Don has Currier and is about 30 minutes away from home. Currier was sleeping with his head in Don's lap when Don called.
Currier will be switching from ProZinc to Lantus. He was on 6.5U BID at the shelter. When Stefani and I got him to home last night, Currier was 174 at +12, 201 at +14, and 259 at +15.5. Lacking Lantus and not wanting to open an unused bottle of ProZinc for one shot, we gave Currier a fat .5U Levemir at +15.5. This morning at +9.5, he was 110. We did not give Currier a shot before transport. He will start Lantus this afternoon. We have great hopes that Don will break Currier soon.
Currier is a big boy. Not quite as big as
Brady or
Sillci were when they were rescued, but darned close. Currier is a totally round boy with four short legs. He does seem to be a Russian Blue in coat and attitude. He was frightened at Stefani's house and hissed at me from his bathtub hideaway when I approached him this morning, but as soon as I climbed into the tub with him, he started purring and body-bumping me. His coat is a little coarse and dandruffy, but with better food (previously DM dry and wet) and regulation, I expect that will soon clear up.
As you might be able to see in Larry's picture, Currier has a cauliflower ear. (Shades of
Vinnie.) The ear canal is closed, but it appears clean and pest-free. The name he had before he was renamed by the shelter was Floppy.
Currier was adopted off the street as a young adult in 2005. He was surrendered to the shelter because his owner "couldn't care for him" and "suspected diabetes." The records subsequently acquired from his vet show that Floppy has been DX diabetic a month earlier and was on 3U of insulin when he was surrendered.
Don believes he will keep the name Currier.