Showing posts with label 2 weeks lost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2 weeks lost. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2013

Handover, pitbull

Homeless Man Reunited With Dog Stolen Three Weeks Ago
May 22, 2013

James Bryan, a homeless man living in Florida, woke up the morning of May 8 to find that his pet dog was missing. The dog, a blue pit bull named Handover, was the only remaining tie to Bryan's previous life, before he'd lost his farm, his home, and nearly all of his other personal belongings.


"Handover is my best friend. He's my heart and soul," Bryan told ABC Action News last week for a story about his then-missing dog. “If anybody sees him, please bring him home.”

Bryan, who lives along U.S. 19 in Hudson, Florida, feared Handover might have been targeted by someone involved with a dogfighting ring.

“I'm praying to God nobody's putting him into an arena and fighting him," Bryan said. "He is a force of nature."

Word spread about Handover's theft, and eventually Carolyn Texter, who knew Handover and Bryan from her work with animal rescues, heard and decided to help.

"That's the hardest thing I'm having right now. To even explain to my kids how someone could possibly steal someone's family member," Texter said.

Texter started a Facebook page to find Handover and, with the help of a few friends, raised a $200 reward for his return. The story eventually went viral. The Facebook page received thousands of likes and attracted the attention of local news stations. Information about and pictures of Handover was shared thousands of time. Soon, the reward money swelled to $1,000.

Wednesday afternoon, all the work paid off, and Bryan was reunited with Handover.

Handover was taken to a veterinarian for an check-up – he was healthy – and to have a microchip implanted in case he goes missing again.

So far, there's been no official word from Bryan, but on the Facebook page Texter described him as "speechless" and thankful for all the help he'd received.

As for Handover's name: He was a gift from Bryan's then-wife five years ago. As she was holding the new dog, she asked Bryan what he wanted to call his new pet. “Hand him over!” was Bryan's immediate response, and the name stuck.

Source: http://gawker.com/homeless-man-reunited-with-dog-stolen-three-weeks-ago-509407912

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Bailey and Baxter, golden retrievers

Sandwich dogs safe at home after two-week walkabout
By George Brennan, Cape Code Online
October 10, 2012

SANDWICH — Cue the Disney sequel machine: Sandwich has its own version of "The Incredible Journey" starring Bailey and Baxter, a pair of golden retrievers found after nearly two weeks away from home.

Penny Blackwell welcomes her two golden retrievers, Bailey, left, and Baxter after their extended venture away from home. The pair escaped while tied together and were on the lam for two weeks as Blackwell pushed a social media campaign to find them.

The two dogs, owned and loved by Penny Blackwell, wandered off Sept. 25 from their home on Stowe Road, still attached to each other by a leash.

Blackwell's husband, Bob, had taken the two dogs — Bailey, 6, and Baxter, 4 — for a swim and tied them outside so they could dry off.

The pair wiggled themselves loose, their leashes still connected to each other, and took off on their wild adventure.

"It was horrible," Blackwell said. "The worst thing was not knowing if they were alive. It's one thing to have a dog die. But to have them gone and not know, it was just awful."

Blackwell turned to Facebook for help and support. She called local animal shelters and kennels. She posted on Craigslist, and her husband searched and put up posters.

Bailey had been given to Blackwell as a present.

"Who gives a puppy as a 50th birthday gift?" she joked. "Really, what's wrong with jewelry? But (Bailey) is the love of my life."

Blackwell had pretty much given up hope of finding her precious pooches alive when she heard from her friend that Baxter had been found Saturday, about a half-mile from home, by a neighbor off Boardley Road. Blackwell was away, so the friend took him in until they could be reunited Monday morning.

It was Baxter who led Blackwell to Bailey on Monday afternoon. Through a trail in the woods off Boardley Road, Baxter sniffed his way through the underbrush until they found Bailey hopelessly tangled around trees and bushes.

When he arrived home, Bailey went straight to his water bowl, lapped up some water and then jumped all over Blackwell and Baxter.

Despite being in the woods for nearly two weeks, both dogs came through their ordeals relatively unscathed — though Baxter did spend much of Tuesday at the veterinarian with stomach issues.

Baxter lost 8 pounds and Bailey lost 10, but neither dog had a problem with either fleas or ticks from their extended stay outside, Blackwell said.

"It's mind-boggling to think they could be there for nearly two weeks and come through it," said Blackwell, a school committee member for the Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical School and president of the Massachusetts Association of School Committees.

Social media definitely played a role in the happy reunion. "That's how my friends knew they were missing," Blackwell said. "The support I received was just incredible."

The family reunion has lit up Blackwell's Facebook wall. Postings about the dogs being found have generated more than 100 comments and likes.

"Wow!! Best news ever!!!" wrote Brett Stonstrom Wilson.

"Relief all around!" added Kathleen Dickson Langevin. "I love happy endings!"

Source: http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20121010/NEWS/210100315&Template=photos

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, January 27, 2013

Mandy, flat coated retriever

FOUND: Mandy, Missing Since Car Fire, Reunited with Owner
By Jeanne Gustafson
January 26, 2013

Mandy, the dog missing since a fiery Kirkland car crash two weeks ago, was found by local residents Saturday morning near the site of the accident, and apparently is in good health, though she is on her way to be checked out by a veterinarian, said pet rescuer Jim Branson.

Kirkland residents spotted Mandy Saturday morning and kept track of her 
until her owner could be brought to the scene.

Mandy's owner, an elderly gentleman with no family in the area, has been relying on community support to help find the flat-coated retriever.

The community came out in a big way, organizing searches and reporting numerous sightings of the shy dog. Bitterly cold temperatures over recent days added to the concerns for the senior pooch.

Branson said Mandy was seen about 5 blocks from accident site atop Finn Hill, near 138th and 72nd.

"We got a call this morning of a sighting on Holmes Point Drive. Lots of people went down and kept track of where she was" until her owner could be brought to the site, Branson said. Mandy came right to her owner, and was taken to the vet for a checkup.

Branson, of 3 Retrievers Lost Pet Rescue, has been operating a Facebook page dedicated to helping find Mandy and working with local volunteers.

MEOW Cat Rescue  volunteer Marilyn Hendrickson said she was out with searchers after the call came in this morning that the dog had been sighted on Holmes Point Road, and that Mandy, though thinner and soaking wet, appears to be in good health and was thrilled to be back with her family.

Source: http://kirkland.patch.com/articles/found-mandy-missing-since-car-fire-reunited-with-owner?fb_action_ids=10200402901185958&fb_action_types=og.recommends&fb_source=aggregation&fb_aggregation_id=246965925417366

Friday, December 28, 2012

Abby, blind dog

Blind dog lost in storm reunited with owners
Source: AP
27 Dec 2012

A blind dog that became lost in a snowstorm in Alaska has found its way home in what its owners are calling a Christmas miracle.


