Thursday, April 27, 2006

Goose Befriends Elderly Man With Cancer

A northern Idaho man diagnosed with terminal cancer says a usually
cantankerous goose that befriended him on his walks has helped him
live past doctors' predictions.

"I'm 73," Bill Lytle, a two-time state legislator, told the Coeur
d'Alene Press. "And I'm not ready to die."

After retiring as project manager for the Bunker Hill Mining company,
Lytle and his wife of 52 years, Myrna, moved to Coeur d'Alene, where
Bill became one of the founding members of a walking club called the
Lake City Striders.

Then last fall his skin turned yellow overnight, and doctors diagnosed
pancreatic cancer, giving Lytle only months to live. But Lytle
continued his walks, having to cut them down to two miles at a nearby
lake, where he met the goose who has inspired him to keep going even
when he wasn't feeling well.

"I have to keep walking or I won't make my next December," Lytle said.

The goose, called Mr. Waddles, is a feral domestic goose, a biologist
with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game said, offering no
explanation for the relationship that has developed between the goose
and Lytle. Myrna has thought about that as well.

"I wonder, why would that one goose attach himself to Bill?" she said.
"I think he knows he's sick. I think animals can sense that."

The goose, about 30 pounds with a red beak and red feet, approaches
Lytle when he calls and rubs its head against his arms. But it snaps
at anyone else who gets too close, including Myrna, their daughter,
and Bill's hospice aide.

"Sometimes he walks around me, sometimes he walks beside me," Lytle
said of the near-daily meetings the two have. "I rub his neck, and the
top of his head and down to his back. Every time I came down, he just
kept coming out. I think it's pretty nice, that he'd always come to
me."

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