![]() ![]() The chase leads to cost a bucket of milk, which later lands on Amos' head, and Abigail, with Amos on her back, running down the field like crazy in a rodeo, much to Tweed's dismay. Tweed is milking her cow, Abigail, in her barn until she notices Tod being chased by Chief and Amos again while Copper only follows them. ![]() Widow Tweed only briefly appeared in and out of a few scenes in the second movie. Later, after the rescue of Amos and Copper from a bear by Tod, Tweed doctors Amos' leg, which he had injured in one of his own bear traps earlier. She gives her beloved fox friend a big farewell hug, then sadly drives away. The next day, she makes the hard decision to release Tod into a nearby game preserve (which is also a forest) where he'll be safe and where he belongs. ![]() Although Tweed prevents Amos from barging onto her property and locks up her door, Amos warns Tweed that she can't protect Tod forever, which she knows is true. He had gone onto Amos' property again, and a long chase had resulted in Chief nearly getting killed. However, trouble starts up as Amos comes back to shoot him. Deciding to keep Tod safe, she decides to coop him up inside, but she is glad the next day to see Amos and his two dogs, Chief and Copper, leave for a long hunting trip for the winter.ĭuring the winter, Tweed gives Tod a birthday party, celebrating his first birthday, and presents him with a collar. She tells him that Tod would never hurt anyone or anything and warns Amos that his temper is going to get him in trouble someday, then orders him off her property. She grabs Amos' rifle and shoots out the radiator in his truck. Tweed stops her car and confronts Amos and Chief (who also chased Tod), making him stop his car in front of her. One day, her neighbor, Amos Slade chases Tod, trying to shoot him for harassing his chickens during the chase, he accidentally nearly shoots Widow Tweed, destroying the pails of milk in the back of her car. Unknown to her, he meets a hound puppy named Copper and they become friends. After he begins annoying Abigail the Cow, she encourages him to run along and play. She notes that she cannot stay mad at him, even when he is being mischievous. Widow Tweed cares for Tod, and he follows her everywhere. She tells him that with him there now, she's not going to be so lonesome anymore after the passing of her husband. She names him Tod because he looks like such a little toddler. When she realizes he has no mother or father, she takes him in as her own. Boomer knocks on her door and when she sees Big Mama and Dinky picking her bloomers off her clothesline and drop them on the cub, she runs over and finds the young fox underneath. They realize that Widow Tweed, a nearby widowed farmer who is known as a kind woman, would be the perfect person for the job. When a fox cub's mother is shot and killed by a hunter, Big Mama the owl and her friends, Dinky the sparrow and Boomer the woodpecker, search for someone to look after the orphaned cub. However, she also shows a firm, assertive side and repeatedly stands up to the antagonistic Amos Slade. She is motherly, taking in the orphaned Tod and raising him. Widow Tweed is known for her kindness she mentions suffering from loneliness after the loss of her husband. ![]()
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