Showing posts with label Dramatic rescues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dramatic rescues. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Libby, chocolate lab

Dog rescued from river reunited with family in Farmington
by Carly Figueroa
May 27, 2014


FARMINGTON, Utah — A Farmington family was reunited with their dog Tuesday after it was rescued from a swift-moving river in Farmington Canyon.

Larae Beck and her family had been searching for their lost Labrador, Libby, since Saturday. Beck said it’s pretty common for her two dogs to wander the large piece of property where they live, but Sunday morning, only one dog returned and it was obvious something happened.


Down a dirt fire road about four miles from the Beck home, Libby ended up in high water in Farmington Canyon Saturday night.

A family had been hiking in the area when they said they heard a dog crying from the nearby river.

“One of the dogs it looked like had fallen down from the rocks and was partially submerged on the edge of the river,” said Sgt. Jason Sorensen with Davis County Sheriff’s Office.

It was cold and the lab was shivering, said Erik Borenmeier, logistics officer for Davis Search and Rescue.

“It had managed to find the small piece of real estate that was left on the small part of the river – it was moving fast,” Borenmeier said.

Rescue crews were called out to make the recovery. The video in the newscast was shot Saturday night as the Swift Water Team pulled the frightened dog to safety.

Libby was brought to the Davis County Animal Shelter in hopes that her owners would come looking for her.


“We had called Sunday — we called the sheriff’s department and they told us about her. And then we couldn’t come get her yesterday because it was Memorial Day,” Beck said.

Animal Control said the dog was not micro-chipped but had she been, the county would have been able to get her home sooner.

Source: http://fox13now.com/2014/05/27/dog-rescued-from-river-reunited-with-family-in-farmington/

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Tinkerbell, poodle mix

Woman reunites with missing dog in Elma
Lou Raguse, Posted by: Liz Reiman
Sunday, 12 May 2013

Elma NY (WIVB) - It was a happy reunion and special Mother's Day for one woman in Elma.

Julie Schwab was reunited with her two poodle mix dog's Tinkerbell and Mator, after they went missing from her home last week.


Mator found his way home the night they disappeared, but Tinkerbell remained missing for a while. The owner said she was worried because the weather started to change, getting colder with more rain.

On Sunday morning, a turkey hunter spotted the lost dog atop a 75 foot cliff near a waterfall in Elma.

The Elma Dog Control Officer, Spring Brook Volunteer Fire Department and Erie County Sheriff's Office teamed up for a daring animal rescue.

Officials walked 200 yards up a creek to a point they could reach the dog.

"At that point we hoisted volunteer fireman D.J. Thompson about 10 to 15 feet up a rock face, where he was able to grab onto some trees and get his hands on the dog," a fire official said.

It was Mator who helped lure Tinkerbell toward the rescuers. Rescue crews said they were happy to risk their safety to reunite the pet with her family.

"The animal is helpless. It can't do anything for itself, and everyone involved was extremely happy to stick their neck out and help the animal and help the dog owner," said the fire official.



Most years, flowers or a trip to the movies would be a good gift, but on this Mother's Day, all Julie wanted was her dog back.

Source: http://www.wivb.com/dpp/news/local/woman-reunites-with-missing-dog-in-elma

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Rowdy, Jack Russell terrier

A Christmas miracle: Dog rescued after falling into 12-foot pit
by Michelle Boudin, WCNC/NBC Charlotte
Posted on December 25, 2012

DAVIDSON, N.C. -- Mary Kay Taylor said she was the lucky one when she rescued Rowdy three years ago from a shelter.


“He is very loyal and very attached to me. I think because he had some previous trauma,” Taylor said.

So she made sure to spoil him, often taking him for walks on the campus of Davidson College near where she lives.

“I walk him usually well into campus and let him off the leash for maybe a five minute run around. Looking for squirrels is his favorite thing in the whole wide world to do,” she said.

But on Sunday he got carried away.

“In a matter of a seconds he was not within my vision and I heard this yelp noise and right away I thought, 'that’s not good.'”

But she had no idea what happened and no idea how to find the 8-year-old Jack Russell.

“I spent about an hour-and-a-half, two hours looking, looking, looking--calling his name,” Taylor said.

She posted fliers on every campus light post, and the Davidson online newspaper even posted the story. She spent a lonely night without him, wondering if he was gone.

“When you come home and he’s not there to greet you and all that kind of stuff, it’s sad,” she said.

Despondent, she was stunned when she received a phone call early Christmas morning--36 hours after Rowdy had disappeared.

He'd somehow fallen down a 12-foot pit in the well of a window outside the campus library.

“I think he jumped and down he went,” she said.

Tuesday morning, a man out walking his own dog heard Rowdy crying for help. He called the campus police. They then called the fire department and a few hours later Rowdy was snuggling by the fire in time to enjoy some new Christmas chews from Santa.

