,” Crystal Carson, cofounder of Rescuers Without Borders, told The Dodo. “We were like, ‘OK. We definitely need to get her out of there and get her some vet treatment and see what’s going on.’”
After this, Goat was meant to go Patim Pet Pansiyon ve Pet Nakil, a boarding facility in Istanbul. However, the journey would take over seven hours, and the rescue team couldn’t immediately get a pet taxi to drive her there. So Goat temporarily went to a different boarding facility in Corum.
Goat spent about two weeks there before she escaped — she chewed right through the plastic coating of her enclosure’s wire frame, then bent the wire enough to wriggle past it.
To everyone’s great surprise, Goat appeared back at the dump a few days later. The boarding facility had been a half hour’s drive away, so everyone was amazed and bewildered that she’d found her way back.
“A lot of these dogs are born there,” Carson said. “It’s the only place that they know, so they must feel secure and safe.”
The team actually wondered if Goat had a secret litter of puppies, so they watched her carefully for the next few days. But they never found any puppies, and they’d later learn that Goat had been spayed as part of a local effort to sterilize and vaccinate street dogs.
They tried again — they caught Goat and took her back to the Corum boarding facility, and tried to expedite a pet taxi to Istanbul. But before the pet taxi arrived, she escaped a second time.
Eventually, Goat turned up at the landfill again, but this time, she was in terrible physical shape. So the rescue team made one last attempt to help her. When they caught her this time, they didn’t take her to the Corum boarding place, but had a pet taxi waiting to take her directly to Istanbul.
“Immediately, she took to their dog, Deuce,” Carson said. “She started flourishing and coming out of her shell.”
The Zanes ended up falling in love with Goat, and realized they didn’t want to let her go.
“They ended up messaging me and saying that they’d love to give her a forever home,” Carson said.
With the Zanes, Goat has transformed into a happy, confident dog.
“She’s definitely more outgoing,” Carson said. “She plays with toys. She loves going on walks. She’s great on a leash. She loves Lanie, her new mom, and she follows Lanie wherever she goes.”
“It’s because of them that she’s flourished into who she is right now,” Carson added. “She has a chance to be a normal dog, and to go on walks and have toys and a comfy bed, and she seems to be absolutely loving every moment of it.”