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    Vet in a Spin

    Page 7
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      "Yes."

      "Well, will you tell me please?"

      "It's myxoedema."

      "Myx . . . ?"

      "Wait a minute," I said.

      "I'll just make absolutely sure." I reached for my stethoscope and put

      it on the dog's chest. And the bradycardia was there as I expected,

      the slow, slow heartbeat of hypothyriodism.

      "Yes, that's it. Not a shadow of a doubt about it."

      "What did you call it?"

      "Myxoedema. It's a thyroid deficiency there's a gland in his neck

      which isn't doing its job properly."

      "And that makes 'is hair fall out?"

      "Oh yes. And it also causes this typical scaliness and wrinkling of

      the skin."

      "Aye, but he's half asleep all t'time. How about that?"

      "Another classical symptom. Dogs with this condition become very

      lethargic - lose all their energy."

      She reached out and touched the dog's skin, bare and leathery where

      once the coat had through in bushy glory.

      "And can you cure it?"

      / ~ ~ "Now Mr Herriot, don't take this the wrong way, but could you be

      mistaken Are ye positive it's this myxi-whatever-it-is?"

      "Of course I am. It's a straightforward case."

      .

      .........~ . ~ ~ . - ~ ... _ . _ ~, "Straightforward to you, maybe."

      She flushed and appeared to be grinding h' teeth.

      "But not straightforward to that clever husband o' mine The great

      lubber When ah think what he's put me good dog through ah could kill

      'im."

      "Well, I suppose he thought he was acting for the best, Mrs Pilling."

      "Ah don't care what he thought, he's made this poor dog suffer, the big

      fool.

      Wait till ah get hold of 'im."

      I gave her a supply of tablets.

      "These are thyroid extract, and I want you to give him one night and

      morning" I also handed her a bottle of potassium iodide which I had

      found helpful in these cases. : She looked at me doubtfully.

      "But surely he'll want sum mat rubbed on 'is skin."

      "No," I replied.

      "Applications to the skin do no good at all."

      "Then you mean." She turned a dark purple colour and began snorting

      again.

      "You mean all them bottles o' filthy stuff me husband put on 'im were a

      waste o'time?"

      "Afraid so."

      "Oh Ah'll murder 'im!" she burst out.

      "Mucky, oily rubbish, it was. And that fancy feller in Braw ton sent

      some 'orrible lotion yeller it was, and stank the place out. Ruined me

      carpets and good chair covers an' all!" ~;~ Sulphur, whale oil and

      creosote, I thought. Splendid old fashioned ingredients.

      but quite useless in this case and definitely antisocial. - .

      Mrs Pilling heaved the keeshound to the floor and strode along the

      passagewaY head down, powerful shoulders hunched. I could hear her

      muttering to herself as she went.

      "By yaw, just wait till ah get home. Ah'll sort 'im, by gaw ah

      will!"

      I was naturally interested in the progress of my patient, and when I

      failed to see him around for the next fortnight I could only conclude

      that Seth Pilling' was keeping out of my way. Indeed there was one

      occasion when I thought I saw him and the dog disappearing down an

      alley, but I couldn't be sure.

      When I did see them both it was by accident. I was driving round the

      come' into the market place and I came upon a man and dog coming away

      from one of the stalls on the cobbles.

      And as I peered through the window I caught my breath. Even in that

      short~ space of time the animal's skin was covered with a healthy down

      of new hair.

      and he was stepping out with something very like his old vitality.

      His master swung round as I slowed down. He gave me a single hunted

      look then tugged on the lead and scuttled away. :~ I could only

      imagine the turmoil in his mind, the conflict of emotions. No?

      doubt he wanted to see his dog recover, but not this way. And as it

      turned out; the dice were loaded against the poor man because this was

      an unbelievably' rapid recovery. I have seen some spectacular cures in

      myxoedema, but none dramatic as that keeshound.

      Mr Pilling's sufferings were communicated to me in various ways. For

      instance I heard he had changed his pub and now went to the Red Bear of

      evening. In a little place like Darrow by, news fairly crackles around

      and I had a good idea that the farm men in the Crown and Anchor would

      have had a bit of quiet Yorkshire sport with the expert.

