http://www.care2.com/causes/trailblazers/blog/the-angel-of-texas-rescues-unreachable-dogs/posted by: Emily L. 5 hours ago
Photo: Kelle Mann Davis holds a pup rescued from a park in Montgomery, Texas. The Pup Squad took her in to their rescue program and she is safe and being treated for her horrendous skin problems.
NOTE: This is a guest post by Laura Simpson, Founder of The Great Animal Rescue Chase and the Harmony Fund.
In the Texas area between Interstate 59 and the York area of Houston, there are whispers of an angel. She appears as a slender woman with auburn hair who skillfully descends dark crevices, enters abandoned buildings and braces against extreme weather in pursuit of homeless and injured dogs and cats. She's trapped aggressive dogs with collars and rope deeply embedded in their necks and she opens her arms to dogs who have lost every bit of their fur to mange. It's rumored that she has a near magical way of sustaining orphaned newborn pups and a golden touch in trapping frightened survivors in an area dubbed the Corridor of Cruelty. Her real name is Kelle Mann Davis and her story is one you won't soon forget.
For 25 years Kelle devoted her nursing career to high risk patients at an obstetrics clinic in the Houston, Texas area. She spent her days tending to the complex and unpredictable medical needs of expectant mothers and their developing babies in what could only be described as the ultimate recipe for a high stress job. But for Kelle, after-hours was when things really started to heat up as she went about the business of raising five kids of her own through the years of science projects, skinned knees, puppy love and all the rest. And while most of us might collapse on the bed and pull the blankets over our heads after an 18 hour day in Kelle's world, she did something different. Kelle was stirred by a passion that pushed right past the veil of fatigue, a delicately balanced check book and even the fortress of motherhood. We're talking about the sort of thing that makes a person slide out of bed at 4am or run out into the street in the middle of a thunderstorm. And it's a calling she simply had to answer.
"It started small," Kelle explains of her work occasionally volunteering to walk shelter dogs and fostering through Pals for Pooches. But five years ago when a sea monster named Katrina hit the Gulf Coast of the United States, something shifted inside of Kelle.
"My grandmother had Alzheimer's disease. She loved dogs and that was one of the things that would make her respond. She died about two weeks before Katrina hit and left me money. So I used that to head out to head out 10 days after the storm. I just knew that was in the divine plan."
FULL story at link.