Abby, an eight-year-old mixed breed dog, went missing on Dec 13 in bad weather in the town of Fairbanks.

While her owners assumed they would never see the dog again, it survived temperatures of -40C and travelled 10 miles before being taken in by a local vet.

"It's a miracle, there's no other words to describe it," said McKenzie Grapengeter, Abby's owner. "We never expected to have her to be returned safe and alive."

Musher and vet Mark May said he came across the dog while running his team on Dec 19, but didn't stop to pick it up.

"It ran with us for about a mile on the way home before she fell off the pace, but I had a big dog team so I couldn't grab it," he said. "I said, 'boy I hope it finds somebody's house.'"

The next day, the dog turned up at Mr May's house.

"Everybody just assumed it was some kind of scaredy-cat, but there it was in front of the door in our dog lot and it was blind," Mr May said. "It was sitting there, all the way from 14 mile on the winter trail down into this neighborhood, I guess by just sniffing, so I picked it up and brought it in."

To Mr May's surprise, the dog had no signs of frostbite.

"No frozen ears, no frozen toes, she'll probably go back home and it'll (be) business as usual. She's no worse for wear but quite an adventure," he said.

The Grapengeter family hadn't tagged or put a microchip in the dog, but the community used social media to track down Abby's owners.

"We're so, so grateful for all (the community's) hard work," McKenzie Grapengeter said. "They've given us the most amazing Christmas gift we could ever ask for."

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/9766860/Blind-dog-lost-in-storm-reunited-with-owners.html

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Ralph, shepherd lab mix

Maryland Couple Reunited With Dog Adopted From Egypt
By Benjamin R Freed
December 26, 2012

A Germantown, Md. couple got a very nice Christmas Day surprise when workers at Dulles International Airport recovered a dog the couple had brought over from Egypt but ran off as soon as he arrived two weeks ago.


The dog, a German shepherd-Labrador mix named Ralph, was brought over from the streets of Egypt (eat your heart out, Tom Friedman) on December 12. But while his new owner, David Scott was loading Ralph into the car for the ride to his new home, the dog got loose and bolted across the Dulles parking lots.

Scott told NBC4 that his wife first encountered Ralph while visiting friends in Egypt who had been caring for the pooch, but because that family could not care for the Ralph, the Scotts went about trying to adopt him. It took six months of paperwork and waiting for a chaperone before Ralph could be flown to the United States.

But the dog survived his two weeks in the Northern Virginia wilderness, and was found yesterday morning back at the airport thanks to a trap set by Dulles employees. "REUNITED! DULLES RESCUE DOG FOUND TODAY!" blared a posting on a Facebook page that tracks lost dogs in the D.C. area.

The Scotts were reunited with Ralph some time yesterday, according to the posting. The trap used to capture the wayward dog was described as "humane."

UPDATE, 1 p.m.: Kimberly Gibbs, a spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, says it was airport police who found Ralph on Christmas morning.

Officers conducted a brief search the day the dog went missing, but there was no ongoing coordinated effort to find Ralph . The dog was found without any identifying tags, but was reconnected with its owners after matching a description.

But just how did Ralph survive on Dulles' 12,000-acre campus? Scott obtained a trap from a local humane society, left it in the parking lot and routinely filled it with food, as he would check back occasionally and find that Ralph—or possibly some other animal—had eaten it without being captured. On Tuesday morning, though, Dulles police officers positioned a dish of dog food in a position that could trigger the trap, and Ralph was caught in about an hour, Gibbs says.

"Very smart dog," she adds

Source: http://dcist.com/2012/12/md_couple_reunited_with_dog_adopted.php

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Brody, black lab

Black lab's long, strange journey has a happy ending
Dog kidnapped in Florida is rescued in Cecil County
By Lisa Broadt
Friday, March 16, 2012


Well-traveled dog Brody was stolen in Florida and rescued in Cecil County

Walking past the rows of forgotten animals at the Cecil County SPCA, Debby Stevens had a sickening thought: What if, after weeks of worry and more than a thousand miles of travel, the dog being housed here was not, in fact, her Brody?

Inside the indicated cage, a black Labrador lay prostrate on the concrete floor.

"Brody?" Stevens asked.

The dog leapt up; Stevens began to cry.

"There was no doubt about it," recalled the SPCA staff member who took Stevens through the kennel. "That dog just came alive."

* * *

Two weeks earlier, Debby Stevens awoke in her Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., home and found that Brody, her family's 9-year-old lab, had not returned home. She knew something was wrong.

Friendly and playful with big brown eyes that expected nothing but hoped for everything, Brody was a key member of the Stevens family. Every so often the lab would nuzzle through the screened-in porch and spend the afternoon exploring, but he always returned home by nightfall, Stevens said.

Except this time.

Sean Stevens, Debby's 25-year-old son, plastered the neighborhood with "Missing" flyers that afternoon, and the family waited and hoped.

"We heard nothing at all on Thursday," Stevens recalled. "But on Friday a woman called. She said: 'I know where your lab is.'"

The anonymous caller reported that a family relative had recently visited Florida with her three little boys. While playing outside, the kids had befriended the outgoing Brody. When the children asked their mother if they could keep the dog, she agreed they could. They loaded Brody in the car and headed back to New York, the caller said.

Stevens was shocked, but as the caller continued, the story grew even stranger.

While driving through Cecil County, the woman was pulled over by police and arrested for driving under the influence, the caller said. Her three human passengers were sent to foster care homes for the night, and the Labrador traveling with her was sent to the local pound.

The next morning, according to the caller, the woman was released from jail. The sequence of events following her release were not exactly clear, but at 12:35 a.m., the 37-year-old mother was struck and killed by an Amtrak train in Havre de Grace.

Stevens might want to try calling some of the local animal shelters, the caller suggested before hanging up.

"I was so grateful for her call, but I just thought: Oh, my God. This is the craziest thing – how does this happen?" Stevens said. "How did they even get so far in a day and a half?"

Sean and his younger brothers, Trevor, 23, and Colin, 20, began calling Maryland animal shelters. They called 15 or 16 before getting a lead at the Cecil County SPCA where a staff member confirmed that a dog matching Brody's description had been brought in recently by police. The family was thrilled.

Stevens, a special education teacher, worried that she would not have time to go up to Maryland to retrieve Brody. But, on the suggestion of a friend, she contacted a New England animal rescue group, which in turn, put her in touch with Martha’s Mutt Movers.

Martha Chandler, the director of the group, coordinates the Mutt Movers to help transport dogs from shelters to rescues.

“I guess you could compare me to a dispatcher at Roadway,” Chandler explained. “People contact me... and I put together a run and send it out to volunteers drivers along the route.

