Dog needed surgery after 'sniffing' fishing hook

Golden retriever and Irish retriever cross dog with a woman with blonde / brown hair smiling wearing a grey fleece. There is a window and a brick wall behind them.Image source, Katie Stevens
Image caption,

Four-year-old Lola got a discarded fish hook stuck in her nose at Beverley Beck

  • Published

A dog owner is urging anglers to dispose of fish hooks responsibly after her pet got one stuck in its nose.

Katie Stevens, 44, from Beverley, was walking four-year-old retriever, Lola, along Beverley Beck in East Yorkshire on Monday when the injury happened.

With the help of passers-by, the hook was partially removed. An operation was needed to remove the remainder.

Ms Stevens added: "It was an experience I never want to see again. It was awful."

Golden retriever and Irish retriever cross dog with fish hook stuck in its nose. The dog's nose is held in the hand of a woman wearing a blue coat. Image source, Katie Stevens
Image caption,

Lola needed an operation to fully remove the hook

Ms Stevens, a mother-of-two, said she was walking Lola at a spot where fishing is not allowed.

Lola was also on a lead, she said.

She said Lola had "gone to sniff near a tree" when the fish hook got stuck in her nose.

"There was a big yelp," said Ms Stevens.

The situation worsened when another part of the three-pronged hook became attached to her coat leaving her and Lola attached.

After eventually managing to free herself from the animal, Ms Stevens called her cousin for help and a local mechanic cut off the prongs so she would not try to lick them.

"I was having to hold my hand between Lola's tongue and her nose because her tongue kept coming up to lick her nose," she said.

Silver fish hook in the palm of a hand.Image source, Katie Stevens
Image caption,

Ms Stevens is urging anglers to take their fish hooks home with them

Lola was taken to a vets where she had an operation.

It was "extremely upsetting" to see her pet sedated, said Ms Stevens.

She said Lola was not her "usually bouncy self" after the incident but had resumed short walks.

According to the RSPCA, discarded fishing line, hooks and netting accounted for 34% of all litter-related calls last year.

A spokesperson for the charity added: "We know the majority of anglers are careful, but a small number are letting the community down by not disposing of their waste properly and leaving animals like Lola in danger."

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