“It’s a miracle. It’s a Christmas miracle and I feel so grateful,” said Taylor.



Source: http://www.wcnc.com/home/Dog-rescued--int-ime-for-Christmas-after-falling-down-12-foot-pit-184771931.html

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Scout, Shetland sheepdog

Grieving man's dog found
By Lisa O'donnell
March 16, 2012

Still grieving over his mother's death in a house fire, Steve Morris spent much of Wednesday and Thursday dealing with another heartbreak — the disappearance of his beloved dog, Scout.


The story ended on a happy note Thursday evening when Scout, a Shetland sheepdog, and Morris were reunited.

Scout had provided Morris some comfort during what had been a painful week. Morris' mother, Sue Morris, and her dog, Sarge, were killed in an apartment fire in Kernersville last week.

On Saturday, Morris and other family members scattered his mother's ashes from an overlook at Pilot Mountain.

"She was never specific about where she wanted her ashes scattered. She just told us, 'Take them somewhere pretty.' She liked Pilot Mountain. We used to take her there," Morris said.

Still on bereavement leave, Morris decided to return to Pilot Mountain with Scout on Wednesday to get some fresh air and enjoy a beautiful day.

"I've taken him backpacking and hiking quite a bit," said Morris, who has had Scout for three years. "We've been to Cold Mountain and other places in the Appalachians."

Traveling north on US 52 near the Liberty Street exit, Morris came to a halt because of traffic in the work zone. His car was hit from behind, pushing it into a concrete median, which caused it to flip over. Scout, who had been lying on a blanket in the back of Morris' car, scampered out of a broken window and bolted down US 52.

Morris, who sustained a few minor cuts but was not seriously injured, wanted to run after Scout but was stopped by police, who needed him to answer questions about the wreck.

After more than an hour with police, Morris scoured the area to no avail. Later, his wife and some of her friends joined the search. Some people in the area reported seeing Scout near the KFC on Liberty Street.

The driver of the other car, Ashley Payne of Winston-Salem, was charged with failure to reduce speed and driving with a revoked license, according to a report from Winston-Salem police.

Morris, the regional service director of the Boys & Girls Club of America, lives in Trinity. He was too sore from the wreck to help search for Scout on Thursday.

Wendy Rivers, his wife, was back in the area around 7 am with a group of friends, posting flyers and talking with business owners and residents.

Thursday afternoon, an employee with Brown's Car Wash on Patterson Avenue, flagged Rivers down, saying he had spotted Scout in a fenced-in area next to the business.

"It was an area where we had been looking. We must have looked there 10 times but he never came out. He must have been in hiding," Rivers said.

The fenced-in area was locked for the day. Rivers, with the help of a ladder, climbed over the fence, grabbed Scout, who weighs about 25 pounds and handed him to the car wash employee, who was waiting on a ladder on the other side.

"I knew I probably should have called the owners of the property to let us in but Scout was so excited to see me," Rivers said.

Scout has a slight limp but Morris expects the two will soon be back on the trail.

Source: http://www2.journalnow.com/news/2012/mar/15/2/grieving-man-hopes-to-find-missing-dog-ar-2048126/
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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Emma, black lab

Fire crews rescue man, dog from ravine over Occoquan River
By Kari Pugh
Published: December 23, 2011

Volunteer fire crews late Friday saved a man and his dog from a dark and steep ravine over the Occoquan River off Signal Hill Road.

The black Labrador retriever, Emma, had gone missing two days earlier, said Lake Jackson Volunteer Fire Chief Jim Bailey. On Friday evening, her owner found her huddled on a crevice more than 200 feet down the embankment, about 30 feet above the water.

He went down to get his dog, but lost his footing -- and his grip on his flashlight, which slipped down into the water. He fell about 200 feet down, stopping himself by hanging onto a tree.

It was too dark to climb his way back up, so the man called out for help. His wife called 911 about 8 p.m., and the dramatic rescue began.

Crews from the Buckhall, Lake Jackson, Occoquan-Woodbridge-Lorton, Stonewall and Dale City volunteer fire departments, along with the Manassas Rescue Squad, set up over the ravine.

A firefighter rappelled down with a safety harness, and the duo was hoisted up to safety, Bailey said.

Lake Jackson volunteers put a boat in the water and rescued the dog from below.

“It took some coaxing to get her to come to me,” Bailey said. “She was way down the hill, tucked into a crevice. If she had stepped back a foot, she would have fallen in the water.”

Dog and owner weren’t injured, Bailey said. But Emma was happy to be rescued.

“She was real excited when we reunited her with her family,” Bailey said.