“I normally move dogs for rescues that are pulling from shelters or pounds in the areas where overpopulation is great and euthanasia rates are high.”

While Brody’s case was different from most that Chandler handles, the lab’s story – an elderly dog kidnapped from his owners – stuck a chord with her. So she agreed to take him on.

Stevens called the Cecil County SPCA on Monday to tell them that someone from Chandler's group would be by soon to retrieve Brody.

Not possible, the folks at the SPCA told her. Stevens herself must positively identify and pick up Brody; they could not release the dog to anyone but the owner.

Although Team Brody understood the SPCA's decision, they were unsure of their next move.

"Brody had enough going on – if he was truly Brody – that he didn't need to be pulled by someone that wasn't truly his family," Chandler later said.

"The whole next week we were trying to decide what to do. Finally, I decided to fly up there," Stevens said.

She arrived in Philadelphia on March 9 and was picked up by Marianne Perry, a North East resident and a volunteer with the Mutt Movers. Perry took Stevens to the SPCA where she made the positive identification, and the group then headed back to Perry's home.

Brody was, by all appearances, one happy dog, Perry recalled.

"His huge tail waved the whole ride, and I think it wagged all the time he was at our house," she said with a laugh.

The next morning, Stevens flew back to Jacksonville while Brody, because of his advanced age, was transported home by the Mutt Movers who had received his itinerary and description via email.

"Passenger: Brody; Age: 9 years (they have had him since he was 3 years old!)," the email described him. "Size/weight: 95 pounds (they clearly love him!); General temperament: Very sweet, loving, mellow and friendly – loves everyone and everything; Reason for transport: Being reunited with family after being dognapped."

Perry took the lab as far as Bethesda. He was then picked up by another volunteer and relayed down the East Coast by a total of 10 different Mutt Movers.

At 9:30 p.m. on March 10, after a two-and-a-half week adventure, Brody arrived in Jacksonville and was reunited with his family.

"It was a stressful couple of weeks – it felt like one of our family members disappeared," Stevens said. “But I have to give so much credit to Martha’s Mutt Movers, to strangers who just volunteer to transport animals. Brody really is the luckiest – the wonder dog.”

Source: http://www.cecildaily.com/news/local_news/article_84c49360-6ee9-11e1-83b5-001871e3ce6c.html

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Louie, shepherd-chow mix

Louie Back Home After Huge Facebook Following
2-Year-Old Shepherd Chow Named Louie Missing
POSTED: Wednesday, July 20, 2011
UPDATED: 2:47 pm EDT July 27, 2011

HIGHLAND, Mich. -- A dog who was the subject of a social media-based search initiative since early July has been found.

More pictures of Louie at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LXKWA_b4UI

Meredith Miller, of Highland, said 2-year-old shepherd chow mix named Louie is her pride and joy.

"He means everything to us," she said.

Miller said she and her fiancee were in Chicago on July 6 and had left Louie with her parents. She said she was heartbroken when she got the call that he had gotten away.

"My initial reaction when they called was that I was standing in the middle of Chinatown crying in front of just groups of people," she said. "Because I'm emotional and I'm very attached to this dog."

Miller said she wasn't immediately able to get home to search for Louie, so she started a virtual one.

"I didn't know what else to do. There was nothing that I could do from that hotel room. So, I got on Facebook on my laptop and put it here," she said. "And meditatively, I don't remember how many there were in the beginning, but all of my friends pretty much responded right away."

Miller started the Facebook page "Looking for Louie," which garnered more than 1,000 followers.

Details on where or how Louie was found weren't posted on the page, but group members posted pictures of Louie and Miller being reunited and messages of thankfulness and congratulations.

Source: http://www.clickondetroit.com/family/28614267/detail.html
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Part 1 of the story follows:
Skittish pet rescued from hoarding situation on the run in Highland Township
By Carol Hopkins, The Oakland Press
Published: Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Louie ran away from a home in Highland Township on July 6 and has been missing since.


Meredith Brown and her fiancé were visiting Brown’s parents in Highland this month when the couple decided to take a short trip to Chicago.

The couple left their dog, Louie, at the parents’ home, but the dog ran away July 6. Brown has been trying to locate the dog, which has had a hard life.

“It’s been the worst week of my life,” said Brown, who has been frantically searching for the dog.

Louie — a 2½-year-old, 50 pound shepherd chow mix dog — is mainly brown with a dark muzzle, floppy ears and a curly tail. The dog is skittish and afraid of people.

Brown, who has resided in Baltimore for seven years and works as an elementary school teacher, has the summer off.

She and her fiancé decided to visit her parents, who live in the Axford Acres subdivision, located east of Harvey Lake Road between North Milford Road and East Wardlow Road in Highland.

The couple brought along Louie, a dog with an unusual history.

“He was in a horrible situation,” Brown said. A man in Clark County, Ohio, was hoarding dogs, including Louie.

“He had 300 dogs and 70 were dead,” she said. “This is why Louie is so scared and doesn’t trust people.”

Rescue authorities recovered the dogs and, because there were so many dogs, the Washington, D.C. shelter took 30 of the dogs, she said.

“Because our dog died, we were looking for a dog,” she said.

Brown said her parents were well-informed about Louie’s behaviors, but while Brown and her fiancé were away and her parents were home sleeping, the dog went up on a dresser, managed to open a window, tore through the screen and jumped out.

“Louie has severe separation anxiety when I’m not there,” said Brown. “He bonded with me so quickly. I was his world. He focused on me 100 percent of the time and follows me from room to room. He left to go in search of me.”

Brown’s father spotted the dog early on. After Brown posted fliers in the area and announced on her Facebook page she was searching for the dog, she received calls about people seeing him.

“I’m driving 15 hours a day but I’m always five minutes behind,” she said. Milford police contacted Brown, telling her they saw the dog and were tracking him.

“When the officer got out of his car, Louie took off,” said a weary-sounding Brown.



Brown is asking anyone who sees the dog to follow him but not to scare him away. Then call her.

“I think the only chance is if he sees me,” she said.

Brown worries her dog by now is suffering and hungry.

She said, “He doesn’t know people are looking for him.”

Source: http://www.theoaklandpress.com/articles/2011/07/13/news/local_news/doc4e1db6f595c27787923128.txt?viewmode=fullstory

Monday, May 23, 2011

Mason, tornado survivor

Tornado dog crawls home on broken legs
Mason finds his way back home after Ala. twister
Updated: Wednesday, 18 May 2011

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (CNN/WBRC) - A tornado picked him up and blew him away, but his will to live was so strong he crawled home on two broken legs and survived for two weeks before his family found him.


