Showing posts with label 5 months lost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5 months lost. Show all posts

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Natty, shepherd mix

Linden man reunited with dog in Jackson five months after losing her in Fenton
By Will Forgrave
on October 14, 2013

JACKSON, MI – Linden resident Daane Birchmeier was convinced that his 11-month old dog Natty was gone for good after she wandered off as he worked on his truck in May.

Linden resident Daane Birchmeier, 21, is reunited with his dog Natty at the Jackson County Animal Shelter after the 11-month-old sheperd mix wandered off in early May.

But five months and more than 70 miles later, Birchmeier and his dog were reunited last week at the Jackson County Animal Shelter, 3370 Spring Arbor Road in Jackson.

"We have no idea how she ended up here," Birchmeier, 21, said. "I'm just ecstatic to have her back."

Birchmeier said he adopted Natty from a shelter in Fenton in January. For five months, the duo lived in Birchmeier's Linden apartment.

"She's the kind of dog that always sticks around and is really chill and relaxed, even as a puppy," Birchmeier said. "She's just a really, really good dog."

Birchmeier said he took Natty to his parents' house in Fenton in early May to work on his truck. Nearly three hours later, Natty was gone.

"She was just wandering around me as I was working, and then I noticed after I was cleaning up that she was gone," Birchmeier said. "My parents live next to a park so we think she might have run off into it, but there's no telling."

Jackson County Animal Shelter Administrative Clerk Debbie Drouin said the dog was picked up by animal control in the 1800 block of E. South Street in Jackson the afternoon of Monday, Oct. 7.

"She's relatively healthy compared with some of the other animals we get in here," Drouin said. "Luckily, she had a microchip so we were able to get in touch with Daane right away."

Used to keep track of pets, microchipping is a procedure during which a veterinarian injects a chip about the size of a grain of rice just under the skin of a dog or cat. A scanner can then be used to glean information such as the owner's name, phone number and address.

Birchmeier picked up Natty on Wednesday, Oct. 9.

"I walked in and she immediately started barking and jumping up and down," Birchmeier said. "I was like 'oh man, did she turn into that kind of dog when I was gone?' I was worried about her.

"The shelter worker, though, said Natty must have really missed me because she had been moping around the last couple of days," he said. "She almost knocked me over when she came running down the hall."

Drouin, who snapped a photo of the reunited pair, said she couldn't keep the dog still to take a photo.

"It was really cute," she said. "She was so excited to see her owner again."

Source: http://www.mlive.com/news/jackson/index.ssf/2013/10/man_loses_his_dog_in_linden_re.html

Monday, January 16, 2012

Mickey

Oklahoma Soldier Reunites With Lost Dog
By Jamie Oberg, News 9
Jan 14, 2012


When Crystal Tucker lost her dog before she had to deploy over sees with the National Guard, she was afraid she'd never see Mickey again. A chain of coincidences brought the pair back together Saturday.

OKLAHOMA CITY - One Oklahoma Air National Guard soldier thought her baby, "Mickey," was gone forever.

"Oh my God!" cried Senior Airman Crystal Tucker. "Baby, oh you're so excited! Oh my God," Crystal cried Saturday when she saw her dog come around the corner at the PetSmart at NW 63rd and May.

The tale of how this heartwarming reunion was even possible is pretty incredible.

"I got a knock at the door one night and a guy said I have this dog and he's been hit by a car and can you take him in and we said ‘ya'," Bella Foundation President, Eric McCune said.

Mickey was picked up in August without tags or a microchip and could have easily suffered a fate at the pound.

But for five months, he was in good hands. "She had no idea we had him," McCune said.

Lucky for Mickey, he ended up with The Bella Foundation just after they had just started a new program to provide veterinary care to animals whose owners were unable to pay.

"We put up signs, ads on craigslist, posts on Facebook," McCune said. "Nobody ever stepped forward."

Meanwhile, Tucker, who is with the 137th Air Medical Evacuation Squadron, had to deploy to Germany and leave her lost little Mickey behind.