Source: http://www2.insidenova.com/news/2011/dec/23/fire-crews-rescue-man-dog-ravine-over-occoquan-riv-ar-1565457/
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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Freddie, border terrier

Dog rescued from under shed
Wednesday 29th November 2006

A Shropshire pooch who was trapped under a pile of logs for four days was today recovering at home with his relieved owners.


Freddie the dog vanished after a walk on Friday from his home in Bayston Hill.

The small border terrier had got himself wedged underneath a neighbour’s shed which was full of logs. As well as hunting for their pet, the family also put a notice in the lost and found notices of today’s Shropshire Star.


Firefighters yesterday had to remove all the logs to get to the black and tan coloured dog through the floor boards.


Owner Martin Parrish, of Lower Pulley Lane, Bayston Hill, said Freddie was shaking and suffering from dehydration and toxic shock when he was pulled out.

Freddie, 18 months, had gone missing during a walk on Friday when he had run off with their other dog Pikey. Freddie, who is microchipped, was not rescued until 2.20pm yesterday.

Mr Parrish said it was unlike Freddie to disappear for more than five minutes and added he and his wife Andrea, 36, had searched all the fields around.

They even called out the Fell and Moorland Working Terrier Club based in Cheshire to look for the missing pup on Sunday.

Mr Parrish, who is a director for St Kenelm Properties, said: “They walked all the fields and looked in every rabbit hole and badger set.

“They put down listening devices and if they had heard him down there, they would have applied to Defra for special permission to dig as badger setts are protected.”

But Freddie failed to appear and the couple placed a missing advert for him on www.doglost.co.uk They received more than 203 hits.

People in Bayston Hill even printed out posters from the site to display Freddie’s picture around the village. Mr Parrish said: “When he still didn’t turn up, we thought he may have been stolen. We were absolutely heart broken.”

But then the couple had a phone call yesterday from a neighbour at Pulley Hall who said he had heard a noise under his shed.

Mr Parrish, 53, said: “My wife and I dug as much as we could but it was quite dangerous because the ground could have collapsed so we called the fire brigade who were fantastic.

“They had to cut through the shed floor and they got him out. He was filthy and dehydrated and he was shaking. He hadn’t had anything to eat or drink for four days.”

Source: http://www.shropshirestar.com/latest/2006/11/29/dog-rescued-from-under-shed/

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Doudou, pekingese

Blind pet rescued from well
By Zhou Wenting (China Daily)
2011-11-28

A blind dog that became trapped in an uncovered well has been reunited with its owner more than two months after going missing.

Meng Shasha emerges from a sewer drain in Qingdao on Nov 10 with her pet dog, Doudou, who had been missing for two months. The animal had been trapped underground for almost 20 days

Doudou, a 2-year-old Pekingese, had survived on food scraps thrown down to him by people living and working nearby who heard his barking.

"Although born with severe sight problems, Doudou always made it home after going for walks alone," said Meng Shasha, who adopted the dog from a friend in 2009. "Sometimes I'd find him at the door when I got back from work."

The 26-year-old finance worker was on a business trip when the animal went missing in October. She had left her pet with a friend.

"I searched for him in the streets and posted messages on the Internet," Meng said. "I burst into tears whenever I saw his picture. I thought it was hopeless."

A short while later, Wang Bin, a Peninsula City News reporter, received a call from a reader about a dog trapped in a well for almost 20 days.

"We went to the site with a veterinarian. We tried to hook him with a rope and a box, but it didn't work," said the journalist, whose story about the dog was published the next day and attracted comments from more than 200 readers.

Meng saw the report on Nov 9 and called Wang the next morning. He gave her the address of the well, which was outside a gas station and not far from Meng's home in Qingdao, a coastal city of Shandong province.

"Doudou started barking as soon as he heard my voice," Meng said. "He was excited and wanted to jump up."

The well was one of more than 10 in close proximity. Each was 2 meters deep and interconnected by pipes about 20 cm in diameter. None of the wells had covers.

Meng climbed down, causing the animal to initially flee. "Maybe he was scared by the loud voices of the people circling above ground," she said. "In the end, I just reached out my hand for him to sniff. He instantly recognized me and licked my hand."

After being pulled from the well, Doudou was given a quick health check and a shower, and was back home the same day.

"He's very active these days and follows me everywhere," Meng said. "Before he went missing, Doudou wasn't allowed in my bedroom. Now I have a mattress next to my bed for him to sleep in."

Source: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/m/qingdao/2011-11/28/content_14176853.htm

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Polly, chow

Dog reunited with owner after water rescue
by NewsChannel 36 Staff, WCNC.com
Posted on January 5, 2010 at 3:30 PM

Dog rescued from icy water in Fort Mill

FORT MILL, SC -- A dog that was rescued from a freezing cold creek on Sunday night has been reunited with her owner.



Officials at York County Animal Control said the chow's owner came forward on Tuesday.