Meet Mason. It only takes one look to know he's been through a lot in the last couple of weeks. And while his happy but haunted eyes and halting crawl tell us something about his story, his owners helped the Birmingham Jefferson County Animal Control shelter fill in the rest.

On April 27, Mason was hiding in a garage in North Smithfield when a storm picked him up and blew him away. His owners couldn't find him and had about given up when they came back to their home and garage on Monday to sift through debris. They found Mason waiting for them on the porch.

"He's got two broken legs and they're distal radial unal fractures. They've not been able to be in alignment so neither one of them have healed so he had to crawl on two broken legs to get home," said Dr. Barbara Benhart with the shelter.

"This is probably the most dramatic we've seen as far as an injury in an animal that's survived this long. It's kind of tapering off, the amount of animals we're seeing because of the storm. For an animal just to show up on someone's porch after this time was pretty remarkable, especially with the condition he's in," added Phil Doster, also with the shelter.

Mason's owners asked the shelter to take him because they're not able to care for him while they try and piece their lives back together.

"For an animal to go through what he's gone through and not to be ugly, to be happy for any companionship is remarkable. We're honored to be part of his recovery," said Doster.

Now with a little luck and a lot of love, Mason may become a mascot for storm survivors, both on four legs and two legs.

According to WBRC, the hope is that after he recovers, Mason can return to his original family. If not, the shelter says they will find a home for him.

Source: http://www.fox10tv.com/dpps/news/strange_news/tornado-dog-crawls-home-on-broken-legs-ob11-jgr_3814947

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Friday, April 29, 2011

Chance, boxer

Lost dog found almost 2 weeks after I-26 wreck
By Jason Old, New Media Content Director
Updated: Apr 25, 2011 8:09 AM CDT

PEAK, SC (WIS) - A dog that escaped from a car that wrecked on Interstate 26 almost two weeks ago has been found in good condition.


On April 10, Chance, a white boxer, jumped out of a car his sitter wrecked near mile marker 99 on I-26. Another dog, named Lily, was killed in the crash.

Chance's owner, Summer Slaughter, believed her dog was running loose in the woods near the accident site. She was right! The dog was found Friday, just a couple of miles from the interstate. "Some how he survived being outside in the wilderness going under the interstate and going all the way to Marina Road," said Slaughter.

After Chance's disappearance, a search immediately began for him. "So many people were going on their own time out there looking for Chance, calling for Chance," said Slaughter.

Signs were placed everywhere. Facebook and e-mail alerts were sent out, and it all paid off.

An eight-year-old boy sitting on his front porch on Marina Road in Irmo saw Chance in his yard. Remembering seeing flyers for the missing dog, he called for his mother and they were able to get in touch with Slaughter.

Summer and her friends rushed to the area and after several minutes chasing the dog in the rain, they were able to catch Chance. "I mean, he's alive, and I just can't believe it," said Slaughter.

The group took the boxer to the veterinarian with what looked like a broken leg. Dr. Debra Breland checked him out. "He is one lucky dog, very lucky," she said.

Slaughter added that Chance was in good spirits. "This is definitely a very 'Good Friday,'" she said.

So Chance is back home Friday night, safe and sound. It was all thanks to eight-year-old Garrett Porter who found Chance almost by luck. "He looked pretty happy to being back again," said the boy.

Garrett's mom, Cheryl, said he saw the posters. "He said wouldn't it be neat if we could find the dog," she said, "We need to be looking for the dog."

But Chance kind of found them, practically on their door step. "She said that I made her the happiest woman in the world, and then I wish she didn't hug me," said Garrett.

Source: http://www.wistv.com/Global/story.asp?S=14498928
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Just the video: http://www.wistv.com/global/category.asp?c=195964&autoStart=true&topVideoCatNo=default&clipId=5782861

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Duke, yellow lab

Dog food lures lost Duke, ends two-week chasing tale
Elusive yellow Lab is back with family
Ron Devlin , Reading Eagle
Originally Published: 2/7/2011


Two weeks after slipping out of the Spring Township Petco and living on the lam, Duke, front, reunites with owner Shawna Beidler, left front, and her parents, Todd and Sheila Bubbenmoyer of Richmond Township. Sheila is holding Dukes best friend, Chloe, a chihuahua.

Duke, the missing dog who was the subject of an intensive manhunt, was back home Sunday night with his family in Richmond Township.

After two weeks on the lam, the 2-year-old yellow Labrador curled up on a cushion next to his master, 19-year-old Shawna Beidler.

"Our prayers were answered," said Shawna, gently stroking Duke's head.

Duke's long journey home ended just in time for his third birthday, which is today.

Shawna and her parents, Sheila and Todd Bubbenmoyer, haven't had a restful night since Duke bolted from the Petco store in Broadcasting Square on Jan. 23.

Duke was being sized up for a new collar when, spooked by a stranger, he darted from the Spring Township store and fled to an open field across Broadcasting Road.

"He had never done that before," said Sheila, who owns Tidy Cleaning Co. in Richmond Township.

Duke proved a resourceful escapee, eluding a cadre of searchers for 14 days.

Though he had been spotted numerous times in the area near where he escaped, Duke avoided capture.

Todd, 43, who works night shift at a Boyertown foundry, tromped through snow-covered fields in pursuit of the errant animal.

Even the family's German shepherd, Hope, was unsuccessful in luring her canine companion. Todd had taken her to the area where Duke had been seen, thinking he would respond to her familiar scent.

A group of animal advocates finally lured Duke into a trap Sunday with a generous helping of dog food, wet and dry. Most of the searchers didn't know Duke or his family.

"A lot of people came together over this dog," Todd said. "We're so very thankful to them."

Nadine Essick of Womelsdorf, who spent days searching for Duke, said she was driven by a love of animals.

"If I know about an animal in distress, I have to do something about it," she said. "I have to know in my heart and mind that I did all I was capable of doing."

Essick, part of a group of searchers from Peacock Bridge Kennel in Bern Township, said the Humane Society of Berks County lent them a trap.

Once, Duke managed to go in the trap, eat the food and get out without triggering the gate. He wasn't so lucky the second time, and was captured Sunday afternoon.

"He dropped a few pounds and didn't smell very well, but he's healthy," Sheila said.

"We're so thankful and relieved," she said. "For the first time in two weeks, we'll get a good night's sleep."

Source: http://readingeagle.com/article.aspx?id=284777

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Hurley, Bernese Mountain Dog

Family 'whole again' after reunion with lost dog
Darcy Wintonyk, ctvbc.ca
Fri. Apr. 8 2011 5:44 PM ET

A North Vancouver, B.C., family says they are whole again after being reunited with their missing dog, who spent more than two weeks wandering the North Shore mountains lost and hungry.

