Showing posts with label Fliers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fliers. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Flo & Efa, border collies

Flo the stolen border collie puppy found at caravan site in Newent
By Hayley Mortimer
Monday 27th May 2013

HERE'S a 'tail' with a happy ending - Flo the stolen border collie puppy has been found at a caravan site in Newent.

The pooch went missing when the vehicle she was sleeping in was stolen from a house in Cranham.


Her owners Lucy and James Bent immediately contacted the police when their Land Rover Discovery was taken on Wednesday, May 15, with their two dogs inside.

James, a landscape gardener, had left the dogs in the back of the 4x4 parked on a driveway while he worked at a client’s house when it was taken at 10.45am.

Efa, a one-year-old collie, was found in the garden of a house in Brockworth later that day and was returned unharmed to the couple, who live in Burleigh.

The Land Rover was found nearby in Brockworth the following day, but Flo remained missing.

The couple launched an appeal, prompting a huge response on social media, and put up posters around Gloucestershire.

Lucy and James, both 43, were beginning to lose hope but on Tuesday, May 21, they received a phone call from a man who said Flo had turned up on a caravan site in Newent.

"He said she didn’t have any tags on her collar so he looked after her for a couple of days," said Lucy, an events co-ordinator at Westonbirt.

"But when he saw the posters he called us.

"He didn’t give his name but we arranged to meet him at a petrol station in Gloucester to hand her over.

"She was dirty but she was well and clearly hadn’t been harmed.

"We will never really know what happened to her but we are just so thrilled to have them both home.

"We are so grateful for all the help we have had, it has been phenomenal."

Source: http://www.stroudnewsandjournal.co.uk/news/10445414.Flo_the_stolen_border_collie_puppy_found_at_caravan_site_in_Newent/

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Penny, JRT mix

Penny's Story
Told by Carine M to LostMyDoggie.com
May 6th, 2013

I took the dogs for a walk at the Spring Gardens in Marilla on 4/30 with my friend Daniela and her dogs.

At one point we saw my smaller dog Penny chasing a rabbit or squirrel in the distance. We immediately set out after her, but after a while, it became clear that she was not coming back. This was the first time in the 5 years I had owned her that she disappeared like that.

We walked back to the car then returned to the spot we lost her at in case she had found her way back there. Nothing. We walked again to the first house on Reiter Rd she would have reached had she run straight ahead, and the lady living there immediately got mobilized to help. She called the EA warden and enrolled her husband to search for Penny in the woods on his four-wheeler. Nothing.

Cathy was the first of the many animal lovers I met on my search for Penny during the following 5 days. The park ranger at the Spring Gardens was the second. They were both extremely worried about the two bands of coyotes that live in the area and that can be heard howling back and forth on a regular basis.

The first night Penny was gone I imagined the worst: that she had become coyote lunch. I know coyotes are usually nocturnal hunters but Frank, the ranger, had shared horror stories of daytime attacks on dogs, including a pitbull.


Penny is a medium-sized Jack Russell mix, with the most adorable underbite, who did not stand a chance. To my biggest relief, the next day the EA warden called to let us know that people had seen her on the 400 Southbound. They had tried calling and catching her to no avail. She ran away and disappeared in the bushes on the EA side, but at least we knew that she had made it across the highway into EA. My little girl was trying to get home.

We started asking people and putting up posters around Porterville Rd and heard from several people that she had been spotted running down that road into the backyard of some houses adjacent to Sinking Ponds. Apparently, a truck driver was following her slowly to make sure she would not get run over.

I spent the next two days putting up posters and asking everyone I met around EA if they had seen a terrified white and tan terrier on the run. I asked so many people that I ended up running into the same folks two or three times on different days. Even the officer I flagged down in his police car told me he had heard of missing Penny several times already! I lost my voice in the process of endlessly inquiring about my dog.

I got in touch with the Elma Warden as well as the sheriff's department in EA, Elma, Wales, Alden, OP, Lancaster... I took posters to town halls, post offices, and country stores. I posted about Penny widely on Facebook and contacted the EA Advertiser to place an ad in the paper's following issue.

Finally the Elma warden called me to mention that someone had spotted a white dog in OP, on Willardshire and Milestrip but that he did not think that she could possibly have made it that far.

Neither did I, but I still went and put posters in mailboxes in that neighborhood, rang random bells and asked people about Penny. Engaging in what increasingly felt like a futile search was better than staying put and mulling over my anxiety over not knowing of her fate.

Apparently, I had not gone far enough on Willardshire however, because it turned out that Penny had been there all along, crouching in someone's backyard. On day 5 in the morning, I got a phonecall from a lady on Willardshire who had finally been able to lay her hands on absconding little Penny.

Terrified, Penny had spent the previous day retreating into the woods at the back of the yard every time someone got near. But she did not leave, and even spent the night on the house's back porch.

The lady approached carefully on the second day and finally succeeded in getting a hold of poor Penny, who was shaking uncontrollably.

Fortunately for us, our pooch was still wearing her collar and tags, and the eagerly awaited phone call ensued.

Penny was a stray and a rescue when we got her and she had obviously been abused in her previous life. For months after we got her, any object that even remotely looked like a stick would make her squirm in terror.

I knew she was particularly fearful of men but apparently, away from her home, she was distrustful of women too... many tried to catch her to no avail during her little adventure. Had she lost her collar in the process, we may never have seen her again.

I will never forget the look of disbelief, recognition, and relief in her eyes when we picked her up. She went from looking confused and beaten to acting more like her old spunky self as we carried her away.

Her little paws were scratched up and bloody in front. She was dirty, exhausted, and ravenous, but she was finally home. She slept for two days straight and is now back to causing havoc around the house with her two favorite accomplices, Jake and Cookie.

As for us, we will not be testing to see if she would ever pull this trick on us again! While I would never relive this experience, I have to say that the most heartening part of it was the way complete strangers would mobilize to help out, deeply empathizing and caring about our plight. At least three people called after seeing the poster, wanting to help. Friends and strangers alike shared their concern on Facebook, asking for daily updates. The dog warden would call every day to ask if there had been any developments in the search.

I wish people knew what a great job dog wardens do and did not hesitate to call them whenever they come across a stray or apparently lost dog. I say this because too many people who had spotted Penny told me that they had just assumed she was someone's dog in the neighborhood. As a result, they did not call the town to signal the presence of a dog loose in their backyard. Had they done so, Penny may have come home much sooner. They only reported seeing the dog because they had come across my many posters or because I was accosting them directly.

Fortunately, this is a story with a happy ending. If anything can be learnt from it, however, it is the knowledge that any sighting of any dog loose in your neighborhood is worth being reported. Better risk an unnecessary call than unnecessary pain. Better safe than sorry.

Source: http://www.lostmydoggie.com/your-stories.cfm#
Photo at http://www.lostmydoggie.com/enlarge.cfm?width=600&image=http://www.lostmydoggie.com/pet_images/30812.JPG

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Buddha, English bulldog

After Missing for 17 Days, ‘Buddha’ the Bulldog Safely Reunited with His Owners!
B-Town Blog
2/22/2013

‘Buddha,’ a red-brindled English Bulldog that went missing from the Gregory Heights neighborhood February 4, and today we’re happy to report some GREAT news – after missing for 17 days, he’s been found and safely reunited with his owners!

This is the second dog in the last month or so to go missing in the area, only to be successfully found after its Owners did massive publicity campaigns (posters, blog posts, Facebook, TV news, etc.) to help find it.

Candace shared this update on her Facebook Page on Friday, Feb. 22:

Yes, inquiring minds wants to know the story: Our deepest apologies for when Buddha came home, we all turned everything off, cuddled and SLEPT!!!


At 10am on February 21st 2013, 17 days after Buddha went missing, we received a phone call from a man saying he thinks he has our dog.

Their story is they bought Buddha from someone off the street for $400. The seller told the couple he found the dog.

They took him home thinking they found a new pet until they saw our lost Buddha posters everywhere.

The lady is a bus driver who sees the posters everyday. The man said he couldn’t take Buddha out for walks because there were posters everywhere. They finally called us to make sure it was our dog.

Around 3pm, we met them along with Burien police (to ensure our safety) and lo and behold, it was our Buddha! And yes, we cried the “ugly cry” where your whole body shook uncontrollably and you didn’t care who saw you!

We’re so grateful to each and every one of you who followed Buddha’s story and in our journey in bringing him home. We are very lucky and have learned a great lesson.

We will be making our thank you rounds in the days to come, a date with Buddha’s vet, removing Lost Buddha posters, getting him a new collar-GPS, reinforcing our fence and just enjoying our time with Buddha - our little guy who made such a big fuss!