"The dog was just as glad to see her owner as her owner was to see the dog," supervisor Chris Peninger told the Rock Hill Herald.

Peninger said the dog, named Polly, apparently wandered off during fireworks on New Year's. On Sunday night, the dog was found stuck in a freezing creek in Fort Mill.

Fort Mill Rescue and York County Animal Control officials worked for more than an hour Sunday night to get Polly out of the creek. The dog was not seriously injured.

Peninger said Polly is between 13 and 14 years old and has hearing and seeing disabilities.

Photos here

Source: http://www.wcnc.com/news/local/Dog-reunited-with-owner-after-water-rescue-80728877.html#

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

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Turbo, doberman

Couple alerted by dolphins about tired dog tells story
By Paul Gessler
Feb 25, 2011

MARCO ISLAND: The story of Turbo, the Doberman who was saved by dolphins, has picked up national attention. Friday, the couple who heard the dolphins and jumped in the water to pull Turbo from the canal spoke out.

It's believed that the determined Doberman spent 15 hours in the canal. And the Dalessandros are part of the reason he survived.

"I think he was probably in the water probably much of the night," said Audrey Dalessandro.

"The dog was exhausted," added Sam Dalessandro.

Sam said on Monday morning, he was loading up his boat when he heard the dolphins.

"They were really putting up a raucous, almost beaching themselves on the sandbar over there," he said. "If it wasn't for the dolphin, I would have never seen the dog."

He called 9-1-1 as his wife got the ladder.

"When I got down into the water, the dog came right over to me and stayed by my leg the whole time," Audrey said.

Firefighters arrived and helped lift him out of the cold water.

"When we finally got the dog up on shore, the dog just laid down. The dog was exhausted," Sam said.

Minutes later, he was reunited with mom Cindy Burnett.

"The lady said, 'No, the dolphin saved him,'" Burnett described.

But by then, the dolphin had left.

"If it wasn't for that dolphin, that dog would be in doggie heaven right now because we would have never seen it," Sam said.




Source: http://www.abc-7.com/Global/story.asp?S=14145484
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View another version of the story at:

http://www.nbc-2.com/global/Category.asp?c=170893&autoStart=true&topVideoCatNo=default&clipId=5599467

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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Friday, April 9, 2010

Copper, yellow dog

An Accident in Washington Leads to a Happy Ending
Volunteers from a local organization make an amazing rescue!
By Jennifer Ray; posted by Brandi Bennett, Best Friends Network
September 30, 2008 : 4:06 PM


On September 16, 2008 Andrea, Chad and their dog Copper was driving down an old forest road when an animal, possibly an elk stepped out in front of the car. Andrea did what her father always told her not to do, she swerved. She instantly knew her mistake and told Chad, "hang on, we're going over".

What they didn't realize until daylight was that "over" meant a 150 foot cliff. After what seemed like eternity the jeep finally came to a rest upside down. Andrea was unconscious and covered in blood, the windows were blown out and Copper was missing.

Chad woke Andrea and got her out of the seatbelt, they climbed back up to the road. Chad went down 4 times looking for Copper, he found nothing.

They sat on the service road and built a fire for the night waiting for daybreak. Again Chad went down and looked for Copper and found nothing.

They ended up hiking home as no one stopped to help them. Later at the hospital they discovered that Andrea had 2 broken vertebrae, gashes in her head and 2 lesions on her brain. Chad had 3 cracked ribs. All they could think of was to get out so they could get back to looking for Copper. Copper was after all, their child.

The next day a car club got together and spent four hours pulling up the wreckage from the gully below. No one saw or heard Copper. They brought squeaky toys and called for him days after the accident. Still nothing.

They posted on several sites, hung flyers and even posted on Craigslist four days after the accident. Someone saw the posting and forwarded to a group called Wags to Riches Animal Rescue and Sanctuary in Union Gap, Washington. They had been involved in an eerily similar rescue after a rollover car accident not 30 days before. They found that dog after ten days. It was alive.

Wags contacted Andrea and told her, "Have hope, we will find him".

Four volunteers set out on Sunday, 5 days after the accident. They were told that because no one had seen or heard the dog that this could be a body recovery. But they needed to do it, for the family, so they would have closure and could begin to heal.

Bob Chism, Kim and Chris Wertenberger and Jennifer Ray spread out and went over the cliff to the gully. They methodically started to comb the area. The girls went together and the men went on the outer corners. The brush was so thick that a machete had to be used to make a path. At the bottom of the gully was a small creek. The girls jumped over the creek and went up and around to walk on the other side. One yelled out "Copper". A few minutes later they heard barking. Mama Bear came out and they threw all caution to the wind as they ran and wildly scraped at the branches and brush trying to get to the dog. All the while yelling "It's okay baby we're coming. Good boy Copper!"