Hurley, an 18-month-old Bernese Mountain Dog, was saved by search crews in a dramatic long line helicopter rescue just south of Capilano Lake on Thursday.


The dog was spotted by a fellow Bernese owner, who was among the hundreds of volunteers and community members who have given their time to search for the beloved pet.

"We couldn't be happier, our family really wasn't complete without Hurley and we were feeling that, all of us," Darwin Schandor told CTV News from his home just hours after he brought the dog home to his family.

"We now know what he means to us, our family. He's one of us," his wife Tracie said.

It has been an emotional two weeks for the Schandor family.

The couple and their two children, Hudson and Kiana, were on vacation in Maui for spring break when their pet sitting service called on March 24 to say that Hurley had wandered away during an outing on the Baden Powell Trail. The dog was supposed to be outfitted with a GPS collar, but the agency, Embark Dog Centre, decided not to use it because they felt the dog was well behaved.

That was the last time Hurley would be seen for two weeks.

The family spent up to 15 hours a day searching the rugged terrain near their home for any clues, but to no avail. A Facebook group, now 600 members strong, was launched for community members to report any possible sightings, and to tell others where they were searching.

"What kept us going was how many people volunteered their personal time to help find this member of our family. Even complete strangers," Darwin said.

"We may live in a big city but this is a small community."

The family even commissioned a helicopter to scour the area by air as a last-ditch effort. Tracie said her children, aged eight and 10, cried every day that Hurley was missing.

"We did start preparing them, and telling them there's a possibility he might not come home and those are some pretty tough conversations to have," she said.

The dramatic rescue

Members of North Shore Rescue quickly launched into action Thursday afternoon after receiving word the dog was spotted on a trail near Mosquito Creek.

Tim Jones said he had a hunch the dog would be near the water.

"When you can't find a person in a ridgeline or a trail system, they're in the creek," he said. "We felt the best way to get it out safely was through a long line rescue."

Two members were flown into the area by chopper, slowly lowered down into the rocky gully by a 200 foot long cable.

Rescuer Jeff Yarnold said Hurley wasn't thrilled to see searchers -- at first.

"He's a big dog. Once the leash was on him he was like ‘take me home,' and then he was thrilled," he said.

Hurley survived for two weeks with minimal food but lots of water. The dog is 20 pounds lighter, but otherwise okay, according to a veterinary assessment after his rescue.

Back at their North Vancouver home, Hudson and Kiana described the elation they felt when they saw their missing dog.

"It was so amazing. I just couldn't wait to pet his fur," Hudson said.

"I missed him a lot. It was really sad, but it turned out happy like him too," Kiana added.

Tracie said Hurley has free run of their home now -- and that their family has learned a valuable lesson.

"He's a bigger part of our family that we ever knew he was," she said.


Hudson added: "Never, never, never give up."


Accountability

Meanwhile, Embark Dog Centre said this is the first time it has lost a dog in its care.

Paul Riley, who spent many hours alongside the family searching for Hurley, describes the employee that was with the dog when he disappeared as one of their most experienced.

Riley said staff spent a lot of time assessing Hurley before they deemed it okay to let him walk off-leash.

"A Bernese Mountain Dog is not a flight risk. So for something like this to happen it makes you rethink everything," he said.

A sign posted on the door of the centre Friday said the business would focus on more training in the future.

Riley said they are rethinking their business model after what happened.

"With animals, you can read body language, but accidents like this can happen," he said, adding that he's just grateful the Schandors found their missing pet.

"If I have a business that's great, but if I don't, the kids have a dog and that's the main thing."

The Schandors say Embark has offered to pay a portion of the rescue costs.

Source (includes video): http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20110408/bc_hurley_home_110408/20110408?hub=BritishColumbiaHome
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Hurley, Bernese mountain dog

Family 'whole again' after reunion with lost dog
Darcy Wintonyk, ctvbc.ca
Updated: Fri. Apr. 8 2011 5:44 PM ET

A North Vancouver, B.C., family says they are whole again after being reunited with their missing dog, who spent more than two weeks wandering the North Shore mountains lost and hungry.

See more photos at: http://www.cvfaf.org/Hurley.html

Hurley, an 18-month-old Bernese Mountain Dog, was saved by search crews in a dramatic long line helicopter rescue just south of Capilano Lake on Thursday.

The dog was spotted by a fellow Bernese owner, who was among the hundreds of volunteers and community members who have given their time to search for the beloved pet.

"We couldn't be happier, our family really wasn't complete without Hurley and we were feeling that, all of us," Darwin Schandor told CTV News from his home just hours after he brought the dog home to his family.

"We now know what he means to us, our family. He's one of us," his wife Tracie said.

It has been an emotional two weeks for the Schandor family.

The couple and their two children, Hudson and Kiana, were on vacation in Maui for spring break when their pet sitting service called on March 24 to say that Hurley had wandered away during an outing on the Baden Powell Trail. The dog was supposed to be outfitted with a GPS collar, but the agency, Embark Dog Centre, decided not to use it because they felt the dog was well behaved.

That was the last time Hurley would be seen for two weeks.

The family spent up to 15 hours a day searching the rugged terrain near their home for any clues, but to no avail. A Facebook group, now 600 members strong, was launched for community members to report any possible sightings, and to tell others where they were searching.

"What kept us going was how many people volunteered their personal time to help find this member of our family. Even complete strangers," Darwin said.

"We may live in a big city but this is a small community."

The family even commissioned a helicopter to scour the area by air as a last-ditch effort. Tracie said her children, aged eight and 10, cried every day that Hurley was missing.

"We did start preparing them, and telling them there's a possibility he might not come home and those are some pretty tough conversations to have," she said.

The dramatic rescue
Members of North Shore Rescue quickly launched into action Thursday afternoon after receiving word the dog was spotted on a trail near Mosquito Creek.

Tim Jones said he had a hunch the dog would be near the water.

"When you can't find a person in a ridgeline or a trail system, they're in the creek," he said. "We felt the best way to get it out safely was through a long line rescue."

Two members were flown into the area by chopper, slowly lowered down into the rocky gully by a 200 foot long cable.

Rescuer Jeff Yarnold said Hurley wasn't thrilled to see searchers -- at first.

"He's a big dog. Once the leash was on him he was like ‘take me home,' and then he was thrilled," he said.

Hurley survived for two weeks with minimal food but lots of water. The dog is 20 pounds lighter, but otherwise okay, according to a veterinary assessment after his rescue.

Back at their North Vancouver home, Hudson and Kiana described the elation they felt when they saw their missing dog.

"It was so amazing. I just couldn't wait to pet his fur," Hudson said.

"I missed him a lot. It was really sad, but it turned out happy like him too," Kiana added.

Tracie said Hurley has free run of their home now -- and that their family has learned a valuable lesson.