      But his main martyrdom was at home. It was about six weeks after I ha

      finished treating the dog that Mrs Pilling brought him to the

      surgery.

      ~,i c~ .,. ~ ~.,.

      , 4, As before, she lifted him easily on to the table and looked at me

      her face as bit grim and unsmiling. ' 'mr Herriot," she said.

      "Ah've just come to say thank ye, and ah thought you'd be interested to

      see me dog now."

      "I am indeed, Mrs Pilling. It's nice of you to come." I gazed

      wonderingly at the thick coat, bushy, shining and new, and at the

      sparkling eyes and alert expression

      "I think you can say he's about back to normal."

      She nodded.

      "That's what I thought and ah'm grateful to ye for what you've done."

      I walked with her to the front door and as she led her dog onto the

      street she turned her tough little face to me again. As the stern eyes

      met mine she looked very menacing "There's one thing," she said.

      "Ah'll never forgive that man o' mine for what he did to me dog. By

      gum, I've given 'im some stick, the great goof! He'll never hear the

      last of it from me."

      As she made off down the street, the little animal trotting briskly by

      her side I brimmed with pleasant emotions. It is al ways warming to

      see a case recover so well, but in this instance there was an

      additional bonus.

      For a long time little Mrs Pilling was going to give her husband pure

      hell.

      Chapter Six "Today," said FO Wood ham,

      "We're going to try a few new things. Spinning, side-slipping and how

      to come out of a stall." His voice was gentle, and before he pulled on

      his helmet he turned his dark, fine-featured face towards me and

      smiled. Walking over the grass I thought what a likeable chap he was.

      I could have made a friend of him.

      But he was al ways like that on the ground. He was altogether

      different in the air.

      Yet I could never understand it. Flying was no trouble at all, and as

      we spun and dropped and soared about the summer sky his instructions

      appeared simple and easy to carry out. But the rot, as al ways, began

      to set in very soon.

      "Didn't I tell you opposite rudder and stick to sideslip?" he bawled

      over the intercom.

      "Yes, sir," was all I replied, instead of the more appropriate,

      "That's just what I'm doing, you stupid bugger!" which I might have

      used in civil life.

      The goggled eyes bulged in the mirror.

      "Well why the bloody hell aren't you doing it?" His voice rose to a

      wild shriek.

      "Sorry, sir."

      "Well take her up. We'll try aga
    in. And for God's sake keep your wits

      about you!"

      It was the same with the spins and stalls. I hadn't the slightest

      difficulty in pulling out of them but at times I thought my instructor

      was going out of his mind.

      Berserk cries rang in my ears.

      "Full opposite rudder and centralise the stick!

      Centralise it! Can't you hear me? Oh God, God!"

      And of course the panic gradually crept in and I began to crack. One

      moment //X V~l 2n an

      , " I

      I could see a railway station in front of me whirling around in crazy

      circles .

      then there was nothing but the empty heavens and within seconds fields

      and , trees would start to rush at me. Everything kept changing

      bewilderingly except the enraged eyes in the mirror and the exasperated

      yells.

      "Centralise it, you bloody fool! Keep your eye on that cloud! Watch

      your artificial horizon! Don't you know what the altimeter's for? I

      told you to keep at 1,000 feet but it's like talking to a bloody

      wall!"

      After a while a kind of numbness took over and the words rang

      meaninglessly in my head, one sentence seeming to contradict another.

      Desperately I tried to, sort out the volleys of advice, but the whole

      thing began to slip from my grasp; I had felt like this somewhere

      before. There was a familiar ring about the jumble in my brain. Then

      it came back to me. It was like being back at the.

      it~Birtwhistles.

      The trouble with the Birtwhistles was that they all spoke at once. ~

      Birtwhistle invariably discussed his livestock, his wife concentrated

      on family.

      matters and Len, their massive eighteen-year-old son, talked of nothing

      but ' !, t b a I I . , " ~ . ~, . . . ~ . . A ~ ~ A ~1 ~ _. ~ A A ~

      I was examining Nellie, the pig wnltc ~ow rilal al waya at~Uu ~ - alic

      IrD doorway in the grey stone byre. She had been lame for over a week

      and I didn't' like the look of her.