When they got to him, he had made a little nest for himself right by the creek. When they realized he was not going to let them put a leash on him they sat down beside him and spoke soothingly to him. Bob drove down to where Andrea and Chad were staying to tell them Copper was found but they needed someone to come and call him to motivate him. In the meantime Chris cut a path through the brush for Copper to go through.

The look on Copper's face when he heard his momma yelling his name! His ears flew back, he barked in reply and stood up to come out of the hiding place.

After a bit of confusion, a lot of encouragement and praise, Copper made it up that cliff to his waiting parents. Everyone was crying and hugging. Copper was alive and well.

Standing on that cliff side, looking down, it's hard to believe that all three made it out alive. The love and devotion of a dog, a family's hope and a group's determination had reunited them again.

Copper


Copper, on the day he was found.

http://network.bestfriends.org/News/PostDetail.aspx?np=29283&g=88e56ddfb8844688ac696800af319e5b
http://network.bestfriends.org/news/print.aspx?np=29283

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Harry, bull mastiff

Harry's Big Adventure
Silver Oaks Ranch
August 2007

Big Trees

It all started on Saturday morning, August 11, 2007 at 9am in the morning. It was a glorious day in the California Sierra Nevada; the air was crisp and clean and the scent of pine and sequoia trees was wafting through the air. We were just starting a brief holiday in the serene Big Trees area. We were staying with close friends at their hideaway mountain home which is situated on one of the corners of the Calaveras Big Trees State Park. Harry (our bull mastiff) bounded out the door and into the forest after his breakfast that morning. That was the last we saw of him till Tuesday, August 14, 2007.

Flyer for missing Harry

Lost

Harry got lost in the forest. We searched for two and a half days for Harry. We called day and night for Harry to come home. We slept little and the whole weekend seemed like a bad dream that we wished we could wake up from. We traversed the roads and covered the area in flyers. We even ventured deep into the forest in hopes of locating him. But all that we tried did not reveal Harry’s location to us. It was a difficult time and we were all starting to lose hope that we would ever see Harry again.

To Lake Tahoe

On Monday, August 13, 2007 we left Big Trees and proceed up to Tahoe. We had previously planned to meet friends in Lake Tahoe. We tried to put on a good face but we were all miserable. However, all was not lost.

During dinner that night, I glanced down at my cell phone and noted that I had a message waiting for me. The message was from our friends in Big Trees. I went outside the restaurant to pick up the message. I was hoping that it was good news, but I was also trying to prepare myself for the worst. I dialed their number and waited.

Kathy answered the phone and told me the good news; Harry was found alive and was with them! I was so relieved that my knees wobbled and I had to sit down.

Harry Found

The next day we headed back to Big Tree and to our reunion with Harry. What a joyous reunion it was. The story of how Harry was found is better than fiction. He was found on the North Fork of the Stanislaus River about 10-15 miles away from our friend’s mountain home. The red “x” on the map is where we were staying and the red circled area was where Harry was found.

The Rescue Story

A man named Bruce and his nephew were fishing three miles beyond the end of the trail of the North Fork of the Stanislaus River. Not many people go out that far and it is quite remote. They heard an animal howling in desperation. The howling was coming from the other side of the Stanislaus River, which is quite deep and has a strong current. Bruce braved the river and swam across it navigating around submerged boulders to reach the other side and investigate the noise. He climbed over the rocks by the bank to find a rather large dog trapped in a crevasse. He had to climb in and lift the dog out which was not an easy task, since Harry weighs about 140 lbs.


Harry was dehydrated and physically exhausted. He drank heavily from the river and tried to follow Bruce and his nephew out but Harry was so worn-out that Bruce had to carry him a good portion of the way back up the ridge to his vehicle (about a 3 mile trek). He took Harry to the Park Ranger who had heard about the missing dog from the flyers and our efforts to talk to as many people as possible in the Calaveras Big Trees State Park. The ranger called our wonderful friends and they picked Harry up from the Ranger’s station. Our friends thanked Bruce for his heroic deed and told him about the $1,000 reward for Harry’s return.


Bruce is one of those rare, good-hearted people. He did not want the reward and was just happy to help out. Needless to say we insisted that he take the reward. He decided that he would donate the reward to a charity of his choice.

We are very lucky that we have such good friends and that Bruce and his nephew discovered our dog. It is wonderful to know such quality people.

Source (and lots of great pictures at): http://silveroakranch.com/gpage2.html

Friday, March 26, 2010

Koozie, Rhodesian Ridgeback/chow mix

Dog missing for days rescued on Lake Erie
By S Alexander Gerould
March 17, 2010

WESTFIELD When Nate Myers, his mother Dixie, and sister Amanda decided to take a walk along Lake Erie near Bourne's Beach, they had no idea it wouldn't be just a usual trek along the shore.