The Schandor family — Darwin (clockwise from left), Hudson, Tracie and Kiana — can’t stop hugging their dog Hurley, after almost giving up hope he would be found.
"He's a bigger part of our family that we ever knew he was," she said.
Hudson added: "Never, never, never give up."


Accountability

Meanwhile, Embark Dog Centre said this is the first time it has lost a dog in its care.

Paul Riley, who spent many hours alongside the family searching for Hurley, describes the employee that was with the dog when he disappeared as one of their most experienced.

Riley said staff spent a lot of time assessing Hurley before they deemed it okay to let him walk off-leash.

"A Bernese Mountain Dog is not a flight risk. So for something like this to happen it makes you rethink everything," he said.

A sign posted on the door of the centre Friday said the business would focus on more training in the future.

Riley said they are rethinking their business model after what happened.

"With animals, you can read body language, but accidents like this can happen," he said, adding that he's just grateful the Schandors found their missing pet.

"If I have a business that's great, but if I don't, the kids have a dog and that's the main thing."

The Schandors say Embark has offered to pay a portion of the rescue costs.

Source: http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20110408/bc_hurley_home_110408?hub=BritishColumbiaHome
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Also read the family's
https://www.facebook.com/notes/bring-hurley-home/the-rescue-and-a-big-huge-thank-you/175699819145716

And the recount by the man that went searching for -- and found -- Hurley:
http://www.nsnews.com/life/Hurley+rescue+recounted/4607716/story.html

Friday, April 1, 2011

Harli, Australian kelpie/border collie mix

Autistic boy to be reunited with his lost dog
By ALISON LANGLEY, QMI Agency
Last Updated: July 30, 2010 5:23pm

NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. – Enjoying a roll in the grass and a belly scratch at the Niagara Falls Humane Society, the little dog was blissfully unaware of how she had captured the hearts of local residents.

Harli, a six-month-old Australian kelpie/border collie mix from Ohio, went missing in Niagara Falls 13 days ago, leaving the autistic boy who owned him devastated, and prompting people from all over the community to join in the search.

When she broke free of her leash and collar on July 18, her owners Krista and Troy Bastin watched in horror as she was struck and dragged by a car down the street. When the car stopped, the dog bolted.

There had been several sightings of Harli since that time, however, none of them panned out — until Thursday.

Around 6:45 p.m., the animal shelter received a call of a dog in a yard in the city's north end.

"She was just sitting on their property so they brought her in and called us," said Jay Desroches, manager at the Niagara Falls Humane Society.

A quick scan of the microchip imbedded in her shoulder confirmed the dog was Harli, and the shelter called the distraught family.

"It was a lightning strike of excitement," Krista told QMI Agency Friday as the family prepared to drive 350 km to Niagara Falls.

"We are just exhilarated."

Krista's four children were in Florida when the couple visited Niagara Falls. They were devastated to discover Harli was missing.

Especially upset was her 10-year-old son, Caleb, who has autism and had formed a strong bond with his canine companion.

Now that devastation has turned to elation and the Bastins will pick up Harli Saturday morning.

On Friday, staff at the shelter showered the playful pup with affection, knowing there would be a teary-eyed reunion the following morning.

"She absolutely fine. She's happy and healthy," Desroches said.

Scott Shipley and his girlfriend April O'Sullivan, who have three dogs of their own, had been searching for Harli since her story was featured in local newspapers.

The couple created a Facebook page urging other local residents to keep an eye out for the dog.

The Bastin family were overwhelmed by the support they had received, especially Shipley and O'Sullivan's efforts to find their missing pet.

"They definitely have hearts bigger than most. We should all take a lesson from them. I know our family has," she said.

Desroches said how Harli managed cross town without being struck by another car is anyone's guess.

"That's a long way across town for such a little dog," he said. "I'm thrilled for the family and I'm thrilled the dog is okay."

Doug Kane, chief of the Niagara Parks Police, is glad the story has a happy ending.

"We're very happy that the animal has been found and is going to be reunited with the family. We were pleased we could assist."

Source: http://www.torontosun.com/news/canada/2010/07/30/14882451.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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Monday, February 14, 2011

Beau, newfoundland-rottie mix

Missing Dog Crashes Wedding
Rochester Kennel To Replace Gates
June 24, 2008

ROCHESTER, N.H. -- A 17-day search for a dog from Rochester ended at a wedding reception Tuesday.

Paula and Rick Colman decided to celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary by going on a trip and leaving their 7-year-old dog, Beau, in a kennel for the first time ever.

But when a customer of Country-Brook Kennels left a gate open on the morning of June 5, Beau took off.

Bonnie O'Shea, the owner of Country Brook Kennels, said she will never forget the day when the 130-pound Newfoundland-Rottweiler mix disappeared, marking the first escape at the facility in its 12 years of business.

"It was horrible. You have no idea how upset we were," O'Shea said. "I get tears because that's how upset I was."

WMUR News 9's Kimberly Bookman reported that Beau took off on busy Route 11 in Rochester and couldn't be caught.

His owners cut their trip short to come home and look for Beau. They searched the woods, put up 1,000 lost dog signs and created a Craigslist posting about him.

During the span of three weeks that they passed, the couple received tip after tip from people who believed to have seen Beau.

The Colmans even checked out a bear standoff in Rochester in their hunt.

"The bear was up the tree but I still had to look anyway to make sure it wasn't my dog," Paula Colman said.

Fate Attends Wedding

Seventeen days later, while O'Shea worked as a bartender at a wedding, someone crashed the reception, and O'Shea went to look for herself.

"Disbelief. Relieved. Absolute shock," O'Shea said of the discovery.

"I got a call first from the police saying, 'We've got your dog, he's at The Governor's Inn.' And I said, 'Is he in custody?'" Paula Colman said.

When the Colmans arrived, Beau was posing for pictures with the bride and groom.

"My heart just melted," Paula Colman said. "I grabbed him, hugged him and cried."

Beau lost 20 pounds, had some ticks and scrapes to his paws, but he's healthy.



The kennel has since announced plans to replace gates on the property.

Source: http://www.wmur.com/r/16702143/detail.html
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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Asher, Australian Shepherd

Canine, missing since recent tornado, reunited with family
by Mike Landis, KY3 News
January 23, 2011
 
 
FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo. -- One of "man's best friends" brought some hope to a community recovering from the New Year's Eve tornado outbreak. Asher is a 3-year-old Australian shepherd that disappeared after his family's home was swept away.

"There was one missing link to our family that held us back from moving on," said Norma Mitchell, owner of the dog.

There were scattered reports of Asher being sighted on the post. The Mitchell family eventually secured new housing, and began the search for Asher. Posters for Asher were plastered across the fort and a Facebook page was set up for the cause.