Vet follow-up report: Buddha needed TLC - his skin was scabbed over/missing fur, his ropes (face wrinkle) was infected, nose was cracked. He also had bloody stool. Good thing his vet and staff took very good care of him and he's recovering soundly.

Source: http://b-townblog.com/2013/02/22/after-missing-for-17-days-buddha-the-bulldog-safely-reunited-with-his-owners/ and https://www.facebook.com/#!/BuddhaIsHome

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Cocoa, small terrier

Pavelski reunites dog with its owner
Kevin Kurz, Sharks Insider
November 9, 2011, 10:29 pm

You know the tale of Pavlov’s dog. Now, here’s the story of Pavelski’s dog.

Sharks forward Joe Pavelski recently made a new fan when a stray dog wandered onto his property. After waking up from a pregame nap before the Sharks hosted Nashville on Saturday, he noticed a small dog peeking in his backdoor when his chocolate lab, Lucy, started barking.

Cocoa with Sarah, Joe and Lucy

“The other dog took off and we went in the backyard, which is fenced in,” explained Pavelski. “Our dog came out and started running around, so he started playing with her.”

Fortunately, Pavelski had a flyer on his kitchen table that his babysitter brought by after the dog’s owner handed it to her on the street the day before.

“Our babysitter, the previous day, was out for a walk and met this guy and he gave her a flyer saying they had a lost dog,” he said. “Sarah (Pavelski's wife) came out and said ‘I think that’s the dog that’s on the flyer.’ So we called him, and he was over in five minutes.

“It was great seeing the dog, Cocoa, and the owner reunite.”

San Jose Sharks forward Joe Pavelski, holding Cocoa, and a very happy blogger, Taewoo

Source: http://www.csnbayarea.com/blog/sharks-talk/post/Pavelski-reunites-dog-with-its-owner?blockID=591400&feedID=10290


Original blog post at: http://blog.pawshpal.com/2011/11/05/missing-dog-missing-heart/

Missing Dog, Missing Heart
By taewoo
On November 5, 2011

Dear friends, subscribers, and readers of PawshPal.

Yesterday, I lost my dog Cocoa.


A few days ago, my door window basically cracked into a billion pieces from strong winds.

When the door guy came to fix the window, I wasn’t home. He didn’t realize that Cocoa would bolt out. (Terriers are known to be quite frantic and territorial at the same time). When he chased after Cocoa, Cocoa got spooked and basically ran for his life.

After 24 hours of intense searching (by THREE people), Cocoa is nowhere to be found, including local animal shelter.

Cocoa was my inspiration for PawshPal.

I have not given hope, but i am in insane emotional pain, anxiety, and fear. The nights are quite chilly these days and he hasn’t eaten in a few days from upset stomach. I wonder where he is sleeping … if he’s warm.. if he’s hungry.

It’s true what they say.. “you don’t know what you have till it’s gone.”

It’s taking me 2x as long as normal to write this post because my fingers are trembling and i can’t quite type straight. Though I like to express my emotions, right now it’s too much for me to take and I am quite lost for words.  I will update you guys as things progress.

Remember, tomorrow is never guaranteed. Live today NOW.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Marley, mutt

Dog Found After Being Missing For 3 Months
Julie Flannery - ABC23 Kern Mountain Reporter
March 20, 2010

TEHACHAPI, Calif. -- It was back in December when Marley, a 14-year-old mutt, went missing from a Bear Valley home. The owners had given up hope of finding their four legged friend, when just last week a friend saw Marley on a “dog found” poster.

If dogs could talk, Marley would have quite a tall tale to tell after he wandered away from home and in to the Bear Valley wilderness three months ago.

Marley was Leslie Walz's childhood dog and she said when Marley went missing the family did everything they could to find the dog.

Video at http://www.turnto23.com/mountain/22893494/detail.html

"For about a month, we did everything we could to find him. We put up the posters, called the newspaper and the humane society, and the bear valley gate and everything and we had given up hope that he would ever be found,” said Walz.

But on a cold winter day last week, Marley was found taking refuge in an old dog house.

The dog house was on Jenny and Rick Salazar's property and used to be their dog's dog house before he passed away.

“He looked very dirty, scared, and when we were able to touch him although he had a very thick coat, the bones underneath, he was very emaciated,” said Jenny Salazar.

The Salazar's called Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue for help, and flyers were put up in hopes of finding Marley’s owner.

Zach Skow, who owns Marley's Mutts Dog Rescue, said because the dog was so old and was obviously missing for a longperiod of time, they weren't very hopeful that his owners would be found, but a few days after flyers were posted, Skow got a phone call.

"A gentleman at the Bear Valley Market saw the poster and called up Marley’s owners and let them know, ‘hey buddy, I’m looking at a picture of your dog,’ and still he didn’t believe it. He said, ‘nah can’t be,'” said Skow.

But it absolutely was their beloved Marley.

And while Marley is now safe at home, it’s still a mystery just how this little pooch survived not only freezing temperatures but alongside the bobcats, coyotes, cougars and bears that roam this lanscape.

“It’s treacherous up here and the fact that he didn’t get killed is beyond me, I don’t know how that happened,” said Skow.

Rick Salazar said he believes Marley was able to survive thanks to a creek of fresh water at the bottom of the canyon and food set out by local residents meant for deer.

“Quite a few people putting out food for deer and cats and I think he got used to eating that and it was enough for him to survive on,” said Rick Salazar.

And while no one will ever know just how Marley survived, his story has left quite an impression.

Jenny Salazar said Marley has taught her a life lesson. “Marley has made me have a lot more hope and hang in there when things aren’t going so great,” said Jenny Salazar.

Marley has been reunited with his owners for almost a week now. He lost twenty pounds while he was missing, but the vet said he is in good health, and Walz said he is also in good spirits, and actually more outgoing now then before his three month long adventure.

Source: http://www.turnto23.com/mountain/22893494/detail.html

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Marty, Katan/Cavalier King Charles

Dog Found Thanks to Community’s Help
By Wendy Edwards
Published: May 25, 2011

When Suzan Roberts told the community her beloved dog went missing, hundreds of people attempted to help find him. Roberts, beset by the grief of having lost the Katan/Cavalier King Charles mix she calls Marty, was overwhelmed by the generosity of those living in and around Fluvanna.

Marty has been found and the owner is grateful to a community that came together in many ways to look for the lost dog.


“It was just amazing when I would talk to people,” says Marty’s owner. “One gentleman I was talking to sent [word of the missing dog] on his iPhone right then and there.”

Marty went missing on a Sunday afternoon.

“I was out playing with him and my older dog and he slipped down in the woods, which is nothing unusual,” Roberts says. “I came around to help my dad with something,” then when she looked around for Marty, “he was gone. He may have had a seizure (the dog is diagnosed with Epilepsy) or may have gotten unfocused and I think he just got totally confused and he bolted.”

Roberts, her husband, Gary, and father, Roger Cyr, spent hours searching to no avail, looking in the woods, driving up and down the driveway, hollering for the dog who “usually comes running when he hears us.”

Together, the family checked along Route 53 near the Lake campground, where they were told a lady tried to catch [the dog], “but he bolted back into the woods. She said he was scared.”

By five in the morning Monday, Roberts was in front of her computer making fliers about her lost dog. “By six, I was at the Lake campground posting fliers.” Within a few hours, everyone in the vicinity of Routes 53 and 618 could see Marty’s picture and learn about his plight.

“It was totally amazing how the community came together to support this little guy,” Roberts says. “My husband gave a flier to one of his coworkers whose child saw the $200 reward, said ‘Dad, is that for real?’ And then out the door he went!’”

Pizza delivery drivers and Fluvanna school bus drivers joined Marty’s neighborhood friends and family in the search by keeping fliers on hand and helped to spread the news that he was missing. Even the Lake Monticello gatekeepers did what they could. “Every day we went to the Lake, they let us in.”

Roberts’ brother, Damon Cyr of Charlottesville, could not join in the search, but that did not prevent him from contributing to Marty’s rescue.

“He hired an online service called LostMyDoggie.com and they flooded the area with over 1,200 phone calls and sent out notices to 100 veterinarians and shelters in the area,” Roberts says.

By Tuesday, news of Marty’s disappearance was all over Facebook and Twitter. “And my phone started ringing!” People that had seen Marty were calling in, helping Roberts piece-together his trail.

Then came call she was waiting for. “Marty was found at a barn at Ash Lawn, a little over eight miles from our house.”

Apparently, the tired dog approached a caretaker who was thoughtful enough to share a little bit of his lunch. “I do not know how he managed to catch [the dog] but he did and he took him home,” Roberts says. “He even let Marty sleep with him.”

