Daisy’s Rescue Story

Because of supporters like you, dogs like Daisy are given a second chance.

Daisy’s Arrival at Jai Dog Rescue

Just before Christmas, an eight-week-old puppy arrived at Jai Dog Rescue in pain.

She was found by locals who had attempted to treat her with an antibiotic spray. However, on such a young and fragile body, it appears to have caused severe chemical burns, adding to already existing wounds that were suspected to be from hot water.

By the time she reached the team, her skin was raw and inflamed, and she was exhausted from discomfort. We named her Daisy.

First Days of Care

Cases like this change the pace of everything. The first priority is simply relief – easing pain, preventing infection, and stabilising a body that has already been through too much.

Daisy’s early days were quiet and repetitive in that way: careful cleaning of wounds, medication given at set intervals, and constant monitoring to make sure her condition didn’t worsen.

There is rarely anything dramatic in those first stages. Just time, attention, and small signs of improvement that only become meaningful when you’ve seen the starting point.

Complications and Long Recovery Ahead

As Daisy began to stabilise, other issues became visible.

Scar tissue had formed as her skin healed, including around one of her ears, which would later require surgical correction.

She had also arrived severely undernourished, and as she grew, the effects of that early neglect showed in the way her front legs developed.

Her recovery would take months, not weeks – the kind of progress that cannot be rushed.

Small Signs of Change

But slowly, things changed.

She began to eat with more confidence.

She rested more easily.

She started to respond to familiar voices, then to seek them out.

She started to play. And learned to be a dog again.

None of it happened all at once, but together these small changes marked the shift from survival to recovery.

Recovery and Adoption

After nearly two months of care, treatment, and steady rehabilitation, Daisy reached a point where she was strong enough to leave our care and find her forever home.

She has now been adopted by a kind Thai family, where she is safe and loved, and continuing her life beyond Jai Dog Rescue.

What Daisy’s Story Represents

Moments like this are what our team works towards every day, but they’re never the result of a single action or moment. They come from weeks of hands-on treatment, constant monitoring, and countless small decisions made to keep each dog stable, comfortable, and moving forward.

Emergencies don’t arrive on a schedule, so the work doesn’t pause between cases – it simply shifts from one dog to the next as new needs come through the gate.

Ongoing Care Beyond One Story

And while Daisy’s story has reached a happy ending, there are always more dogs arriving who need the same level of care. What happens next for them depends entirely on your support – it’s what allows us to keep showing up for each new case and see every dog through their recovery, no matter how long it takes.

Posted in Rescue & rehabilitation

Jiw: A Rescue Dog’s Story of Adoption

A tiny pup. A big rescue.

When little Jiw arrived at Jai Dog Rescue, he had just survived a terrifying attack by a bigger dog. Badly injured and alone, he needed urgent help.

Firstly, our team gave him a soothing bath to clean the deep bite wounds on his back:

He was carefully dried with a soft cloth after his bath, and received vital veterinary treatment to help him recover:

Poor little Jiw was so hungry! We made sure he had a tasty meal of puppy food:

Little Jiw won so many hearts at our hospital!

After weeks of attention and vet care, Jiw was ready to find a new home – with one of our vet nurses! Today, he’s living a safe, happy life as a much-loved member of their family.

Thanks to your support we can continue to care for helpless puppies like Jiw and provide hope for a better future.

Thank you.

Today, Jiw is happy and healthy, living in his forever home – all thanks to kind supporters like you.

Posted in Rescue & rehabilitation