Soon, the search grew into an affair involving at least 100 people. Volunteers from the fort banded together to help find the dog. For three weeks they combed woods, fields, and neighborhoods.

Late last week, Mitchell family decided to drive by the site of their old house "one last time." That's when they found that Asher was back.

"I got down on my hands and knees and I was like begging him, 'Asher, come on, come on, come to me,'" said Mitchell.

The dog had lost at least 11 pounds, which Mitchell jokingly said was a good thing. A veterinarian gave him a clean bill of health.

"He didn't obviously didn't give up on his family, and they sure didn't. What wonderful pet owners that they didn't give up on him," said SFC Julie Paramore, who helped organize the search.

Those who spent time searching for Asher believe his story has brought a little bit of hope to the community, which will be recovering from the tornado for some time.

"From the Humane Society standpoint, things aren't always positive and we are not always dealing with happy endings. This is definitely one of the good things," said Kim Fuhr, president of the Pulaski County Humane Society.



Many of the volunteers met Asher for the first time on Sunday at a homecoming party held in his honor.

Source: http://articles.ky3.com/2011-01-23/asher_27045739

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Jesse, yellow lab

GOING TO THE DOGS: ‘Tail’ to tell after being lost.
By Jerry Elsden, GateHouse News Service
Posted Oct 27, 2009 @ 08:00 AM

Lewkowski, the Rhodesian Ridgeback, left, found Jessie, the 12-year-old yellow Lab, right, 16 days after she became lost in Wompatuck State Park on Oct. 14.

Hingham — What’s better than a miracle, long after you’ve given up hope finding a lost dog?

On Wednesday, Oct. 14, we found Jessie, a 12-year-old yellow Labrador retriever, who has cataracts and mast cell cancer tumors on her body.

Jessie was found alive 16 days after she had vanished east of the parking lot opposite the Wompatuck State Park Visitors Center on Monday, Sept 28, around 3:15 p.m., near the N2 side trail.

I’ve been Jessie’s dog walker since 2003. So, I was looking for her body when I took four Labs and a Rhodesian Ridgeback named Lewkowski (who I walk only on Mondays and Wednesdays) into Wompatuck on the same trail I had last seen Jessie. I remember thinking that her beautiful body would be more visible as winter approached. The “lost dog” posters that I had taped everywhere were a sad reminder of the horrific day she disappeared. I was no longer calling out for “Jessie.”

I took the dogs on the paved road past the waterfall and toward Triphammer Pond, onto the old gravel railroad bed (from when Wompatuck was the Naval Ammunition Annex). On that trail Accord Brook runs swiftly through a culvert on its way to the pond. Over the last two weeks I’d walked that trail several times looking for Jessie, as did many others, calling her name, and whistling.

Suddenly, the Ridgeback hung back, sniffing the ground and air. She barked as if to say, “Pay attention here.” This dog has never barked with me when I walk her. Something was up.

Lewkowski rushed down the 45-degree sloped underbrush area and I followed, hanging on to Sonny’s leash. Leila and Tango barked. I saw a yellow Lab body, knew it was Jessie, and my heart leaped. Was she dead, or barely alive?

Jessie raised her head, and tried to recognize me, but couldn’t, her old eyes glazed. The Labs licked her face. She could not stand up. I thought her leg was broken, but a nasty long briar stem had twisted around her belly. I wished I had my jackknife, but instead broke the stem with my prosthetic right foot. She didn’t even whimper. I clipped a leash on her collar but it slipped off, she had lost so much weight. I think I grabbed the back of her neck, and got Jessie up the slope onto the trail. I was so overjoyed I thought I was dreaming. That dog actually walked back to the car, although I was prepared to call the park ranger to open the gate and get her. The other dogs pranced around, knowing she was OK, especially Lewkowski. Jessie drank lots of water in my car, and at my house she ate some kibble. God only knows what she ate for 16 days. The rainfall kept her from dehydration, which is worse than hunger for any creature. I wanted to grill her a steak, but knew her tummy had to have what the vet recommended.

After contacting Jessie’s pet parents by cell phone, I whisked her off to Roberts Animal Hospital in Hanover for what the vet called “a head to toe” check-up. Her pet parent’s daughter met us there. Jessie weighed 60 pounds, down from 76 pounds in June. That’s a pound for each day she was lost. Other than some scrapes and scratches, and a few ticks, the old girl was stable and could go home, after the tech gave her some subcutaneous fluids and a de-wormer. We took home special canned food and medicated shampoo. I cherished that reunion of Jessie’s to her home. She was safe, warm, fed and happy. The next day she went to Doggie Style Salon in Quincy, where Ryan Lamb, of Hingham, removed 12 more ticks and gave her a professional grooming. “She earned it,” said Lamb, whose family has been in the insurance business in town since 1952.

Sept 28 was a beautiful early fall day, the sun was drying up the rain from the day before. I took the dogs to Wompatuck because the tide was low at Bare Cove Park, which was business as usual. Jessie hung back from me and the dog pack, which she often does, and I called to her to catch up. She did, but she had a crazy look on her face. My black Lab Duchess had picked up an apple that someone had thrown on to the trail, and she was playing with it. I thought it cute, looked back for Jessie about 15 seconds later, and she was gone. I turned around and called Jessie’s name, went to the parking lot, walked other trails, yelled her name until dark (6:30 p.m.) I called her pet parent. By this time I had corralled the other dogs into the car with water and biscuits. I notified Hingham Police. It was around 60 degrees.

The next morning I was in the park with cooked bacon, searching for Jessie, for about five hours, near the N2 trail. I consulted a dog physic who told me she was alive but west of where I last saw her. With Jessie’s pet parent and other volunteers, we searched that area, near Woodpecker Pond, to no avail. The daytime temperatures were around 60 degrees and nighttime temps were around 45 degrees, in Jessie’s favor.

A friend owns a bloodhound, so I took Jessie’s blanket (so painful to gather) to have the hound sniff if and off she went. But bloodhounds must be trained to find people or dogs for it to work. My daughter helped with the search. I banged a stainless dog dish with a spoon as I walked everywhere on day three. The temps remained warm, giving us hope. We told everyone about Jessie, to look for her. The Wompatuck Park Rangers were really helpful, and sympathetic.

Sept 30 and Oct 1 were search days, but we were getting discouraged. Fellow dog walkers from Bare Cove Park came in to look for Jessie. I printed posters and dropped them at houses all along Lazell Street. I met some nice people.

Saturday, Oct 3 it rained all day. I was losing hope, as did Jessie’s pet parents. A woman called me about a yellow Lab seen near the High School. I printed more posters and taped them all over Hingham Center. I offered a $100 reward.

