CityView Magazine

February 2021

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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20 Februar y 2021 G unny the Greyhound was oblivious. "He just knows he's going to get treats aerward," said Dr. Josh Barkman. So there was Gunny on Christmas Eve, all 93 pounds of him, volunteering to give a life-saving blood transfusion for one sick little shelter dog. Well, not exactly volunteering but not minding either. Again, those treats. It all started with the kind-hearted mother-daughter team of Pickett Smith and Truett Smith and a nonprofit organization called Australian Shepherds Furever. e Smiths had three pooches in their home already when they got a call about a dog that had been brought into the Cumberland County Animal Services shelter. e pup was in bad shape. "Set to be euthanized," Pickett Smith said. ey named her Ember for that little spark of hope that shone in her eyes despite her pitiful condition. Australian Shepherds Furever arranged for Ember to be transferred to Highland Animal Hospital, where Josh and his brother Japheth are second-generation veterinarians in the practice their father Dave has co-owned since 1976. It didn't take long for Josh Barkman to realize Ember was in trouble. She was malnourished and anemic from a gastrointestinal ulcer. "She was sad, depressed and mopey," he said. He told the Smiths that he thought the dog's only hope was through a blood transfusion. So he summoned for Gunny, one of his family's own dogs. e family BY KIM HAST Y PHOTOGRAPHY BY TONY WOOTEN FEATURE Dr. Josh Barkman's greyhound Gunny was able to provide a blood donation to save Ember. Happy Endings Two stories involving the same veterinary practice, both have

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