"I had him for four years, and I wasn't ready to give up on him yet,"

Tucker said she never gave up hope. "It was very scary,"

Another dog lover, whose name also happens to be Kristel, took Mickey in and had been fostering the dog she called "Rudy" in hopes the dog's owner would one day be found.

When her deployment was nearing its end, Tucker went on-line from Germany to check before coming back home. Maybe, just maybe…

And she found him.

"They had him listed as Rudy and I was like ‘No! That is Mickey!"

Crystal Tucker made arrangements to meet Kristel Evans and bring Mickey back home.

"Thank you so much!" Tucker said to foster mom, Kristel Evans when they met.

"He's been such a good boy!" Evans replied. "It's been my pleasure."

A happy homecoming for the Air National Guard Soldier got even better just one day after arriving in the states.

"Just to see him come around the corner and just know he'd be back in my arms…It was great!" Tucker said.

There was one last thing Crystal made sure to get before leaving the store Saturday: new dog tags so Mickey will be safe and everyone will know just where he belongs.

"He was just meant to come back home."

The Bella Foundation waived the $150 adoption fee for the soldier; they hope this story also reminds people the importance of adoptions and more importantly, micro-chipping your pets.

Source: http://www.news9.com/story/16522322/oklahoma-soldier-reunites-with-lost-dog
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Another version of the story is at: http://www.kfor.com/news/local/kfor-airman-reunited-with-lost-dog-at-homecoming-20120115,0,44749.story



Saturday, August 13, 2011

Heidi, german short-haired pointer

Missing Arizona dog found thousands of miles away in Pennsylvania
By: MaryEllen Resendez

August 12, 2011

BLACK CANYON CITY, AZ - A Black Canyon City man waits patiently as details are ironed out for the return of his beloved pet after it went on a cross country adventure earlier this year.

Heidi took a cross-country trip after she went off chasing a rabbit in March.
 Jim Chryst loves taking his dogs on adventures around the creek near Black Canyon City, but then his car broke down and he and his pets found themselves stranded.

"About the second day they were sitting outside my window barking continuously at their walk time," said Chryst who finally gave in and took his dogs for a walk up the hill near his home.

When they reached the top, Chryst's beloved shorthaired pointer named "Heidi" took off after a rabbit.

At first, Chryst didn't worry.

"It's not unusual for her to take off after animals and be gone for 30 minutes," he said.

But Heidi never returned. That was in March of this year.

For the next five months, Jim continued to return to his and Heidi's favorite spots hoping she would be there.

"German shorthaired pointers are known to return to the spot they were released," said Chryst , who was desperate to find Heidi.

"I don't want to sound overly religious, but I got down on my knees and said 'Lord please bring Heidi home, I know you can do this.'"

Jim's prayers were answered last week, when a rescue group called him to say Heidi had been found thousands of miles away, in Pennsylvania.

"A geologist working near I-17 found her along interstate 17," said Joyce Harrison with the German Shorthaired Pointer Rescue of Pennsylvania.

Harrison told ABC15 the woman who found Heidi flew her home to Pennsylvania when the project she was working on was over.

"She has five cats and Heidi didn't take too well to the cats," said Harrison who took Heidi in after the woman who found her dropped her off at the rescue shelter.

That didn't surprise Chryst who said Heidi's been known to go after cats before.

It was a chip implanted in Heidi that led the GSP rescue back to Chryst in Arizona.

"I just happened to have a scanner and started scanning Heidi's body when I found the chip," Harrison said.

Soon Chryst was called and told Heidi had been found.

"I was happy, then it hit me and I got a little emotional," he said.

Harrison said after talking to Chryst, she knew she needed to get Heidi home.

The rescue is now working with Pilots and Paws, an animal rescue group that flies pets home to get Heidi back to Arizona. The rescue will take five flight legs and will need five volunteer pilots. So far only three have come forward, including Sgt. Bill Rademacher with Avondale Police.

Rademacher is hoping to fly Heidi over the last leg from Albuquerque, New Mexico to Goodyear, Arizona.