      "Lift her foot, will you, Len," I said. It was wonderful to have a

      muscular giant to hoist the hind limb instead of going through the

      tedious business of hauling it-up with a rope over a beam.

      With the cloven hoof cradled in the great hands I could see that my

      fears we g realised. The space between the cleats was clear but there

      was a significant; swelling around the inter phalangeal joint. ~ I

      looked up from my stoop ing position.

      "Can you see that, Mr Birtwhistle?i The infection is spreading

      upwards."

      "Aye . . . aye . . ." The farmer thrust a finger against the

      tumefied area and; Nellie flinched.

      "It's goin' up her leg on that side right enough. Ah thought it was

      nowt but a bit o' foul and I've been put tin' . . ."

      "By gaw," Len interjected.

      "The lads 'ad a good win against Heller by q.

      Saturday. Johnnie Nudd got another couple o' goals and . . ." ;~

      '... put tin' that caustic lotion between 'er cleats." Mr Birtwhistle

      didn't appear to have heard his son but it was al ways like that.

      "Done it regular night and morning'. And ah'll tell ye the best way to

      do it. Get a hen feather a~ '. . . ah wouldn't be surprised if'e

      scores a few more this Saturday," continu" Len unheedingly.

      "He's a right bobby dazzler when 'e . . ." .; '. . . ye jU' ~ it in

      "'lotion and push the feather in between "'cleats. It wor~ like a . }

      ~ : :~: ~, on 'is right foot. He just whacks 'em in . . ."

      "Wait a minute. You must realise this cow hasn't got foul <, arthritis

      in this little joint just at the coronet here. I clod ';~; ~A 'words

      but she has pus matter right inside the bloody thing."

      ' - o ~c ~owly.

      "Sort of a abscess, you mean?

      Well, maybe) i'- ~ ~C; vou let "'matter out it would . . ."

      instancco, ~o ~ ; \t on Len.

      "Ah'll tell ye, Johnnie could get a t~ evening. In ; ~'t~ ~s and then

      . ' a good idea that . ~ . ~ok at a person when they are talking to

      ydi~ of quiet Yorkshire sP -. %~> ~oth talking at once, especially

      when o d But his main martyro~ , ~tanding behind you. 4 finished

      treating the dog that ~ put her foot down now." I straight~

      ~ G- `16 U Q~61`

      /~7 up and directed my gaze somewhere between them.

      "The trouble with this condition is that you can't just stick a knife

      into it and relieve it. Very often the smooth surfaces of the joint

      are eaten away and it's terribly painful."

      Nellie would agree with me. It was the outside cleat which was

      affected and she was stan ding with her leg splayed sideways in an

      attempt to take the weight on the healthy inner digit.

      The farmer asked the inevitable question.

      "Well, what are we goin' to do?"

      I had an uncomfortable conviction that it wasn't going to make much

      difference what we did, but I had to make an effort.

      We'll give her a course of sulphanilamide powders and I also want you

      to put a poultice on that foot three times daily."

      "Poultice?" The farmer brightened.

      "Ah've been coin' that. Ah've been . . ."

      "If Darlington signed Johnnie Nudd I reckon . . ."

      "Hold on, Len," I said.

      "What poultice have you been using, Mr Birtwhistle?"

      "Cow shit," the farmer replied confidently.

      "Ye can't beat a good cow shit poultice to bring t'bad out. Ah've used

      it for them bad cases o' . . ."

      '. . . ah'd have to go through to Darlington now and then instead of

      watch in' the Kestrels," Len broke in.

      "Ah'd have to see how Johnnie was get tin' on wit hem professionals

      because . . ."

      I managed a twisted smile. I like football myself and I found it

      touching that Len ignored the great panorama of league football to

      concentrate on a village team who played in front of about twenty

      spectators.

      "Yes, yes, Len, I quite understand how you feel." Then I turned to his

      father.

      "I was thinking of a rather different type of poultice, Mr

      Birtwhistle."

      The farmer's face lengthened and the corners of his mouth drooped.