Thankfully, an associate that works in the Ash Lawn-Highland gift shop had seen one of Roberts’ fliers. “So, they found our number and called the house and spoke with my Dad.” Thirty minutes later, Marty was identified and brought home.

Because the dog experienced a number of seizures while he was away, Roberts and her family saw to his medical treatment first and foremost. They will be keeping an even closer eye on him from now on.

“We are looking into a GPS tracking collar,” she says.

As for everyone who helped share pictures of Marty and did their best to get him home, she says: “Thank you all for what you did. For the ones that helped hand out flyers, the online postings, Facebook … everything that you did made the difference in saving this little guy’s life and bringing him back home. The emotions are still running wild with me; I am so happy. You cannot see me, but right now I have tears of joy in my eyes.”

Source: http://www.mydailyprogress.com/ruralvirginian/index.php/news/article/dog_found_thanks_to_communitys_help/40489/

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Max, chihuahua

Lost Dog Rescued by Another Dog Returns Home to Joyful Family
By Linda Chion Kenney
Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Max, a standard Chihuahua, returns home to the Rodriguez family after being rescued by another dog and its owner at a retention pond behind Mann Middle School in Brandon. Max’s three-night plight leads to a reconsideration of collars and microchipping.

Jerry Rodriguez,with his wife, Karen, and daughter, Nicole, has a tearful reunion with Max. This picture was taken moments after Rodriguez came home May 29 to see his dog safe at home after Max went missing for three nights, lost in the neighborhood.

When the call came, Karen Rodriguez rushed out of her Brandon home and drove three blocks to meet the good Samaritan who called her husband on a cell phone and said she thought she had found the Rodriguez family dog.

“I don’t even remember what the woman looks like, I was crying so hard,” Rodriguez said. “And when I told her husband about the reward money, he said, ‘No, ma’am, you just take that money and get the dog to the vet.”

Max, the four-year-old standard Chihuahua, who likes to sleep tucked between a pillow and its pillowcase, was found May 29 behind Mann Middle School, stuck behind a chain-link fence that separated ground from retention pond.

Turns out it was a dog named Coco, acquired by her family eight years ago from a rescue organization for Australian Shepherds, who discovered Max “all huddled up in a little ball” under tall blades of grass, according to Coco’s owner, Kathleen Gridley.

“We almost didn’t walk down there today,” Gridley said in an interview the day Max was found. “It was hot and I gave Coco some water and I said, ‘Let’s give it a try.’ "

The route took them to the end of Larson Avenue, off Parsons Avenue, behind Mann Middle School, to a fenced-in retention pond. There, Coco typically would sit in the grass and watch the ducks.

But on this day, Gridley said, “she just keyed in along the fence and followed it to the end where we saw [Max] rolled up into a ball."

“I think [Coco] realized [Max] shouldn’t have been there and that he needed a little taking care of,” Gridley said. "Coco and I sat down and they touched noses. We sat with him and I called my husband to run down to the corner and get the phone number."

That would be the phone number printed on flyers that the Rodriguez family hung around town, asking for help in finding Max.

When Rodriguez found Max, sans collar and having never been micro-chipped, wagging his tale furiously at her, she burst into tears. Even now, back at home, the emotions take over.

“He looks real good and we’re just thrilled beyond words,” Rodriguez said.

Missing since May 25, Max is home with Rodriguez and her husband, Jerry, and their daughter, Nicole, a ninth-grader at Foundation Christian High School, who reportedly fell in love with Max when she first saw him.

The family got Max from the same woman who had provided them with Midnight, the family’s other pet, an eight-year-old long-haired Chihuahua mix.

“It was a fluke conversation with them, that we were looking for a companion for Midnight, and they said they had one,” Rodriguez said.

Apparently, it was a fluke, too, that Max would venture out alone, let alone go missing for days.

“Because we had not seen any evidence of him being hit by a car, we felt like someone had taken him in, and that maybe we would get him back,” Rodriguez said. "Unfortunately, he did not have his collar on him. And we didn’t microchip him because it didn’t help us when we had a dog stolen 10 years ago. And he never goes out on a leash because he only goes out in the backyard and never unsupervised.”

So it was odd when Rodriguez and her husband first noticed that Max had not been in the room with them, under feet somewhere, sitting on the couch next to somebody, as the night unfolded May 25.

“We couldn’t find him in the house anywhere,” Karen Rodriguez said. “He wouldn’t go outside without us. He wouldn’t even do his business without us. Jerry, I think, slept one hour that night. He walked and walked and he drove and drove throughout the neighborhood, calling him, and looking out for Max.”

An announcement was posted on Brandon Patch and on Facebook. Notice was placed on Craigslist and in the Tampa Tribune. Flyers were photocopied and distributed throughout the neighborhood and signs were tacked at Petsmart, Petco, and other pet stores, as well as at area veterinarians.

The Rodriguez family took a trip to Hillsborough County Animal Services on Falkenburg Road on May 27, wondering if Max had been taken to the shelter.

“A lot of prayers went out, I’m telling you,” Karen Rodriguez said. “A lot of prayers.”

And now?

“Oh, it’s such a relief,” Rodriguez said. “When you commit to having a pet you make a lifelong commitment to that pet and they become a lifelong member of your family. And when they’re not there and you don’t have a clue where they are? It’s very unnerving. There’s no words to describe it. I am just so happy inside and so at peace that he is back home with us.”

Rodriguez said Max and Midnight both will be wearing collars from now on and microchip implants for pet identification are a possibility.

But one thing she most definitely is going to do, and she recommends that every pet owner take heed as well:

“When you think you’re going to go out, even for just a second, make sure that door is closed tight,” Rodriguez said. “It only takes a second for a pet to dash outside.”

Video at http://brandon.patch.com/articles/lost-dog-found-by-rescue-dog-returns-home-to-joyful-family-video#photo-6313975

Source: http://brandon.patch.com/articles/lost-dog-found-by-rescue-dog-returns-home-to-joyful-family-video

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Zoey Haney

Missing Dog-Happy reunion: Pet Detective on the case
By Mike Bush
Jan 24, 2011


Wildwood (KSDK) --With snow on the ground, one might figure that the trail was cold.


"It makes the footing a little dangerous, I've fallen a couple of times, " says Berns, Jim Berns.

He's on the case of the missing dog.

"Zoey's our pet she's been missing since last Sunday, " explains John Haney.

Haney and his family are from Chicago. They were visiting relatives in Wildwood last weekend when Zoey got away.

"She's been with us, we got her about 5 1/2 years ago. She was a rescue dog and she was the first member of our family before we had our kids and everything."

So when the initial search and posters didn't work, the Haney's called in Berns.

"We found him online, " says Haney.

Berns doesn't have a license to kill but he is a detective. Pet detective.

Yes, they've had a little fun with pet detectives in the movies. Jim Carrey started a profitable movie career playing the hilarious "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective" .

But Berns takes his job seriously. Seriously.

"I have been on 173 cases and more than half of the cases we have solved", he says.

Berns who came in from Cincinnati with his trusty bloodhound says he learned his tracking skills as a hunter.

"When I was a kid, I used to hunt rabbit, fox and deer and now can go hunting and I don't have to kill anything, " he explains.

And late Sunday afternoon, a reunion.

"Oh we're just thrilled, " says Haney.

Actually, Jim Berns didn't find Zoey. He was found by a couple that saw one of the posters.

"Still we were very happy to have him and he did find a lost dog for someone else, " says Haney. "We're just thrilled to have her back, either way."

As for the pet detective, it's on to the next case because in line of work tomorrow never dies and you never say never again.




Source: http://www.ksdk.com/news/article/240189/3/Missing-Dog-Happy-reunion-Pet-Detective-on-the-case

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Chelsea, terrier mix

Lost dog from Ft. Myers finally reunites with owners
By Colleen Hogan, Reporter / Videojournalist
Posted: May 01, 2011 5:55 PM CDT


A Ft. Myer's couple finds their lost dog 30 miles away, months after the dog first went missing.


Four In Your Corner's Colleen Hogan caught up with the couple, who credit FOX 4 with being the first media outlet to get their story out, when the dog first went missing.

"It was our worst nightmare, something we never expected," the dog's owner Gail said.

But out of a nightmare, came a miracle. Gail says her energetic terrier-mix Chelsea is finally back at home, running around in the backyard, after being gone for months.

The dog was missing for 74 days before she was eventually found.

"She followed 2 strange men that were in the yard next to us back to their truck and disappeared."

That was back in February. The couple offered a $5,000 reward for Chelsea's return. They posted her pictures all over town even reaching out to vet's offices, and going on-line trying to find the dog.

