Thursday, 20 August 2015

A Student adopts stray dog that saves her from attack in Crete

Georgia Bradley spent thousands to adopt the pet and bring it home to Cornwall

Georgia Bradley spent thousands to adopt the pet and bring it home to Cornwall
Georgia Bradley with her stray dog Pepper

A British tourist who was saved by a stray dog after two men attacked her in Greece spent thousands of pounds bringing the animal back home to live with her.
Georgia Bradley, 25, was on a beach alone when she was surrounded by aggressive men who grabbed her when she rejected their advances.
But just at that moment, the small, black dog "appeared from nowhere" and started barking at the men, scaring them off.
Miss Bradley, whose boyfriend was at a nearby café at the time, said: "I decided to go for a walk along the beach, and found two Greek men who kept harassing me to go out for a drink. I kept telling them I didn't want to.
"Then one of them grabbed me on the arm and I didn't know what was going to happen. I was on my own and it was a very scary and difficult situation."
She said the dog must have noticed something was wrong and had "saved her".


     Georgia Bradley spent thousands to adopt the pet and bring it home to Cornwall

After the incident, it followed Miss Bradley back to her apartment and she said they had an instant bond.
The Plymouth University student believed the dog, whom she called Pepper, had been abandoned as she had seen it wandering around the town alone.
"Pretty much every evening we saw her around outside the bars and restaurants, trying to get the attention of the tourists," she said.
"Every time we got close to her she wouldn't let you stroke her. She was very gentle, but was too scared to let you close."
She tried to persuade a local animal shelter to take her in but was unsuccessful and eventually had to return home to Calstock, Cornwall.
Miss Bradley added: "When we left to go to the airport, we looked back and Pepper was running after the car. It was heartbreaking.
"When I got home I couldn't stop thinking about her so I took the soonest flight back out that I could, which was two weeks later."
The student was amazed to find the stray on the same beach, in the small town of Georgioupoli, Crete.
The dog was confirmed as a stray and Miss Bradley had Pepper microchipped, wormed with a rabies jab and given a pet passport. It had to spend 21 days in quarantine in boarding kennels but was eventually allowed to travel to Britain.
When Miss Bradley returned to Crete for a third time to collect Pepper, the kennel owner told her that her new pet was pregnant.
A week after arriving back in the UK, Pepper, who is believed to be a Terrier Poodle Cross, gave birth to six puppies.
Miss Bradley said: "It has been such a crazy journey. But I am over the moon. Pepper has settled in brilliantly."

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