      "Well, ah've never found owt better than cow shit and ah've been among

      stock all my life."

      I clenched my teeth. This earthy medicament was highly regarded among

      the Dales farmers of the thirties and the damnable thing was that it

      often achieved its objective. There was no doubt that a sackful of

      bovine faeces applied to an inflamed area set up a tremendous heat and

      counter-irritation. In those days I had to go along with many of the

      ancient cures and keep my tongue between my teeth but I had never

      prescribed cow shit and I wasn't going to start now.

      "Maybe so," I said firmly,

      "But what I was thinking of was kaolin. You could call down at the

      surgery for some. You just heat the tin in a pan of hot water and

      apply the poultice to the foot. It keeps its heat for several

      hours."

      Mr Birtwhistle showed no great enthusiasm so I tried again.

      "Or you could use bran. I see you've got a sack over there."

      He cheered up a little.

      "Aye . . . that's right."

      "Okay,
    put on some hot bran three times a day and give her the powders

      and I'll see her again in a few days." I knew the farmer would do as I

      said, because he was a conscientious stockman, but I had seen cases

      like this before and I wasn't happy. No thing seems to pull a good cow

      down quicker than a painful foot. Big fat animals could be reduced to

      skeletons within weeks because of the agony of septic arthritis. I

      could only hope.

      "Very good, Mr Herriot," Mr Birtwhistle said.

      "And now come into the house.

      I'missus has a cup o' tea ready for you."

      I seldom refuse such an invitation but as I entered the kitchen I knew

      this was where the going got really tough.

      "Now then, Mr Herriot," the farmer's wife said, beaming as she handed

      me a steaming mug.

      "I was talkie' to your good lady in the market place yesterday, and she

      said . . ."

      "And ye think them powders o' yours might do the trick?" Her husband

      looked ~.

      at me seriously.

      "I 'ope so, because Nellie's a right good milker. Ah reckon last.

      Lactation she gave . . ."

      "Kestrels is drawn agin Dibham in t"Hulton cup." Len chimed in.

      "It'll be.

      some game. Last time . . ."

      Mrs Birtwhistle continued without drawing breath. '... you were

      nicely.

      settled in at top of Skeldale House. It must be right pleasant up

      there with the lovely view and . . ."

      '. . . five gallons when she fust calved and she kept it up for . .

      ."

      '. . . they nearly kicked us off "'pitch, but by gaw ah'll tell ye,

      we'll . .

      ." : '. . . you can see right over Darrow by. But it wouldn't do for a

      fat body like me. I was say in' to your missus that you 'ave to be

      young and slim to live up there. All them stairs and . . ."

      I took a long draught from my cup. It gave me a chance to focus my

      eyes and attention on just one thing as the conversation crackled

      unceasingly around me.

      I invariably found it wearing trying to listen to all three

      Birtwhistles in full cry and of course it was impossible to look at

      them all simultaneously and adjust my expression to their different

      remarks.

      The thing that amazed me was that none of them ever became angry at the

      others butting in. Nobody ever said,

      "I'm speaking do you mind?" or

      "Don't interrupt!" or

      "For Pete's sake, shut up!" They lived together in perfect harmony

      with all of them talking at once and none paying the slightest heed to

      what the other was saying

      When I saw the cow during the following week she was worse. Mr

      Birtwhistle had followed my instructions faithfully but Nellie could

      scarcely hobble as }~ brought her in from the field.

      Len was there to lift the foot and I gloomily surveyed the increased

      swelling; It ran right round the coronet from the heel to the

      interdigital cleft in front, and the slightest touch from my finger

      caused the big cow to jerk her leg in pain.

      I didn't say much, because I knew what was in store for Nellie and I

      knew too, that Mr Birtwhistle wasn't going to like it when I told

      him.

      When I visited again at the end of the week I had only to look at the

      farmer) face to realise that every thing had turned out as I feared.

      For once he was on his own and he led me silently into the byre.

      Nellie was on three legs now, not daring even to bring the infected

      foot into momentary contact with the cobbled flooring. and worse, she

      was in an advanced} state of emaciation, the sleek healthy animal of

      two weeks ago reduced to little more than bone and hide.

     


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