Chryst is happy for all the help, and is hoping to soon be reunited with his beloved Heidi,

"At least I know where she's at now and I know she's being taken care of," he said.



Source:  http://www.abc15.com/dpp/news/region_central_southern_az/black_canyon_new_river/missing-arizona-dog-found-thousands-of-miles-away-in-pennsylvania
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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Ginger, shepherd mix

Epileptic Girl Reunited With Missing Dog
Dog Found Thanks To Microchip, Good Samaritan
Isis Romero, KSAT 12 News Reporter
Monday, June 20, 2011

SAN ANTONIO -- It's been a difficult past few months for Rosalia Gallegos, 10, after searching tirelessly for her missing dog, Ginger.

Watch the video at: http://www.ksat.com/video/28303076/index.html

Gallegos, who suffers from epilepsy, said she had not experienced a seizure in two years, thanks in part to her dog.

However, after burglars broke into her home and allowed Ginger to get out, the seizures returned.

"I have a feeling in my heart that she's alive and trying to find her way home," Rosalia said in January. "I want Ginger to come home."

On Monday morning, Rosalia finally got her wish, as Ginger was returned home to her, safe and sound.

According to the girl's mother, Lydia Barrientos, Ginger had been under the care of someone who found her several months ago, and was living just four miles away.

After the person took Ginger to get spayed, the dog's microchip revealed its true owner.

"The person that found her took her to the vet, and they scanned her, so the microchip said that she had been reported missing," Barrientos said. "I called the man who had her, and he agreed to meet me after work to return Ginger."

As for Rosalia's epileptic seizures, Barrientos said they disappeared once again after the family got another dog a few months ago. The family said they will now keep both dogs.

Source: http://www.ksat.com/news/28300722/detail.html
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Video at: http://www.ksat.com/video/28303076/index.html
Previous story at: http://www.ksat.com/news/26629790/detail.html

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Tito, chihuahua

Bernards Township couple helps reunite lost pet with family in Kearny
This dog’s tale has a happy ending

By Amy Baratta, contributing writer, Recorder Community Newspapers

Friday, January 7, 2011

Tito, a 5-year-old Chihuahua who had been missing from his Kearny home since July, spent the Christmas holiday with Jim and Eileen Furst of Basking Ridge, who found the dog wandering down the middle of Pond Hill Road. With the help of Tito’s microchip and good old-fashioned telephone detective work, the Fursts were able to reunite the dog with his owners.


BERNARDS TWP. - As unexpected holiday houseguests go, Tito couldn’t have had more beautiful manners.

He seldom made noise during his four-day stay at the Basking Ridge home of Eileen and Jim Furst and he turned out to be great company for the couple.

In fact, he made himself right at home, according to Eileen Furst, who found the 5-year-old light-brown Chihuahua wandering, without a collar or dog tags, down the center of Pond Hill Road on Christmas Eve morning.

“He acted like he lived here all his life,” Furst said. “My husband fell asleep in his recliner with the dog on his lap.

“He barked maybe four times while he was here. As far as a houseguest, you couldn’t ask for anything better.”

A self-professed dog lover, Eileen Furst said she was just being a good Samaritan when she stopped her car at 9am Friday, Dec 24, to try to corral the small dog she saw wandering down the center of the two-lane road.

With the help of another passer-by, Furst said, she put the dog in her car and canvassed the nearby neighborhood, hoping to find someone searching for a lost dog.

While unsuccessful in that quest, Furst said she did come across a woman who worked for an animal shelter.

The woman was heading out of town for the Christmas weekend but told Furst that if she was unsuccessful in finding the dog’s owner by Monday, she would take him to the shelter. In the meantime, the woman gave Furst, who does not own a dog and did not have any supplies, a half a bag of dog food for her new canine companion.

Furst then headed home to Hunter’s Lane, where, while she did some Christmas Eve cooking, husband Jim took up the task of trying to unravel the mystery of the dog’s owner.

“He found another neighbor who also works for a shelter and she suggested we take him to Basking Ridge Animal Hospital to be scanned for a (micro) chip,” Furst said. “Shortly, Jim comes back walking the dog on a red leash. The hospital had given him a leash and loaned us a crate with towels in the bottom and everything. One of the girls who works there also gave us a half a bag of food.

