Penny Eggleston Hume, from Bury St Edmunds, runs Paws ‘n’ Claws Response and was contacted us to get the dog after a walker discovered him.
The 12-year-old Staffordshire Bull Terrier was discovered dead behind a fallen tree trunk simply within the forest, by a slip roadway off Thetford Road.
Ms Eggleston Hume drove the dog to Bury St Edmunds Veterinary Centre on May 22 however his chip might not be traced and the RSPCA was contacted us to help.
“I did not anticipate my very first job to be this,” she said. “I’ve got 4 dogs myself, in addition to other animals, and have actually constantly been surrounded by animals.
“I could not leave him there on the side of the roadway – a kid might have discovered him.
“There was simply no requirement to discard him like that when there is assist there if you are having a hard time.
“My child who is 19 needed to help me bring him as he was so heavy and she was so distressed.
“It was such an undignified method for him to be left, I even offered to spend for his cremation.
LEARN MORE: ‘It’s a scary time’ – RSPCA centre in Norfolk ‘inundated’ with animals in need
“I believed, if he had remained in the very same family because he was a puppy, how could you let him wind up like that?”
The RSPCA has actually been included with this case.
A spokesperson for the charity said: “This should have been extremely tough for the member of the general public to discover this poor dog.
“The RSPCA is pleading with individuals not to abandon animals and motivates anybody who is having a hard time, to look for help.
“We’ve just recently introduced a devoted cost of living center to help describe and signpost the assist there for owners.”