"We had tracked down so many different leads, just always with disappointment at the end."

The break came earlier this week, when someone saw Chelsea's pictures in a vet's office, and thought she looked a lot like another dog on the block. But his dog was being kept outside on a lanai, most of the time. So the couple traveled 30 miles north to check out the tip, and sure enough, it was Chelsea.

"Her first reaction was pure happiness."

The people who had her, let her go home with Gail and her husband without a fight.

"We just wanna thank God because we believe this was truly a miracle."

Finally home again, Gail says it took a few days for the pup to settle back in. Chelsea now has two microchips so she never has to worry about being lost again.

"Our lives feel complete now. There was just such an empty spot with her missing."



The couple says they want to thank everyone for their prayers and help during the time the dog was gone.

Source: http://www.fox4now.com/story/14550628/lost-dog-from-ft-myers-finally-reunites-with-owners
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Monday, March 21, 2011

Pepper, poodle

Pepper the Poodle
Told by Kat Albrecht to HomeAgain

I’m skeptical whenever I hear someone say that their dog was stolen. Although some dogs are occasionally stolen for profit, my research has shown that the majority of supposed “theft” cases are actually incidents where a dog has strayed from home and was picked up by someone who decided to keep the dog. Unfortunately, in the following case, the owner’s suspicion of theft was correct.

Pepper was a ten-year-old tiny black teacup Poodle who lived with her human, Martha, in a posh apartment in a very nice area of town. Unbeknownst to Martha, several apartments had been burglarized in her neighborhood over the past month. Of course, Martha didn’t think twice about leaving Pepper alone in her apartment while she ran several errands.

When Martha returned to her apartment one day, she immediately knew something was wrong. She was normally greeted by a yapping, wiggling ball of fur – but this day, there was silence. As soon as she entered the apartment Martha’s worst fears were confirmed –items that were once neatly in their place were strewn around the apartment floor. Drawers were open, seat cushions were out of place, and CDs littered the floor by her bookshelf. Martha yelled for Pepper but there was no response. She quickly called the police and waited until they arrived to search the apartment. Pepper was gone.

The point of entry and exit were the same – the window in Martha’s bedroom. The window was too high for Pepper to climb out of on her own. Pepper had been stolen.

By the time that Martha learned about our services, Pepper has been missing for two days. Martha had done the usual posting of flyers in the neighborhood, searching the shelters, and placing a classified ad in the paper. One mistake that Martha made, which I quickly corrected, was to change her flyers and posters so that they read “REWARD LOST DOG” instead of “STOLEN DOG.” The worst thing we could have done was to scare off any potential witnesses by letting them know the dog was stolen. Very few people are willing to be a snitch, but many are willing to be a hero by helping reunite a lost dog with his family. But as day two ticked by without any leads, we decided it was time to pull out the big guns – an intersection alert.

An intersection alert is when four to six volunteers stand on the corner of a major intersection near where the pet was lost (or stolen) and hold up giant florescent “REWARD LOST DOG” posters. Similar in concept to companies that pay people to stand on corners holding marketing signs, intersection alerts are designed to capture attention and get information out to the community that a dog is missing.

We started our intersection alert the following morning at 6:30 a.m. in order to capture the traffic for the morning commute. Our florescent orange posters read, “REWARD LOST TINY BLACK POODLE” and within twenty minutes we had our first lead! A gentleman in a white pickup truck pulled over and told me that his nextdoor neighbor, a woman in her early twenties, had a new small black Poodle. The description seemed to match, even down to the blue bows in Pepper’s poofy ears. I obtained the address, thanked him profusely for the tip, and never let on that Pepper was stolen. I didn’t call Martha just yet. And I didn’t go to the house myself to confront the woman. This was a felony investigation and the last thing the police needed was for us to interfere. So, I called the police and gave the information to the officer when he arrived.

Within twenty minutes, Martha was at the woman’s house and identified Pepper. The woman at the house claimed that Pepper was her family’s dog that she had owned for years. But Martha had told the police officer beforehand about a tiny patch of white fur on Pepper’s left hind foot and the royal blue bows in his ears. His markings matched and Pepper was recovered. Of course, there would have been no question of identity that it was Pepper if he had been microchipped. Martha was very lucky, because if Pepper was generic-looking there would have been no proof that Pepper was her dog and she probably would not have left with the Poodle in her arms.

It was exciting to see a happy ending to a case where there seemed to be no hope. But by changing one word in our message – from “stolen” to “lost” – and by using a bold method to get our message out to the community, Pepper was home again, where he belonged.

Source: http://fpblogengine.com/PetRescuerStories.ashx?blogid=2&postid=36

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Laverne, lab mix

Happy tail: Lost dog found after 65 days
By Catherine Kavanaugh, Daily Tribune Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 15, 2011


Mixed lab makes it through winter, 12 miles of busy streets

FERNDALE – A dog that ran away on Jan. 7 -- the day after she was adopted -- somehow survived the coldest and snowiest days of winter and is back with her foster care guardian.


Laverne, a Labrador retriever mix last seen on Laprairie Street on Jan. 13, was found 12 miles away in the area of Telegraph and Schoolcraft roads in Detroit.

The 4-year-old brindle dog had fended for herself 65 days, crossed busy mile roads and freeway overpasses, and depended on the kindness of at least one stranger.

“A nice lady had been feeding her in her garage for a week and called the Michigan Anti-Cruelty Society,” said Tracy Balazy of Dearborn, Laverne’s foster care guardian and soon-to-be forever home owner.

Balazy was in the process Tuesday of adopting Laverne – a dog she had fostered for five months and then with some reluctance gave up to a Ferndale couple so she could give temporary shelter to another homeless dog.

However, absence made Balazy’s heart grow fonder of the shy, mild-mannered Laverne. The volunteer with the Dearborn Animal Shelter never stopped looking for the dog and even offered a $250 reward, which was later raised to $500, for her return.

Balazy left 500 fliers at Ferndale houses and businesses in the area of Livernois and Eight Mile roads, where Laverne’s first adoptive owner said she rushed past him and out of sight the day after he brought her home to his girlfriend’s house on Gardendale.

The search was on. On one bitterly cold weekend, 10 people fanned out across southwest Ferndale to look for Laverne. They were encouraged by two sightings, one from an Allen Street resident who said the 50-pound dog had been picking through his garbage.

Balazy said she was relieved to learn the timid and skittish Laverne had some street sense. It made it easier for her to stay hopeful during days of single-digit temperatures, nights of sub-zero wind chills and all of February – the second snowiest month on record.

“On some days I’d go looking for her I’d be all bundled up and I’d be freezing,” Balazy said. “One time there was ice on the inside of my car window. I wondered how Laverne could stand it.”

Balazy went through a lot of fleeting optimism on her searches.

“I imagined all kinds of scenarios,” she said. “I’d call for her and think she might come out from an alley. I’d see paw prints and try to follow them but they always ended at a shoveled sidewalk.”

As much as the cold and snow, Balazy was worried about Laverne crossing busy streets. Not knowing which direction to turn, she expanded her searches into Detroit and as far north as Clawson and Troy. Ferndale residents also stayed on diligent guard for Laverne.

On days when it was fit for man and beast to be outside, Balazy would take her rescued dog, Uma, to look for Laverne. The pair had become fast friends and Balazy figured if anything could lure Laverne out of hiding it would be the furry black mutt who had become her creature of comfort.

Every time Balazy saw people outside in Ferndale, she would show them a flier with Laverne’s picture.

“They would say, ‘Oh yeah, we know about this dog. We’re watching for her,’ ” Balazy said. “Other times people would call me and say your flier is still hanging, should I leave it? Did you find her? Everyone in Ferndale was so helpful. The community is great.”

Balazy was volunteering Saturday for the Dearborn Animal Shelter at a home and garden show when she learned Laverne had been located and was waiting to be picked up at the Michigan Anti-Cruelty Society, Detroit – one of the many places she had left a flier.

“I was shocked,” Balazy said. “They recognized Laverne from a flier but she has a microchip and they could have easily scanned it, too.”

Balazy and Elaine Greene, executive director of the Dearborn Animal Shelter, went to get Laverne immediately. They had a low-key reunion.

“Laverne was just sitting there quietly. She was always very gentle and it was just business as usual,” Balazy said. “She’s in good shape, too. She weighs the same as when she took off, maybe even a little more.”

Balazy’s husband, Chris, has a theory.

“I bet she figured out where every little old lady who feeds feral cats lives,” he said. “Laverne probably muscled in and had her fill.”