“They were great. They even clipped his toenails free of charge – he got a pedicure - and they scanned him for a chip, which, to my surprise, he did have.”

Armed with information about the Nebraska company that stored details embedded in the chip, the Fursts tried to make contact but to no avail.

“We’re talking Christmas Eve,” Furst said. “Nobody’s around Christmas Eve.”

The question then arose what to do with their tiny visitor the next day, since they were planning to spend Christmas with family in Yardley, PA.

“We took him with us,” she said, adding that they would be gone too long to leave the dog by himself. “He was clean, very well behaved and housebroken.”

Long Journey

A quick call to Nebraska on Monday morning revealed that their mystery guest was born Aug. 7, 2005, and had been purchased from The Pet Company in the Newport Centre Mall in Jersey City, Furst said.

However, when the couple called the pet store to see if they could obtain any details about the dog’s owner, she said, they were told it was closing for the day because of the blizzard.

“So there we were, high and dry again,” she said.

When they called back the next morning, they were told that a Kearny woman named Anna Ferreira had purchased the Chihuahua.

At that point, Furst didn’t know what to think.

“I mean, how would a Chihuahua get from Kearny to Basking Ridge,” she asked.

The answer is still a mystery.

When the Fursts contacted Ferreira, she told them that the dog and her cat had gone missing from her yard in July and efforts to find them – by posting fliers and contacting animal control officers and the police – proved fruitless.

She indicated she had paperwork with the chip number to prove that the dog was hers and showed up at the Fursts’ house shortly thereafter.

“She didn’t even know where Basking Ridge was,” Furst said. “But she came right away – she was here an hour and a half after we spoke.”

The woman, accompanied by her mother, who spoke only Portuguese, “started crying the minute she saw (the dog),” Furst said. “His name was Tito. It was definitely her dog.”

Ferreira told Furst that her family had had another Chihuahua that died, leaving them heartbroken, so she had purchased Tito. Her daughter had been asking to get another dog after Tito disappeared but Ferreira told her that she couldn’t bear to have another pet.

“She must have called every relative she had (about finding Tito) because she was standing in my kitchen and her phone kept ringing. She was speaking Portuguese but I could hear the word ‘Tito,’ ” Furst said.

Despite all the detective work that it took to reunite Tito with his family, Furst said the couple was only too happy to oblige.

“I kept thinking, ‘Here it is Christmas Eve and somebody has lost their dog. They’re sitting there with their family wondering where their dog was and who had him,’ ” Furst said. “Other than the fact that we had this blizzard and it was the perfect storm of not being able to contact somebody (because of the holiday weekend), it was a very happy ending.”

Source: http://newjerseyhills.com/bernardsville_news/news/article_93ed06fa-18f6-11e0-8740-001cc4c03286.html
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Friday, December 31, 2010

Zeta, Australian shepherd

Ramona dog reunited with owner after 5 months on its own
Dixie Pettit
Published 12/10/2010 - 1:08 p.m.
Dogs: 2, Coyotes: 0

That’s the score in the Cavender household.

When his father died last May, David Cavender brought his father’s three dogs home to live with him in San Diego Country Estates. “L.G.” is a basset Hound, “Zeta” an Australian shepherd, and “Doofus” a 30-inch tall but not big, long-legged mutt.

Ramona is surrounded by family adn EARs volunteers

Within a week, the gate was left open. Doofus and Zeta walked out for a romp in the neighborhood.

A devastated Cavender flooded the neighborhood with posters.

“My son and I posted signs up on the mailboxes, at the equestrian center, at the Country Store,” he said. “I made calls to all the animal shelters – you know – San Diego, Escondido – I called everyone I could think of. Nothing. After a couple of weeks of trying to find them every day, I just figured the coyotes got them.”

Five weeks later, Cavender saw a flier about a “found” dog. Someone had found Doofus near the International Equestrian Center.

