Andrea Athie, from Ciudad Victoria, Mexico, immediately stopped her car when the vehicle in front of her hit what she thought was a dog. The motorist whose car had injured the animal kept on driving, so Athie ran out to help.
Her misidentification of the animal, at the time, had emboldened her to approach the wounded creature. Yet, finding out what the animal really was (a coyote), she explained, a feeling of compassion took over; she allowed that feeling to guide her actions and did what came naturally.
When Athie approached him, she saw an expression of fear in the animal. Yet, as she wrote, “he just stood still and let me carry him and move him without resistance.” After taking him back to her car, she and some friends drove him to the animal hospital for treatment. They named him Pancho.
“Many will say that it is just an animal that does not feel, or is going to attack you, but they feel and recognize when [you] want to help them,” she wrote. What unfolded next only confirmed that sentiment; many people online began to follow Pancho’s treatment process with interest, many expressing great concern for his well-being.
Sadly, she noted that Pancho had suffered an injury to two of his cervical vertebrae, and that made it impossible for him to move his hind legs or go to the bathroom.
She shared that at no time was Pancho ever aggressive, even as she and her friends attempted to rehabilitate him through daily exercise. And neither Athie nor her friends who helped in the rescue had any intention of keeping Pancho as a pet, as they recognized the fact that he was a wild animal.
So, after several veterinary surgeries and consultations, it became clear that Pancho’s injuries were beyond recovery, and in the end, it was decided that the most humane thing to do was put him down.
She informed those who had been following the rescue that Pancho would be cremated and the ashes kept in a biodegradable urn to be planted somewhere.
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