Nate, a fisherman, was checking on the conditions of the mouth of a creek which runs into the lake. Meanwhile, his mother and sister were busy taking photographs of the natural wonders lining the lake's shore.

But, out in the lake, something didn't seem right.

"They were taking pictures of the lake, and I happened to look out and saw a dark spot. I thought, 'What is that?'" Nate said. "I noticed it started moving. We have a pretty good camera, so we zoomed in on it and realized there was a dog out there."

HOLDING OUT HOPE

Phil Frost lives near Evangola State Park and Farnham, about 30 miles away from Westfield. It was around mid-morning on Thursday, March 11, when he noticed his dog, Koozie, a Rhodesian Ridgeback and Chow mix, had gone missing. Frost filed a pet Amber alert online, plastered his friends' Facebook pages with messages asking if they had seen his dog and put about 200 fliers at area businesses around his home.

"I was searching the woods since Thursday afternoon for some time, every day getting out of the woods well after dark," Frost said. "I would get out there first thing in the morning."

Then, on Tuesday, he got a call from a friend about a dog which was stuck on the Lake Erie ice near Barcelona.

"My buddy called and said his mother saw the news and there was a dog (stuck on the ice)," Frost said. "So, I jumped on and I was watching it (the news). It was dark, but you could see the thermal image of the dog. I looked at it, and I knew right away it was her. I could tell from the silhouette, the way she moved. They said the dog had actually bit one of the rescuers and I said, 'Wow, that sounds like Koozie to me.'"

Frost then called the Chautauqua County Sheriff's Office, who put him in touch with the Westfield Volunteer Fire Department.

"I called them and gave them a description. They called back and said they think they found my dog and sent me a picture," Frost said. "All I could care about was please let it be her. I must have said that about a million times. All I could think about was getting her home."

THE RESCUE

At first, Nate said he and his family were unsure of what to do, as they thought the dog's owner may have walked out onto the ice or was nearby. After a while, they decided to call the Westfield Police, who put them in touch with the fire department.

Soon, a rescue effort was under way, with Westfield firefighters donning wet suits and using a ice sled, while an Erie County Sheriff's helicopter and a rescue boat from Dewittville headed to the scene.

"It took a while to finally decide what to do," said Randy Edwards, assistant Westfield Volunteer Fire Department Chief. "We got our ice team out there and our ice sled. We had guys get their wet suits on, go out and try to capture the dog to get him back in. We just tried and tried and tried for about two hours."

After attempts by the Erie County Sheriff's helicopter to get close enough to the dog to scare it towards the firefighters and others, rescuers decided to call the rescue off for the night around 10:15 p.m.

"We went home and decided to come back today," Edwards said. 'We didn't want to do that (leave Monday night), but we didn't have much choice."

Around 8 a.m. Tuesday morning, the rescuers returned to the dog, and, using the helicopter, lowered an individual to the ice using a lift. They were then able to capture the animal, but not before it ran off and rescue personnel had to chase it down. The dog was taken to a local veterinarian's office to be checked out.


"He was basically okay, a couple of minor problems," Edwards said. "The dog is in good shape and the owner is happy."

'A HAPPY ENDING'

To everyone involved in the rescue, it couldn't have gone any better. They were able to rescue the dog and reunite someone with his best friend.

"To me, it was very rewarding," Edwards said. "Everybody said it's only a dog, but, to me, it's part of somebody's family. I was very, very happy that today we were able to finish the job off and have a happy ending out of it."

Frost was quick to express his gratitude for the work all the rescuers had done.

"I have so much appreciation for what these guys have done," he said, "all these guys risking their lives going out there on the ice and doing what comes natural to them."

He was also clearly overjoyed at having his dog back.

"It's a huge relief," Frost said. "I've been heartbroken since Thursday. I've had her for eight years since she was a 10 month-old pup. She's my baby. There's nothing better right now in the world for me."

Source: http://www.observertoday.com/page/content.detail/id/537401.html
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Friday, February 26, 2010

Bella, chow-GSD mix

Rescued dog reunited with her owners
Associated Press
March 9, 2009

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Days after being pulled from an ice-covered lake, a 10-year-old dog missing for two weeks is back in the warmth of her owner's home.

Bella the wayward Chow-German shepherd mix was reunited Friday with her family, three days after her rescue from Lake Lemon. She found her water bowl and food dish where they have always been, even though owner Hannah Shuler feared her 50-pound mutt might be dead.

"I didn't have the heart to put it away after she was gone," Shuler said.

Bella was rescued Tuesday from ice and mud about 200 feet from shore on Lake Lemon near Bloomington. Monroe County animal control officials used a boat to pull her to safety after the dog spent about 10 hours in the lake's icy waters. The canine was taken to a veterinarian for treatment of hypothermia.

