Dog Who Survived Being Thrown Out of Truck Finds Forever Home

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A poor pooch who miraculously survived being thrown from a truck at 50 miles per hour has finally found happiness and learned to wag her tail again.

Freya the terrier has found a loving family after her brutal abandonment in January, when she was thrown out of a moving vehicle and left by the side of the road by her owner.

Passers-by who saw the incident take place in Yalding, England, rushed Freya to a nearby vet, who reported the incident to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA). The 18-month-old dog was found to be frightened, underweight, and suffering from fleas. She was lucky to be alive.

The number of animals being dumped is on the rise nationally in the U.K., with a 17 percent increase from 2020 to 2021 and a 24 percent increase this year, the RSPCA said.

After being treated by vets, Gill and her husband Ray from Maidstone—who asked for their last name to remain anonymous—welcomed Freya with open arms. Gill said: "Freya is really happy here and is always wagging her tail."

Freya
Freya the dog in an undated photo. The terrier was thrown out of a moving vehicle and left by the side of the road by her previous owner. SWNS/ Zenger/RSPCA

Inspector Kirsten Ormerod, who launched an investigation into the incident, said the canine was lucky to survive being thrown from the truck.

She added: "Witnesses described her being thrown with such force that she landed on the opposite side of the road, and the vehicle didn't stop or even slow down. Freya is incredibly lucky to survive after being hurled from the moving vehicle at such a high speed, and vets were incredibly concerned that she may have suffered internal bleeding so performed surgery immediately."

After surgery, the rescuers were amazed to find the sandy-colored terrier was not seriously hurt. Gill was heartbroken when she heard the dog's sad tale and instantly looked into rescuing Freya.

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Freya the dog in an undated photo. The terrier has found a loving family in Maidstone, England, after her brutal abandonment in January. SWNS/ Zenger/RSPCA

She said: "I lost my Jack Russell terrier in April and we'd been thinking about getting another dog. I was so sad to hear about what had happened to Freya and thought we could give her a wonderful home but assumed she'd be snapped up. When my daughter sent me her profile on the RSPCA website I fell in love with her straight away—but I didn't realize that she was the same dog until I read her story in the Downs Mail and recognized her!"

Gill added: "She can be a bit naughty and play bites a lot but we love her just the way she is. We have a trainer coming to help us as she is very scared around men and finds it difficult to meet other dogs. But she's been through so much that we know it'll take her some time to understand that she's safe now."

The 18-month-old Freya is just one of many cases the RSPCA has dealt with over the last year. In 2021 alone, the charity received 1,081,018 calls to its cruelty line. And 38,087 of these were about abandoned dogs, this being more than 100 vulnerable animals each day.

Freya
Freya the dog in an undated photo. The 18-month-old dog was found to be frightened, underweight and suffering from fleas. RSPCA/SWNS/ Zenger

In that same year, RSPCA figures show that 92,244 dogs were reported as being victims of cruelty—a staggering 253 a day and more than ten an hour. This marks a huge 16 percent increase since 2020, the RSPCA said.

The charity receives around 90,000 calls to its cruelty line each month and investigates 6,000 reports of deliberate animal cruelty. Yet this summer, the number of calls has risen to 134,000 a month, with reports of cruelty soaring to 7,000 monthly.

A total of 38,087 abandonment reports were made to the charity's cruelty line last year—an average of over 3,000 reports a month, 104 a day, or four abandoned animals every hour.

Produced in association with SWNS.

This story was provided to Newsweek by Zenger News.

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