Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Sugar, maltese

Stolen dog reunited with south Fort Myers owners
news-press.com
November 20, 2010

A Maltese, stolen Friday during a burglary, was returned safely to its rightful owners later that day.


Shortly after noon Friday, Lee County sheriff's deputies responded to Pine Hammock Circle in south Fort Myers in reference to a burglary. The victims advised that their home had been forcibly entered while they were away. The suspect or suspects ransacked the home, stealing various items including a computer, a flat-screen television, money, jewelry and the couple’s pet dog, an 8-year-old Maltese named Sugar.

During the evening hours on Friday, deputies were called to the Publix at Summerlin Road and Colonial Boulevard. One of the clerks told deputies a regular customer had returned to the store after shopping and said he found a dog in his car. The customer had left his windows down in the Publix parking lot while he shopped. The clerk said she recognized the dog, which had been featured in media reports throughout the day. The dog was unharmed and has been reunited with its owners.

The investigation into the burglary continues.

Source: http://www.news-press.com/article/20101120/CRIME/101120014/Stolen-dog-reunited-with-south-Fort-Myers-owners
Printer-friendly version here

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, November 19, 2010

Bear, malti-poo

News Update: Puppy Missing from Local Vet Office Found and Reunited with Family
By Erika Conner
November 19, 2010

The Tuttle family had been waiting since Tuesday to hear the news they received Friday.

The Tuttle family received good news Friday when they learned their puppy, who went missing from a local vet hospital after surgery, had been found.
Their 6-month-old maltipoo puppy, who went missing after spending Monday night recovering from surgery at Parkway Veterinary Hospital, has been found.

Cindy Tuttle received a call Friday morning from Danville Veterinary Hospital that staff had found a dog who looked like the missing Bear.

"She said, 'We have a dog here that might be your missing puppy,' " said Tuttle.

The worker at the veterinary clinic had seen a post Tuttle put on Craigslist on Thursday. After hearing the hospital's employee describe the puppy they had found, Tuttle said she got in the car, hopeful she would be reunited with Bear.

"We knew it was him when we saw him and it was just wonderful," said Tuttle after arriving at the hospital and confirming the dog was in fact her beloved Bear.

The Pleasanton resident said the hospital believes someone tossed Bear, who was in a soft-shelled carrier, into the bushes outside its entrance. She was told the receptionist heard noise outside and saw a car speeding off. That's when Bear was discovered.

Tuttle said she believed whoever had the dog intended to keep him.

"They trimmed some fur from his face, put a blue collar on him and fed him, because he gained half a pound," she said.

After picking up Bear in Danville, Tuttle stopped by Parkway Veterinary Hospital to share the good news.

"Everyone came out and they were crying they were so happy that he had been found," she said. The staff immediately put a microchip in Bear at no cost.

Tuttle said Bear appears to be tired but is still the same "love bug" dog her family knew. She acknowledged this has been a very trying time but is thankful things turned out the way they did.

Grace, 8, snuggling with Bear on the sofa, added, "I feel really good that he's home."

Tuttle said she hadn't been sure her family would see Bear again.

"I'm just so thankful that whoever had him took good care of him. We will have a happy Thanksgiving," she said.

Source: http://pleasanton.patch.com/articles/update-missing-puppy-found-and-reunited-with-family

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Faith, bassett hound

Missing Dog Found Miles From Home, Reunited With Owners
Dog Named Faith Found In St. Francis Tuesday Afternoon
November 16, 2010

MENOMONEE FALLS, Wis. -- An amazing journey lead a Waukesha County couple to find Faith, their 8-year old basset hound.

Faith vanished from their Menomonee Falls yard Monday evening.
 She was found Tuesday afternoon in St. Francis, nearly 25 miles from home.

"How she ended up here, I don't know. But she did," said Elliot Brown, who found the dog. "I saw this little munchkin running down the street, so I started chasing her. She ran about a half-mile before I caught her. I know she doesn't look fast, but she is."

Brown took the pup into his home, and after making a few calls he discovered the droopy-eyed dog was missing.

Faith's faithful owners are photo-toting proud puppy parents. They rescued the dog, once in extremely poor health.

But clearly she can make a comeback, considering she likely traveled more than the distance of a marathon.

"I'm telling you it was just the happiest time," said Doris Luedke, Faith's owner. "It has been the longest 24 hours I've spent."

Brown said he is no stranger to rescuing dogs. This is the third dog he's reunited with owners this year.

Source: http://www.wisn.com/r/25820362/detail.html
Printer-friendly version here