When her photograph appeared on the front page of Friday's editions of The Herald-Times, Shuler's partner, Boyd McGinnis, spotted Bella's familiar brown muzzle. The dog had an intravenous line in her foreleg and an apprehensive look on her face.

While Shuler had given up on seeing Bella again, her daughter, Ramona, had remained optimistic.

"She believed that people might have found her and that she was saved," Shuler said. "And as it turns out, Ramona was right."

When Shuler and her daughter arrived home Friday, Bella was waiting inside by the door.

"She seems disoriented, and is kind of pacing around back and forth," Shuler said.

She said Bella had vanished two weeks ago after being let outside following a trip to the vet for breathing problems. She feared Bella might have gone off to die because Bella didn't seem much better after receiving some medicine.

Source: http://pets.kansascity.com/article/4656&pt=Rescued-dog-reunited-with-her-owners

Monday, February 15, 2010

Spikey, german shepherd

Dog saved from river returns home
By Wire Services
Feb 4, 2010

DOWNEY — The German shepherd that was rescued from the rushing Los Angeles River in Vernon during last month’s heavy rains went home to his Maywood family Tuesday.

Spikey was plucked from the river by a Los Angeles Fire Department helicopter crew Jan. 22 in a rescue that was carried live by television stations and was later broadcast nationwide.


The dog bit the thumb of Joe St Georges, the firefighter who was lowered by a hoist into the river and captured the frightened dog. St Georges said he sympathized with the frightened animal and understood why he bit him.

“He didn’t actually break through the glove,” St Georges said of his injury. “He just was able to get hold of it and bite down hard enough he broke the tip of the bone.

“I’m doing fine. I’m off duty. I’ll be returning to light duty. We’re not really sure how long I’ll be on light duty. It’ll depend on the healing process of the thumb. I’m guessing at least a month.”

After spending the last 10 days in quarantine at the Southeast Area Animal Control Agency facility in Downey, Spikey was released to his owner, 70-year-old Maria Medina, and her family.

Medina’s son, Ramon, told reporters Spikey was a “good dog.”

“He takes care of … the house. When somebody’s around, he’s always alert,” he said.

Ramon Medina said he was glad firefighters went to such effort to save the family pet.

“It’s unbelievable. … Some people have told me why do all this work for a dog?” he said. “And many people have told me ... the job that was done, it was worth it ... for saving the dog’s life.”

Spikey and the family’s other dog, a yellow Labrador named Polo, escaped from the family’s yard through a gate that was apparently left open by a young child. Polo was found the next day in the same area as Spikey’s rescue.

Officials at SEAACA said a Medina family member contacted them Jan. 25 to claim the dog — who had been dubbed “Vernon” by firefighters. SEAACA workers went to the Medina home to confirm the dog’s ownership.

Spikey wore a muzzle as he was handed back to his family. Ramon Medina conceded that the dog was nervous, having been through such an ordeal.

The firefighters involved in the rescue, meanwhile, were awarded a “Knights of Katrina award by the MuttShack Animal Rescue Foundation.

Source: http://www.wavenewspapers.com/news/local/herald-american/83574227.html
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Sunday, February 7, 2010

Mojo

Dog survives plunge into frozen pond, reunited with lost owner
Fox59.com
January 7, 2010


INDIANAPOLIS - No one would blame Shannon Burkett if she had given up hope she'd ever get reunited with her lost dog Mojo. The little dog is more than lucky. In fact, his survival story defies belief.

His name is Mojo and he's resting at home after having beaten the odds by not only surviving a life-threatening scare, but by being reunited with his relieved owner.

A passerby saw Mojo struggling to stay a float in a nearly frozen pond at the Quail Creek subdivision in Lawrence. Somehow, the dog had stayed alive in near zero degree temperatures long enough for firefighters to pull him out and put him on oxygen. He was transported by ambulance to a nearby animal hospital.

"We could not get his temperature to register on the thermometer for an hour and a half and we'd already started the warm-up process," said Randall Grosser of the Post Pet Hospital

But Mojo's luck didn't end there. A friend of Shannon's saw the rescue on Fox59 and called her. Mojo had wandered away from Shannon's home more than a month ago and hadn't been seen since.

"I was with a friend who's very familiar with Mojo and he said, 'it's him,'" said Burkett.

Shannon's faint hopes came true. His vet says Mojo will recover from pneumonia back at home. Something his owner could have never imagined.

"My gosh, they pulled him out of the water for 30 minutes. I was so upset. I just want to thank the firefighters, the rescue team that did that for him," said Burkett.

Shannon also says she hopes everyone remembers Mojo the next time they see a stray.

"Just because they see a dog walking and it's a stray and they think somebody doesn't care about them, that's not true. Nine times out of ten there's a story behind it," she added.

His vet also says Mojo must have been taken care of by someone who found him after he wandered from home.