“I concentrated my search over there, hoping to find Zeta, but I couldn’t find her,” said Cavendar.
Again it was assumed that Zeta was a victim of coyotes or, if lucky, “had been picked up by someone who had simply decided to keep her.”

Zeta, like other family pets in the Estates, disappeared without a trace. As time went by, the signs came down. Cavender could only return to work and the two dogs who remained.

Martha Fredericks walks every morning with her dog by the equestrian center. It was during her daily walks that she noticed “kind of a shadow” in the bushes.

“I saw just little glimpses of her,” said Fredericks. “I wasn’t even sure she was a dog when I first saw her,. She blended well into the bushes. I started seeing her early October. She came out of the bushes a couple of times and walked ahead of me about a hundred yards. She had tags and was obviously somebody’s dog. She was real nervous and kept looking back at me but wouldn’t let me get close to her. I put kibble out and something kept eating it, but she was so very skinny that I don’t think she would have lasted much longer.

“That one weekend when it was so hot I got really worried about her. I tried to find her with one of my daughters. We looked all over the bushes for her, but we just couldn’t find her. My other daughter (Anne Mueller) thought of craigslist. She looked there to see if a dog was missing but then placed an ad. That was how we found Laura.”

A volunteer for Emergency Animal Rescue (EAR), Laura Bedinger looks under the pet section on craigslist every day.

“We (EAR) have the equipment, experience, and the willingness to go out and help animals out of dangerous situations,” she said. “I do this on my own. I help to rehabilitate animals, rescue other abandoned animals, and then find homes for them.This girl, Anne Mueller, was asking for help. Animal control wouldn’t help, so I set a trap up for her (using a cheeseburger) but didn’t catch her until the second night when I threw some oatmeal cookies into the trap.”

Bedinger spent hours watching and waiting for the elusive dog.

“She was obviously terrified out there, but she had tags. She was emaciated and had lost about half of her body weight, but I knew someone didn’t just abandon this little girl — someone had to be missing her.”

The 2007 tags were from an Apple Valley hospital, but the telephone number had been disconnected. After several phone calls, Bedinger spoke with an employee from the animal control in Apple Valley.

“Animal control said there was another address in Ramona listed as a forwarding address, but they wouldn’t give me the address or phone number. They said they would try to call the person and get back to me.”

After a week and no word, Bedinger called again, this time able to convince the worker from animal control to keep making calls until she was able to get in touch with the person.

Cavender was at work when he got the call from animal control at Apple Valley.

“Do you have a dog with a strange name you’ve been missing?” said the voice on the phone.

“I said ‘Zeta,’ and they said ‘Yeah, somebody found her!’ I couldn’t believe they found my dog. I kept saying, ‘I can’t believe she’s still alive!’ My dad passed away in May and she has been missing since the first week in June!”

Less than a mile away the whole time, Zeta was brought back to Cavender after five months missing.

“It is amazing. They never gave up looking for me,” said Cavender.

“She probably got lost and didn’t know how to get back home, so set herself up in the bushes and tried to survive on her own,” said Bedinger. “Dogs that have to fend for themselves begin to turn feral (wild) in order to survive. When I first got her out of the trap, she tried to nip at me. She was really scared. Emaciated and full of burrs and worms, Bea Hoskins (volunteer) worked with her a lot, so she would trust people again.”

Gone since the first week in June, Zeta is a proven survivor. Though unclear how much longer she could have made it on her own, the little Australian shepherd beat the odds. The high-desert heat and cold fall nights took a toll on her, but coyotes did not claim this girl.

Bright-eyed and happy to be home, Zeta and Doofus are buddies once again. As the pair bounce around the patio together, “L.G.” rolls over for a belly-rub.

An overwhelming happiness courses through the air. Rescuers with misty eyes, dogs oblivious to anything but the moment, and owners know this is one of those times when things are as it should be.

“This just shows you shouldn’t give up,” said Bedinger. “You just never know.”

Source: http://www.ramonasentinel.com/article/News/News/Ramona_dog_reunited_with_owner_after_5_months_on_its_own/21213