As the days dragged on with no sign of Jessie, we all assumed she had died. The notion set in that maybe her mast cell cancer had spread and she was feeling awful and wandered off to die. People told me to stop beating myself up, which fell on deaf ears. I took the dogs to Bare Cove Park, could not deal with Wompatuck. Her pet parents took down Jessie’s crate.

But in the back of my mind stuck the words of a woman who walks her Bassett Hound at Bare Cove every day. Her name, ironically, is Jessie and she said “dogs have been lost for weeks in that park, and coyotes are not really a problem.”

The lesson here of course is that Jessie should be leashed always, which I do in parking lots and on her street to the car.

Jessie, you have a new lease on life, thanks to your buddy Lewkowski. And I think, the Dog God.

Jerry Elsden is a below-the-knee amputee who was involved in a serious automobile-pedestrian accident. She is a dog walker, freelance writer and former editor of The Hingham Journal. The names of the dogs in this column have been changed to protect the identities of their owners.

Source: http://www.wickedlocal.com/hingham/news/lifestyle/columnists/x665149614/GOING-TO-THE-DOGS-Tail-to-tell-after-being-lost

Friday, April 24, 2009

Maggie, the Sheltie

'Hero' reunites Suffield family and missing dog
Teen refuses $1,000 reward
Deborah Guziak, Record-Courier staff writer
August 12, 2008

SUFFIELD Maggie is back home with her family after a Congress Lake Road teen found the missing dog two weeks after she escaped a house fire. Matthew Heater, 13, refused the $1,000 reward Maggie's owners, Rick and Jayelen Oaks, tried to give him.

"They just lost everything in a fire," Matthew explained. "That would be mean to take any money."



Maggie was tossed out the door of her owners' Galaxy Drive home on July 20 when they discovered it was on fire. Maggie, a sheltie, is afraid of fireworks, and propane tanks that were in the garage had exploded, said Maggie's "mom," Jayelen Oaks. It sent the frightened dog running. Where Maggie went or how she survived during the two weeks she was missing is unknown.

Once during Maggie's absence, Jayelen Oaks saw her dog in the cornfield and called for her. Maggie didn't come to her. The sheltie's veterinarian recommended that Jayelen Oaks return to the field with a bowl of food and wait.

"I brought a book and sat for an hour," Jayelen Oaks said. "She didn't come. It was so hard to leave."

Matthew was riding his 4-wheeler last week and saw Maggie in the field. He didn't know the dog was missing and went to visit with his grandparents. It was there that he saw a flier advertising Maggie's disappearance, said Matthew's mother, Laura Heater. Matthew hurried back to the spot where he had seen Maggie. Now, knowing the dog's name, he called for her, and she came.

"She looked really healthy," said Matthew, who speculated Maggie came to his families' home and ate dog food that had been left out for the familys' dogs. Then came the happy part " calling the Oaks family.

"I spoke to the daughter, and I said "I think we found your dog,'" Laura Heater said. "Her mom must've been in the background picking up a word here and there, because I heard her screaming, "Did they find my dog?' and things like that. The daughter kept telling her to be quiet because she couldn't hear."

Then Laura Heater had a terrible thought " what if the dog wasn't Maggie, and she'd gotten the family's hopes up for nothing?

"She (Alysha Oaks, the daughter) asked me if the dog had one ear up and one ear down," Laura Heater said. "I said "please, Lord, let there be one ear up and one ear down. I turned around and looked at the dog, and sure enough, one ear was up and the other was down."

The Oaks family was waiting at the end of the driveway for the Heater family and Maggie to arrive. Soon, Maggie was back in the loving arms of family members, and they were trying to give Matthew a check for a reward. Rick Oaks wouldn't take "no" for an answer, and unbeknownst to the Heater family, he had tossed the check into their car.

"We were on our way home when my mother found the check in the car," Laura Heater said. "She said, "Matthew, they gave you a check for $100.' She gave the check to Matthew, and he looked at it and said, "That's not a hundred, grandma. It's a thousand.'" Matthew returned the check.

"When we returned the dog, he said, "Ma, I think this is the best day of my life,'" Laura Heater said. "He is my hero," Jayelen Oaks said.

Source: http://www.recordpub.com/news/article/4226411
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Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Reba, the Panhandler's Dog

Panhandler reunited with dog
By Gerry Smith, Tribune Staff Reporter
September 23, 2007

For two weeks, Tom Finley was in a daze, holding fliers with a photo of his friend and asking passersby in the Loop if they had seen a blond husky/terrier mix with a limp.



“It was hard to sleep,” he said. “Hard to eat.”

On Saturday, the well-known panhandler received a gift no amount of loose change could replace when he was reunited with Reba, who had been missing since Finley, 69, left the 12-year-old dog outside a McDonald’s at SouthFranklin Street and West Jackson Boulevard on Sept 7.

“I’m speechless,” Finley said during a news conference at the Anti-Cruelty Society of Chicago, where Reba strained on the leash and barked at photographers. Since Reba disappeared, Finley had received an outpouring of support from the public. Office workers printed up fliers of the missing dog and a woman gave Finley a prepaid cell phone to field calls in the search. He said he received “hundreds” of calls from people claiming to have seen Reba.

“Some would call and say they’d spotted her or they had her,” he said.” Sometimes I thought I heard her myself.” Finley believed Reba was taken by someone who thought he couldn’t care for her. Officials at the Anti-Cruelty Society would not identify the woman who returned Reba around noon on Friday.


“She was in tears,” said Nadine Walmsley, an official with the Anti-CrueltySociety. “She just handed us the dog. We honored our part. No questions asked.” Finley said he already forgave the woman, if she had been the one who had taken Reba.

“I thank her from the bottom of my heart,” he said. The Anti-Cruelty Society of Chicago will offer the 30-pound canine a lifetime of free veterinary care, starting with an appointment on Tuesday,Walmsley said.

"Reba’s an older dog and she’s got some real issues,” Walmsley said. “We’re going to find out what the problems are and try to address them the best we can.” Finley, who has been homeless before, has been living in a studio apartmenton the North Side for about four months, he said, scraping together the $550 rent with monthly Social Security checks. The reward fund for Reba’s return, set two weeks ago at $500, has grown through donations to an undisclosed amount, Walmsley said. The woman who returned the dog would not accept the reward, and so it will be given to Finley, Walmsley said.

But as he crouched down to let Reba lick his face, Finley declined to put a price on his friend’s return.

“I’d be lost without her,” he said. “She’s the best thing that’s everhappened to me.”After a news conference, Finley and Reba were ushered into an elevator.They were going to celebrate over a meal, Finley said:“We’re going to have a great buffet.”

Source: http://archives.chicagotribune.com/2007/sep/23/news/chi-dogreturn_23_bothsep23