Source: http://www.fox59.com/news/wxin-one-lucky-dog-010709,0,1363436.story

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Arabia, German shepherd

Lost dog, found fallen through thin ice, is reunited with Springfield family
By Patrick Johnson, Republican staff
December 23, 2009, 6:46PM

Arabia the German Shephard is shown with her owners and the two Springfield police officers who rescued her. From left to right are Det. James L. McCoy, Sharayvia A. Ayala, 17, her mother Erica M. Williams, and Lt. Kevin R. Wood.

SPRINGFIELD – Arabia is going home for the holidays.

The 16-month old German Shepherd, rescued early Tuesday by Springfield police after she was found fallen through the ice on Watershops Pond, was reunited with her family Wednesday afternoon at the T.J. O’Connor Animal Shelter.

Erica M. Williams of 34 Rochelle St. claimed Arabia at the T.J. O’Connor Animal Shelter, concluding a hectic 36 hours for the family that lost its dog and a dog that lost its way home.

“It’s OK as long as we got her for the holiday,” Williams said.

She said they last saw Arabia after they let her out in the back yard late Monday night. The yard is fenced in, but Arabia must have pushed the gate open or figured out how to unlock it with her nose, Williams said.

They just moved into the house earlier this week, she said.

When she discovered Arabia was missing, it set off a frantic search of the neighborhood that was unsuccessful, she said.

She said she didn’t know until later the dog had been rescued from the ice on Watershops Pond near Alden and Middlesex streets. Police spotted the dog trapped in the water about 40 yards off shore at about 1 a.m. Arabia was rescued by Lt. Kevin Wood and off-duty detective James L. McCoy.

McCoy, who lives near the pond, saw the commotion and went home to get his pontoon boat that was used by he and Wood to rescue the dog. Both officers were on hand for the reunion. A grateful Williams called them “My super cops.”

Woods said “I’m glad she’s going back to her owner. That’s great.”

It cost Williams $500 to retrieve the dog, mostly because she had no proof that the dog was properly registered or was current with its rabies and distemper vaccinations.

“We could not be happier for Arabia and her family, but it’s a very valuable lesson to be learned,” said Pam Peebles, executive director of the T.J. O’Connor facility said “People should have their pets micro-chipped, be vaccinated and licensed, and have identification on the animal at all times.”

Source: http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2009/12/lost_dog_found_trapped_on_thin.html
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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Alex, a dalmatian

Dog Rescued After Four Days in Storm Drain
Two Days of Digging Pay Off for Alex, the Dalmatian
Reporter: Bill Murray
Aug 19, 2007

SUNDAY AFTERNOON STORY (original) Sunday afternoon emergency crews in Genoa, Wayne County got an unusual call for help. Larry Thompson told first responders that his dog, Alex was trapped 15 feet underground in an old storm drain. He had been missing since Friday. Family members started hearing sounds of a dog whimpering coming from the storm drain Sunday morning. The drain pipe is in their driveway and is more than 30 years old. As of 2:30 Sunday afternoon, the dog is still stuck. Family members say Larry has crawled down in the hole to comfort his dog and try to help with the rescue. SWAZI has a crew on the scene and will update this story as details come in.
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SUNDAY NIGHT UPDATE: Sunday afternoon the search was called off for a Dalmatian trapped 20 feet underground in a storm drain in Wayne County. Sunday evening family members decided to keep digging. They say they have spent Sunday evening talking to Alex and praying for him.

Earlier Sunday, Larry Thompson tried to rescue his Dalmatian named Alex. He says the dog climbed down into a storm drain to cool off. The dog got stuck and efforts to rescue him became dangerous. At one point Larry crawled down into the storm drain to try to help free his dog but a wall of dirt started falling in on him. Larry climbed out and had to leave his family pet behind. A friend with a backhoe helped dig Sunday afternoon. The family has called for an excavation crew to come in Monday morning and resume the search for Alex. As of 10 Sunday night the family says they can still hear Alex but have not been able to do any more digging. Rescue efforts will continue Monday morning.

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Triumph over tragedy in Wayne County Monday afternoon. After days of digging, a family found their buried dog alive. Larry Thompson first noticed his 14 year old dalmatian was missing on Thursday night. Over the weekend, he heard noises and realized the dog, Alex, had fallen in a storm drain. Family, friends and a back hoe, that dug another hole 30 feet deep helped in a rescue fueled by hope.



Larry Thompson says, "A lot of people wouldn't give it a time of day or even attempt to get the animal out. I wanted to get him out alive or dead, either one. The effort was worth it both ways."

After four days underground, Alex was rushed to a vet in Huntington to be checked out.

The Thompson family is grateful for all the messages of support, received from around the region, on Alex's rescue.

Source: http://www.wsaz.com/news/headlines/9247576.html
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