When Laverne and Uma saw each other for the first time in more than two months, the dogs nuzzled. Laverne is staying very close to her buddy these days. She ran behind Uma when a neighbor stopped by to welcome her home.

“We’ll never know for sure what Laverne has been through,” Balazy said. “I’m just thrilled she was found safe.”

The woman who called the Michigan Anti-Cruelty Society is eligible for the reward along with the two men sent to retrieve Laverne.

How did she make it so far? Balazy said Laverne might have hid by day and roamed at night when traffic was lighter.

On Tuesday, Balazy was going to fill out the paperwork to adopt the mutt who miraculously made it back to her after some trying months and miles.

“She’s lying on the couch – very much a dog of luxury,” Balazy said. “We’re both much better now.”

Source: http://www.dailytribune.com/articles/2011/03/15/news/doc4d7faaf4dea3d368760606.txt?viewmode=default
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Monday, March 14, 2011

Maizey, yellow lab

Lost dog reunited with owners thanks to good samaritans
By Maria Lindsay
11/18/2010 - South Side Leader

Jesse Carvill and his daughter Avery are shown after being reunited with their dog Maizey, who was lost for about five days. The dog was found by Quick Clean Car and Pet Wash owners Paul and Linda Doerr, who took Maizey in and put signs in front of the business in an effort to find her owners.

GREEN — A lost-dog story has ended well for one Green family, thanks to a little luck and a dog lover who happened to find the pooch.

Paul and Linda Doerr, owners of Quick Clean Car and Pet Wash Store, found an older female yellow Labrador wandering on Ashwood Road Oct. 20 at about 9 p.m.

“We are dog lovers and we could not turn our backs on one wandering around, so we took her in,” said Paul Doerr, adding that he and his wife own two Labradors — a yellow one and a chocolate one.

Paul Doerr said someone had come to his home earlier in the day looking for the owner of the dog and had apparently let her loose when they failed to find its owners.

Doerr said the dog was well fed and cared for, but she had no collar, just a red “shock collar” worn by pets contained by an electric fence.

“Someone cared enough to keep her contained, but she was dirty as if she had been running through a stream,” he said.

The Doerrs washed and cleaned her at their business.

“My wife wanted to call her Daisy,” said Paul Doerr.

Paul Doerr said he and his wife called three veterinarians in Green to see if anyone had reported her lost and to find out if the dog had an identifying microchip but were unsuccessful in identifying the owners.

He decided to put large signs about the dog in front of the business, which is located at the corner of Mayfair and Massillon roads.

“Our pet groomers at the business wanted to adopt her, but we decided to give it some time,” said Doerr. “The owner apparently was on Craig’s List and saw notes about the dog posted at our business.”

Owner Jesse Carvill contacted Paul Doerr Oct. 25, and soon the dog, which actually was named Maizey, was reunited with him and his young daughter Avery, who live about half a mile down the street from where the dog was found.

“When they were reunited, the dog perked right up and was overjoyed to see her owners,” said Paul Doerr.

Paul Doerr said Carvill told him he had been having problems with his electric fence, and the dog somehow got out.

Carvill could not be reached for comment by presstime.

“They were lucky. This was one of the few good-ending stories,” said Paul Doerr. “It emphasizes the need for why dogs should have a microchip or wear a collar with a license or identification tag at all times so it can be identified when it goes missing.”

Source: http://www.akron.com/pages.asp?aID=10859

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Mac, Jack Russell terrier

Found Dog in Bray – Mac’s Back!
Emmet, blogmaster Lost Dog in Bray
Published on May 5, 2010

So the huge news is we’ve got Mac back. The other great news is that while he’s a bit thin, he’s physically in great condition. He has clearly been shaken up by his ordeal, but aside from being tired and initially timid, he’s very quickly returned to form.


The cool thing is we got Mac back as a combined result of pretty much everything we’ve been doing. We worked hard, and a lot of other people worked even harder on our behalf, but the combined effort is what led to finding him.

First up we got the word out on twitter via my account (@emmet), people really responded to this and it created a huge awareness. A couple of hundred people retweeted info on Mac, and really helped spread the word he was missing. As a result of that activity, Sian from whatswhat.ie contacted me. We’d never been in touch before, but John had mentioned her before in some context or other. So she put me in touch with her business partner from what’s what , Barbara

I know this is getting convoluted, but Barbara put me in touch with the legendary Lesley. Lesley runs Bray Directory and basically seems to have friends in both high and low places. She’s kept us going through a lot of the crappier times in the last week. Barbara and Lesley basically went around talking to people and harassing them and raising awareness. Impressive stuff.

So it seems that whoever took the dog felt enough pressure on them from people on all sides of the law, that they decided to let Mac go last Friday. Someone spotted him in Fassroe where he was abandoned by his abductees. From here, Mac made his way to Enniskerry, and to be honest I’m shocked he had the road sense to make it that far. He then basically followed this girl home, and they took him in on the weekend.

I spent my weekend plastering bray with flyers, and basically the girl’s father saw one of these. He checked out the website (site developed in record time by the legendary Niall Flynn), and confirmed from the photos it was Mac they had. The father got in touch with me, and then my wife picked up Mac this evening.

At first Mac was really quiet and timid, but he was physically really well. He’s lost a lot of weight, but hasn’t been maltreated. Despite his initial reticence, when he got home he went nuts, running around like a mad thing, really, really happy.

So basically that’s the direct path to how he was found, but lots of other people helped too. We had senior members of the Gardai taking a close personal interest, we had private detectives making enquires free of charge, we had some media coverage, not to mention twitter, facebook, blogs etc. and we even had a few really decent members of the traveling community working for us.

To be honest I really didn’t think we’d get mac back, but I thought if I threw everything at it, it mightn’t become a defining moment in the lives of my children. I am really blown away by the help and support we’ve got from everyone, without it he wouldn’t be here now. One bath later, my living room smells like a smelly wet dog, but I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Thanks.

Emmet

Source: http://lost-dog-in-bray.com/found-dog-in-bray-macs-back.html

Friday, February 18, 2011

Titan, great dane

Dog reunited with Ashland family after dramatic rescue
Titan survived days of cold weather before the persistence of his worried owners finally paid off
By Sanne Specht for the Tidings
January 21, 2011

Titan and his owner, Merri Walters-Woo, share a moment together Wednesday in their Ashland home after Titan was rescued from a muddy ravine in Portland.

Titan the Great Dane is soaking up all the love Merri Walters-Woo has to offer while he recovers from a real-life cliffhanger.

Walters-Woo, 44, of Ashland, had nearly lost faith that the 4-year-old dog would be found alive after he ran away from her brother's Portland area home on Dec. 29.

While outside on a potty break, Titan suddenly bolted into the night, chasing after a passing car he likely mistook for Walters-Woo's vehicle, she said.

"He was doing really great," she said. "Then a car drove by that looked exactly like mine and he just took off. My brother felt so terrible."

A flurry of "Lost Dog" fliers, Craigslist postings and offers of a $1,000 reward had alerted the dog-friendly Vancouver Lake neighborhood to keep a sharp eye out for Titan. The next night there was a reported sighting in a nearby park. But Titan was not to be found.

"How can you miss a Great Dane?" Walters-Woo said.

As the days turned into weeks, Walters-Woo and her husband continued to drive to Portland to join Andy Walters and his fiancée, Amanda Giese, as they searched ravines, parks and along railroad tracks. But there were no further sightings.

Meanwhile, Portland was experiencing the worst weather possible, she said.

"It snowed, it rained, it was freezing," Walters-Woo said. "He's not an independent type of dog. He's super clingy. He wants to be in the house 24/7."

By Jan. 14, the harlequin Dane had been missing for 16 days.

"I thought for sure Titan was dead," she said. "I sat and prayed. He may not come back."

Then the phone rang. Titan was alive. But just barely.

"He was in really, really bad shape," Walters-Woo said. "My brother warned me he might not make it."

Rachel Gissel and her young children were spending Friday afternoon looking for frogs at a nearby pond when they spotted a dog stranded on a ledge 50 feet down a muddy ravine. Gissel immediately recognized Titan from the fliers. She called Walters. He and Giese raced to the rescue, Walters-Woo said.

It was Giese, 28, who scrambled down the vertical face of the washed-out ravine.

Sliding down blackberry bushes, grasping for handholds, Giese traversed the landslides and crawled over muddy debris to reach Titan.

"He was really excited to see me," Giese said. "I said, 'Are you ready to go home? Let's go!' "

But getting Titan out of the ravine was not going to be easy. Starvation and dehydration had taken their toll. Titan had lost 50 pounds off his normally 150-pound frame. The dog also had seriously injured his front leg.

