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In the end, another canine
contestant—one that did acrobatic tricks—claimed the coveted “Most
Talented” title.
“The experience was absolutely
wonderful, though,” says Wiley of her first-ever visit to New York.
“The people were all fantastic, and to see what all goes into that kind
of production seven days a week was amazing.”
Wiley probably would not have considered
entering the Today Show contest had she not heard about it shortly
after learning that Animal Planet's Funniest Animals show planned to
air a video recording Wiley had sent in of Guinness doing the
ring-stacking thing.
When a friend told her about the
“America's Most Talented Pet” contest, Wiley figured, hey, what the
heck, and sent in a video of a ring-stacking Murphy, along with a
required 25-words-or-less entry stating why Murphy deserved to be a
finalist for that title.
“My special Murphy spins, flips, plays
dead, weaves, scratches, dunks,” Wiley's entry read. “But best of all,
she saved Guinness's life when he was bitten by a rattlesnake.”
That last line's what clinched Murphy a
spot as a finalist.
Murphy was just a pup when the snakebite
incident occurred, Wiley says. The two dogs were out in the back yard
one day when Wiley and her husband, AU animal sciences professor Skip
Bartol, suddenly realized that Murphy was out there barking
incessantly—a shrill, urgent little bark—and that Guinness was
strangely silent. Wiley and Bartol ran outside, where they found a
highly agitated Murphy running circles around an alarmingly still
Guinness. Then they heard that distinct, bone-chilling rattle of the
snake.
They raced Guinness to the AU College of
Veterinary Medicine, where emergency personnel sprang into action and
pulled Guinness through.
“But five more minutes, and he wouldn't
have made it,” Wiley says. “Murphy saved his life.”
Here in the U.S., Irish terriers are an
uncommon breed. In fact, Bartol says, there are fewer than a thousand
of them. Wiley got Guinness and Murphy from a Canadian breeder. The two
have the same grandfather.
Given the breed's resistance to
training, Wiley has worked wonders with her two terriers.
“These dogs are highly intelligent, but
they were bred to be extremely independent, and it takes an
unbelievable amount of time and energy to train them,” says Wiley, who
works intently with Guinness and Murphy every single day. “It's like
they're always asking, ‘What's in this for me? If I do what you want me
to do, what am I going to get out of it?'”
The Today Show says it's going to make
the competition an annual event, but Wiley says she has no plans to
enter her dogs again.
“I wouldn't take anything in the world
for the experience,” she says, “but things there were just too busy,
and too noisy—and there was far too much concrete.”
That latter was a problem because Murphy
will only “do her business” on grass. By the time the show was over,
the little dog's bladder was about to burst.
“They had a limo to take us back to the
hotel, but the nearest grass was at Central Park,” Bartol says. “So
here we were, in a limo, making a pit stop at Central Park so our dog
could pee.”
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