"I thought the infection had gone to the bone. I thought for sure, if we could even get him out of there, if he survived, he'd lose the leg," she said.

Giese barely weighs 100 pounds herself. But she was the only one the frightened dog would allow near him.

"He likes two people, Merri and me. I told (everyone else) to stand back," Giese said, adding Titan was biting and snapping at others' rescue attempts.

Standing precariously on a rotten stump, Giese quickly realized an outcropping over the area where Titan was trapped meant she had to persuade the dog to take a literal and lateral leap of faith.

"One leap was what I really needed," Giese said, as she continued to coax the dog.

"I finally said 'Titan! You need to jump to me now!' "

Titan jumped, and landed on Giese's legs, then crawled up onto her body. From that point on, the pair endured a gut-busting scramble to the top of the embankment. Giese would push the dog ahead of her, drag him behind her, whatever it took to gain ground, she said.

"Every step I took, I'd step and slide backwards," Giese said.

When they finally popped over the edge, Giese's adrenaline was so kicked in she simply picked Titan up and carried him to the car. The dog's feet were almost dragging on the ground, she said.

"He's so big. And I'm not. I don't know how I did it, really. I just knew that when he took that leap there was no way I was going to leave him behind in that ravine," Giese said.

Portland veterinarians examined Titan and determined that while he was emaciated and suffering from a serious leg infection and other lesser injuries, the dog had no broken bones, Walters-Woo said.

"When I first saw my brother, I just cried," she said. "But I felt such relief knowing Titan wasn't going to die out there by himself."

Life has never been easy for Titan. He was the last of his litter to be adopted, his four-legged mother rejected him after biting a hole in his ear, and he was isolated in a pen until he was adopted by Walters-Woo at 5 months old. At the time he had a cut on his eye, staples in his ears and his tail had been docked, she said.

"He was always an accident-proned little guy," Walters-Woo said.

Walters-Woo was able to bring Titan home Monday from DoveLewis, a nonprofit emergency veterinary clinic in Portland. There may be surgeries in his future, depending on how well his leg heals. But for now their days will revolve around wound care, doses of medicine — and lots and lots of snuggling.

"His recovery is going to be long," Walters-Woo said. "His wound is seven inches long and three inches wide."

Gissel, the frog-hunting woman who found Titan, refused to accept the $1,000 reward, Walters-Woo said.

"She said to put it toward Titan's medical bills," Walters-Woo said. "I am so grateful to her, and to Amanda, and to everyone. It's really a miracle. I am so blessed."

Source: http://www.dailytidings.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110121/NEWS02/101210307
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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Daisy, sheltie

The Ultimate Christmas Gift: A Lost Dog, Found!
Summit residents and dog lovers join together to save a lost dog and deliver the ultimate Christmas present to one local family.
By Michelle Colandrea (New Providence Patch)
February 7, 2011

Nothing brings a community together quite like a shared mission and just before Christmas, Summit residents young and old found themselves unified on such a quest in search of a lost dog named Daisy.

Susan Grates is happily reunited with her dog Daisy who went missing for three and a half days in December but was miraculously found on Christmas morning.

You might remember having been in your local coffee shop or grocery store during the days leading up to December 25 and seeing a lost dog flier posted on the door. Or maybe you received the e-mail that showed up in countless inboxes that described the details of the dog’s possible whereabouts. Or perhaps you read a breaking news alert advising locals to keep their eyes open for the Blue Merl Sheltie on your town’s Patch homepage.

However you heard about the search for one of Summit’s four legged residents, we hope you also heard about her miraculous Christmas morning rescue. Read on for the heartwarming tale of a lost dog, the spirit and support of a New Jersey community, and a very happy ending.

On December 22, Summit resident Susan Grates, along with her husband and their three grown children and their families, were enjoying a holiday vacation in relaxing Puerto Vallarta, Mexico when miles away in chilly New Jersey, the Grates’ dog Daisy had just escaped from her sitter’s New Providence home.

“That breed (of dog) really wants to be in their home,” Grates said. “They want to defend their own property. (Daisy) wasn’t home, and she wanted to get home!”

For the next 48 hours or so, the Grates would be completely unaware of the devastating event that would soon gain the attention of residents and authorities in New Providence, Summit, Berkeley Heights and surrounding towns.

The Grates family had agreed to remain relatively “unplugged” from their electronic devices during their vacation save for the wireless internet access provided at their hotel. According to Grates, the family members didn’t own international cell phones, they hadn’t lugged their laptops along with them, and they hadn’t left their contact information with anyone back home in Summit.

“We’re never under the radar, and it’s kind of a nice thing to be unplugged,” said Grates of what could have been a relaxing vacation away from daily phone calls and e-mail messages.

But 2,278 miles away in New Providence, Daisy’s dog sitter and family were chasing after the Grates’ dog.

“When she’s scared, she runs surprisingly fast,” said Grates of the 23-pound dog which she and her husband have owned for more than six years.

Having had no luck apprehending the speedy canine, the searchers immediately contacted the Summit and New Providence police departments and eventually informed the authorities in Berkeley Heights as well. Grates had left the contact information of family friend and neighbor Tine Mikkelsen in case of an emergency and she was soon alerted of the news.

Mikkelsen played a crucial part in spreading the word about the missing Daisy. She sent out alerts through Facebook and Craigslist, posted fliers, called area veterinarians, and sent out an e-mail that eventually reached Patch staff inboxes.

“She was perseverance personified,” said Grates of her friend.

Other area residents also joined the search effort including a neighbor's son Matt who assembled some friends and used his new Christmas flashlights to look for the missing furry friend. Even Paw, the Mikkelsens’ golden retriever helped to search for her canine companion.

“In this neighborhood especially, most everyone cares about the dogs,” said Daisy’s owner.

On Christmas Eve, the news finally reached the vacationing Grates via a family member’s Smartphone internet connection. Shortly after they were informed, Susan decided to make the trip back to New Jersey to assist Daisy’s search team.

“I figured, ‘I’ll never be able to find (Daisy), it’s a needle in a haystack,’” said Grates of her thoughts on the decision to head home and help with the search.

As luck would have it, Grates wouldn’t even have to step foot in America before her beloved Daisy was discovered.

According to Grates, the final rescue effort began on Christmas morning in nearby Berkeley Heights. A happy family (who have yet to be identified) were opening their Christmas presents when the mother spotted Daisy through a window. The woman had received the chain email the day before and seen the lost dog flier posted in her local Dunkin’ Donuts, telling of the missing sheltie.

“She said ‘That looks like that dog!’” recounted Grates of the story she’d been told. “So what do they do? They stopped opening their gifts, they dropped what they were doing, and the man got in the car to follow Daisy.”

Meanwhile, the man’s wife made the necessary phone calls to let searchers know the dog had been spotted. Soon, a team of dog lovers, family friends including the Mikkelsens and Paw, and neighbors who heard the news were out of their homes and on the streets to do what they could to get Daisy home.

The story ends in a Berkeley Heights neighborhood near Summit Medical Group where a fellow dog lover had cornered Daisy on his front porch and was keeping her captive through the skillful use of doggie treats.

“So then there’s this crowd of people Christmas morning descending upon Daisy!” said Grates of the scene when Daisy was finally found.

Altogether, Daisy had traveled at least three miles and spent three and a half days without any reliable source of food or water.

Less than 24 hours after the dog’s discovery, a record breaking blizzard would sweep through New Jersey and those involved would call it a miracle that Daisy was found in the nick of time.

“Our friends never gave up searching daily along with their children and dogs, putting food and water on our porch and checking our yard and property several times a day in case she found her way back home," Grates said, calling the efforts of those involved “tireless” and described them as “an outpouring of love.”

Since Daisy’s return, the Grates and their dog’s unlikely search team have continued to receive congratulations and well-wishes from friends and town residents.

“Our visit to the Murray Hill Vet's office was more an exhilarated family reunion with stories of Daisy sightings than a regular pet check-up," Grates said. "The MHV staff congratulated us, expressed their concern, and informed us of the many well wishers who had contacted their office."

Grates said repeatedly that she would like to thank all of those who took part in Daisy’s rescue.

“It was heartwarming; we were very moved by it. I think that it brought people together, it really did. I think it goes beyond just the love of a dog. It speaks to people wanting to help each other out in these three communities.”

Source: http://newprovidence.patch.com/articles/the-ultimate-christmas-gift-a-lost-dog-found-2

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Dixie, aussie

Dixie is Found!!!!
Serina L
March 29, 2010

Dixie- thank god, is found! I would like to share the story filling in the gaps between her loss and her final return.

Dixie was lost and found in March 2010

As we know, Dixie had gone missing out of Terence's back yard Tuesday night, and he bagan searching for her. There were many people involved donating hours uppon hours of their time walking, and talking to people and handing out fliers. The mornings were early, and the nights were so late, you could count them as quite early as well.

On day two (Wednesday) Besides the street searching, her hunt became more advanced including puting fliers in pet stores, gas statios, any other place that would take them, including along the streets. The humane society and animal control were called. (and became a daily task)

Then on Wednesday night, it was beginning to feel hopeless. We had heard stories about puppies being stolen from people's back yards, and that was a huge and gut wrenching shock! We knew that either way, the longer she was lost, the less of a chance we would have in getting her back.

That night, we searched the internet for any puppy sale listing in Minnesota. (ther are a lot of them by the way) We put adds on any internet sight that might help, and in every news paper we could think of surrounding the St Cloud area. This was extremely time consuming, not to mention heavy on the pocket book. None of the time or money mattered however, as long as it gave us even the smallest posibility of getting Dixie home safe.

Thursday, a lost dog specialist was called, and she set up a search game plan, and designed poster boards to promote to the dense weekend traffic in St Cloud. The poster boards were picked up thursday night in big lake and a group of people were recruited to create a full on weekend search for Dixie.

Friday morning, Terence was on his way to pick up Dixie's Lost Dog posters, when he got a call. The newspaper adds had come out, and someone had Dixie! Terence turned right around and hurried back to St Cloud to be reunited with his dog.

He arrived at the house where Dixie had been staying the whole time, and was pleasantly greeted by the man at the door.

The man asked about the reward posted on the flier Terence had put out. Terence told him he was planning on offering $500 - he didn't have it with him, but he would be happy to get the money and bring it to him. The man then said that he planned to keep her until Terence came back with his reward. Terence told the man he was happy to get the money and come right back, but he wasn't going to leave without his dog. Then the man became hostile and informed him that this was unacceptible and refused to give Terence his dog back!

Terence then called the police. While they waited the man informed him that he had planned to keep Dixie and only decided to call and return her when he saw the posters. He then had the audacity to inform Terence that HE owned the dog now, and his friend in the house piped in "posession is 9 10ths of the law"

The police came and negotiations began. Obviously Terence owned the dog, but the officer asked him to try and settle this peacefully and which point a friend brought $75 to the house for the man and Terence left with his dog.

Bravo to Terence for managing to stay civil! He had spent the better part of a year finding and preparing for the perfect dog, and finally got to bring her home last month. Then this jerk off just decides to make her his! She would have been home days ago if it weren't for the scum like the man who poor Dixie had to stay with for 3 whole days!

Hours of searching, and hundreds of dollars were spent in her search, and all the while this guy had taken her with absolutely no intention of giving her back. If the flier hadn't said there was a reward for her, he wouldn't have even given her back. He would have just let us continue to worry, with no idea what may have happened to her for his own selfish benefit. I take a little bit of comfort in knowing this sorry excuse for a human being didn't get the full reward. He screwed himself with his own selfishness and showed his true colors. I honestly hope that his selfishness continues to hold him back in life because he doesn't deserve any better.

Meanwhile, little Dixie is back home, and content! She is micro chipped and will never go back yard running without her collar and close supervision again! (Smart little girl to figure her way out of a fenced yard)

Thank you to all of the good people out there who helped us find Dixie! The world is blessed to have good people like you in it! I can't believe the number of people who stepped up to help us find her, whether it was keeping watch for her, or helping in the full on search, every little bit helped. It's nice to know there are some truely wonderful people out there!

Source: http://www.facebook.com/#!/group.php?gid=107988595892223

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Piper, tan dog

Kingsport family's lost, sick dog returns for Christmas
By Phillip Murrell
Published: December 24, 2010

A Kingsport family has been searching for their sick dog since Saturday.

The Nelson family went on vacation, leaving Piper at her local animal hospital.

While an employee walked her, she accidently slipped off her harness.

The Nelsons and the animal hospital have been looking for Piper, hoping to find her so she could get her medicine for her illness.

She has a disease that causes inflammation of her spinal chord.

Thanks to dozens of flyers and a helpful neighbor, they found her.

Larry Lyon looked through a wooded area in his neighborhood of Preston Forest, and found Piper laying down at the bottom of a hill.

An 11 Connects crew captured the moments leading up to a Lyon finding her.

"Oh...Merry Christmas to the Nelson family. This is great! I've got to call everybody," exclaimed Marsha Nelson.

Piper is doing well tonight - she's set to receive chemo treatment for her illness on Monday.

Watch the video above to see the amazing reunion.




Source: http://www2.tricities.com/news/2010/dec/24/kingsport-familys-lost-sick-dog-returns-christmas-ar-735553/?referer=http://twitter.com/&shorturl=http://tricities.com/ar/735553/

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Huck, toy poodle

Residents' Kindness Helps Reunite Family With Lost Dog
Strangers tips help find toy poodle in New York Times writer's book, "Huck."
By Don E. Smith Jr
November 30, 2010

Wyckoff residents were among the many to help a New York family find their lost toy poodle, Huck.

In a recent novel released from Broadway Books, residents of Wyckoff were praised for their kindness when Huck, a toy poodle staying in Ramsey, went missing.

In the book "Huck," the Manhattan-based writer Janet Elder details how in 2006, Huck, their family pet, disappeared while the family was on vacation in Florida.

"The thumbnail of the story is my son Michael had wanted a dog for seven years and [in 2005] I was diagnosed with breast cancer," said Elder, who is a senior editor at The New York Times. "We told Michael that while I was going through cancer treatments he needed to think up a name for the dog."

She said she wanted to give her son something positive to focus on while she endured treatments.
"So he chose the name Huck, and Huck became a symbol of hope for us," said Elder.

She said that the week preceding the start of treatments, her family went to Newark International Airport and picked up the toy poodle.

"We brought him home and fell in love with him," said Elder.
In March 2006, Elder said her family took their first vacation and brought the dog to her sister's home in Ramsey.

However, Huck went missing.

"We got the phone call in Florida that Huck had been missing for six hours, so we boarded an airplane and flew to New Jersey," said Elder. "We got a motel room and stayed there for three days."

She explained that her family was especially concerned about his safety, given his small size and the prospect that he was on unfamiliar ground in the foothills of the Ramapo Mountains.
When Elder and her family arrived in New Jersey, she said was met with a pleasant surprise as people from Wyckoff, Ramsey, Allendale and Mahwah assisted in the search.

"I had people from Wyckoff ask me for posters," said Elder. "They offered to put them up in their town."

She added that people would offer tips on where to look and kids on bikes would volunteer to look in the woods.

"We were just touched by their kindness," said Elder.

Finally, the family received a phone call from a man in Mahwah.

"He told us that he saw a dog that looked like Huck, and we got him back," said Elder, but she added with a chuckle: "As to how we got him back, well you'll have to read the book."

Elder regularly covers the world of politics for The Times, and she called "Huck" a labor of love.

"The story has a real happy ending," said Elder. "We have been surprised at the response we have gotten."

The book has led her to The Late Show with David Letterman and The View.
And the happy endings do not end with the reunion of the family and Huck. "I am doing well," she said, when asked about her health.

"As Letterman said, 'It makes you feel good about everything.' "

Check out Elder's book here.

Source: http://wyckoff.patch.com/articles/residents-kindness-helps-reunite-family-with-lost-dog#c

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Katie, sheltie

Lost dog found after 25 days at Lake Crescent
By Leah Leach, Peninsula Daily News
November 21. 2010 2:01AM

LAKE CRESCENT -- Katie, a sheltie who was lost for more than three weeks, is now home safe.

Katie, a Shetland sheepdog who was lost for more than three weeks, is home again with John and Donna Fabian. The Fabians live in the Port Ludlow-Shine area near Hood Canal.
She was brought home Friday "after 25 days in the wilderness," thin, but apparently healthy, said John Fabian, 71.

"I'm kind of an old fellow, and I've been down through a lot in my life, but it brought me to tears."

Fabian is a former NASA space shuttle astronaut and a founder of the Hood Canal Coalition, an environmental group that opposes industrialization of Hood Canal.

He and his wife, Donna, live in the Port Ludlow-Shine area near the Canal.

Mrs. Fabian spent a sleepless night in a cold car before she saw the Shetland sheepdog and coaxed it to her as she knelt on a trail near the Olympic Park Institute on Lake Crescent on Thursday afternoon.

"She's our Thanksgiving miracle," she said.

Two get reward

The reunion resulted in a Thanksgiving gift for two other people as well.

They had spotted the dog and notified the Fabians, who had offered a $1,000 reward for Katie's return.

Fabian contributed $250 to the Association of National Park Rangers in the name of Mark O'Neill, an Olympic National Park ranger, and wrote a second check for $750 to Maggie Van Catfort of the Olympic Park Institute.

O'Neill reported last week the first sighting of the 4-year-old dog since she had run off from the Fabians during a visit to the lake Oct. 24.

The Fabians, who had owned her for only three months, and the dog's breeder, Cindy Wilson of Bremerton, searched for her the first week and nailed up posters near the Lake Crescent Lodge, which is about 20 miles west of Port Angeles.

After a story in the Peninsula Daily News, the Fabians received calls of commiseration from other dog lovers -- but no one reported seeing the 4-year-old sheltie.

"We decided it was fruitless until we had a sighting," Fabian said. "We didn't know where to search."

That changed Wednesday with the call from O'Neill, who had spotted the dog on the road between the entrance to the lodging area and the lodge itself.

"He followed her slowly in the car as she traveled down the road, then lost track of her," Fabian said.

Mrs. Fabian and Wilson raced up to the lake, picking up a live animal trap from the Olympic Peninsula Humane Society on the way, and spent the night in their cars outside Lake Crescent Lodge, which is closed for the season.

Snow on ground

When they awakened, snow lay on the ground.

"We hardly slept at all, it was so cold," Mrs. Fabian said.

And they hadn't thought to bring breakfast.

"We made sure we had dog food, but we didn't have food for ourselves," she said.

They snacked on some Kashi bars Mrs. Fabian found in her glove compartment, set up the trap with the help of some workmen -- and continued to search.

"We felt we had to get her that day or the next because . . . it was so cold," she said.

At about 4 p.m., a call came in on Wilson's cell phone.

Spotted on beach

Van Catfort had spotted a sheltie on the beach near the Olympic Park Institute and had called numbers she found on posters -- first the Fabians' home, then Wilson's cell.

"We were yards away from her when she called," Mrs. Fabian said.

"Cindy said, 'We are right here. We will be there in seconds."

When Mrs. Fabian saw Katie, she dropped to her knees and pulled out food, speaking softly to the dog.

"She walked back and forth, very nervous, and finally took the food. I grabbed her collar," she said.

Fabian had delivered supplies to the two women, updated the posters and returned to the Port Townsend area to get another trap from the Jefferson County Humane Society.

"While I was getting the trap, my wife called and said, 'We have the dog.'"

O'Neill and Van Catfort recognized the dog because of the posters the Fabians had put up -- and because of the PDN.

"We had been up there and everybody we had talked to said, is this the dog that was in the paper?

"The PDN did an amazing amount of good," Fabian said.

Mrs. Fabian and Wilson stayed overnight at Indian Valley Motel, part of the complex that includes Granny's Cafe, which allowed the dogs to stay with them.

They brought Katie home about a half-hour before the Fabians were interviewed.

"She's excited to be here. . . . She's very thin. She's extraordinarily hungry," Fabian said.

Wilson, who Fabian described as "an amazing dog lady," had owned Katie for three years before the Fabians adopted her, and had dog-sat Katie while the Fabians were out of the country for three weeks.

"This was like a loss for her family, too," Fabian said.

Katie, who the Fabians figure lived on bear droppings and other unsavory fare, was to be taken to the vet for a check-up.

And the couple now has "increased security awareness," as Fabian put it.

"We're going to be awfully careful about not allowing her to bolt away. . . . She's going to have to learn how to go out and poop on a leash."

Source: http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20101121/NEWS/311219985/lost-dog-found-after-25-days-at-lake-crescent

Friday, October 22, 2010

Harley, teacup chihuahua

Chihuahua reunited with owner after being loose for 11 days
By Carrie Ann Knauer, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 21, 2010


Cheryl Naugle, left, holds her chihuahua Harley as her daughter Paige, right, with her dog Bandit, looks on at their Taneytown home Monday evening. Harley was found at the Maryland Wine Festival Saturday after going missing in Westminster for more than a week.

When Cheryl Naugle found out that her dog Harley had run away from her mother's house on Sept. 8, she took the next four days off work to look for him.

It was all the vacation time she had, but she was desperate to find the 2-year-old teacup chihuahua that was so important to her, she said.

Saturday afternoon at the Carroll County Farm Museum, amongst the excitement going on for The Maryland Wine Festival, a little boy assisted by a few adults found Harley and turned him over to Naugle's sister, who was working at the festival.

After 11 days of being on the loose and spotted all around the Center Street-Washington Road area, Harley is back home with his family and recovering from his adventure.

When Harley was dropped off with Naugle's mother for an overnight stay, they forgot to bring his collar, Naugle said. Her mother tried to use the leash only when she took him outside, but Harley wiggled his way out and escaped.

After he first went missing, Naugle's daughter Paige made posters and put them all over the Center Street area in Westminster, where Harley had gotten loose. On Sept. 9, Naugle got a call from a security guard at Carroll Hospital Center who said he had seen Harley sleeping near some construction trailers. The guard offered him a blanket and a bowl of water, but Harley growled and the security guard gave him some space. He was gone within an hour, before Naugle could get to him.

Encouraged by the sighting, Naugle and her husband Todd spent Sept. 10 through 12 camping out around the hospital and Carroll Springs School, walking all over the neighborhood, handing out fliers and asking residents if they had seen Harley. They went to the Farm Museum and talked to people at the Mason-Dixon Historical Society's Steam & Gas Round-Up, hoping Harley would show up there looking for food.

"We were walking railroad tracks, we were walking through the Farm Museum woods, we were everywhere," she said. "We were sleeping in our vehicles, searching up and down."

Sept. 13, Naugle decided to make more fliers and added that Harley had been seen at the hospital. While giving fliers out in the Cranberry Square Shopping Center, a stylist at Great Clips told Naugle she had seen a Chihuahua on the evening Sept. 11 at the intersection of Md. 97 and Hook Road. Naugle redirected her search to the neighborhood around Westminster High School and Carroll Community College.

Naugle got a call the afternoon of Sept. 13 that children had seen a Chihuahua at recess at Friendship Valley Elementary School on Gist Road. Unfortunately, no one had called the Humane Society, she said, and he had gotten away again. Three hours behind him on the trail, Naugle couldn't find him, but talked to neighbors along Gist Road, asking them to keep an eye out for him.

The next morning, Naugle was back in the neighborhood, looking all over. Todd Naugle went out to the neighborhood at 4:30 a.m. each morning before going to work, hoping to find him.

On Wednesday, Naugle had to return to work, having exhausted her vacation days. By the end of the week, she said they were getting nervous because there hadn't been any calls or sightings since Sept. 13. She was beginning to give up hope.

Friday, Naugle was supposed to be heading down to Ocean City for Bike Week. She was reluctant to go, but decided to make one more round of fliers about Harley. She sent one to her sister, Heather Plank, who works for the county government and was going to be working at the wine festival over the weekend, which is held at the Farm Museum.

"I said ‘can you print these new ones off and place them up there and ask anybody if they've seen him?' I figured he was probably working his way back from the elementary school," Naugle said.

And sure enough, Saturday afternoon, a little boy was playing around the Farm Museum pond and noticed Harley in a drainage pipe, which Naugle said she believes he was using as a hiding place. The boy and some adults worked to lure him out with food, using a rope from one of the festival's tents to fashion a temporary leash for him to keep him from getting away again.

Word about the dog was passed along to the Farm Museum staff, and when it was mentioned that the dog was a Chihuahua, someone went to find Plank to see if she would recognize the dog.

"Thank God my sister was working," Naugle said.

Naugle said she pulled over her bike and was standing on the side of U.S. 50 when she got her sister's call, and she was filled with joy and relief.

"I've never shed so many tears, my husband and I," Naugle said.

Naugle's mother-in-law came to the Farm Museum to pick Harley up, and Harley recognized her and was happy to go home with her. Naugle arrived back in Westminster Sunday and was reunited with the exhausted, hungry dog.

Starting at only 5 pounds, Harley had visibly lost weight, she said, and was very excited to be back home and eating his normal food again. He is technically under quarantine now because he bit one of the people who had helped rescue him, Naugle said, but he is going to the veterinarian Wednesday for a check-up.

"He's eating, he's just really thin," Naugle said. "He's better this morning. He just follows me around, and he's getting back to normal."

Harley's disappearance has had a bigger effect on the family as well.

"[Todd and I] have been separated for 11 months, and this dog kind of brought us back together," Naugle said. "That dog is our baby."

Source: http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/news/local/article_aa0a3e04-c530-11df-98cc-001cc4c03286.html