After two years apart, Portland man and his dog are reunited, OR

Source: OregonLive.com, Mar 7, 2010

The story of the man, his dog and the lost and found began on a spring day two years ago near an open field in Chicago.

Roger Mallette  was playing with his black lab, Ike, when his cell phone buzzed. Mallette turned around, took the call and Ike took off.

“It was extremely painful,” Mallette said Sunday at his office in Southeast Portland. “I never got over it.”

For the longest time, it seemed to Mallette the story would end right there and he’d never see Ike again. It seemed like all he could do was nurse his broken heart and tell friends about the dog that got away. But then, late last year, Mallette got a phone call and the whole story changed.

Mallette, who is 45,  found Ike on Craigslist in 2004 when he lived in Seattle. He went to pick him up and found his new friend in a muddy backyard, bounding around, full of energy. This did not bode well.

Ike is a runner. If he’s not on a leash, he’ll sniff around and take off. Mallette estimates that in their first few months together, Ike ran away five or six times.

But Mallette always managed to find his dog. He gave Ike a rabies tag and had a microchip implanted between Ike’s shoulder blades, both of which identified Mallette as his owner.

Together, in early 2007,  Ike and Mallette moved to Chicago. It was there, in spring 2008, when Mallette took that fateful cell phone call.

He’d taken Ike off the leash to play ball with him in a grassy lot. One minute, Ike was running around, chasing the ball. The next minute: gone.

Mallette put up fliers and placed an ad on Craigslist. No luck. He eventually gave up, too distraught to get another dog.

In late 2008, Mallette moved to Portland. He owns and operates a company that makes cycling jerseys and he wanted to be in the sport’s epicenter.

This is where he met his fiance, Elizabeth Everman.  He told her all about Ike.

“I’d heard all these stories about him,” said Everman. “Roger, whenever we saw a lab, would almost tear up.”

That’s where the story stood in early December, 2009.

Then early one morning, when Mallette was asleep, he got a phone call. It was a woman from a dog shelter southwest of Chicago. She had Ike, she said on the voice mail. Call us back.

“I about fell out of bed,” Mallette said. “I was in utter disbelief. I was so caught-off-guard I was hoarse. I could barely talk.”

Apparently, Ike had run away again and someone in Romeoville, Ill., southwest of Chicago, called the animal control department. An officer came and picked Ike up.

After the microchip and the rabies tag confirmed that Mallette was the owner, Mary Helton gave him a call from the shelter.

“He started crying,” Helton recalled.

With help from a friend, Mallette had Ike flown to Portland several days later.

Now when he tells the story about his dog, it has a happy ending.

“I have to say man, it’s the coolest thing,” Mallette said. “The greatest gift the universe has ever given me.”

Missing Dog Turns Up 600 Miles Away From Home in Florida

Source: FoxNews.com, Feb 25, 2010

A Virginia couple has been reunited with their missing German shepherd, which somehow made its way to Florida.

Pamela Holt lives in Stuart, Va., and says she thought the phone call from an animal control officer in Florida was a “mean trick.” Then she realized the man really had found her missing pet, Deacon, hundreds of miles from home.

The dog hadn’t been seen since December. Holt and her husband eventually decided the dog must have died.

According to police reports, a convenience store clerk saw Deacon and another dog running in traffic last week in Deland, Fla. The clerk called authorities and the dogs were taken to a kennel.

Deacon had an implanted microchip, which helped track down the Holts. The Virginia couple have made the more than 600-mile trip to pick him up.

Dog Survives 40 Days Stranded In Mountains, CA

Source: kdka.com, Feb 22, 2010

A very strong-willed dog has returned to its owner after surviving 40 days in the freezing wilderness of the Santa Cruz Mountains, CBS station KPIX-TV reports.

Buck, a black lab, got lost near his home Jan. 6. Owner Terina Held thought he got swept up in a swollen river during a rain storm. Flyers went up and calls were made to shelters, but Held gave up after five weeks of searching.

“We figured he was probably dead or what not. Or someone fell in love with him and (they) weren’t going to give him back,” Held recalled.

But the story changed on Feb. 16 when neighbor Mark Smith took the day off to go hiking on his birthday. Smith and his dog Copper heard whimpering and found the weak, emaciated black lab stranded on a patch of dry river bed not far from where Buck went missing.

Smith scooped him up, waded 200 yards through an ice-cold creek, and carried Buck to safety.

“I would think that anybody who loves animals and was walking and seeing what I saw probably wouldn’t have hesitated to do what I did,” said Smith.

Buck lost 50 pounds as he lay in the cold without food for more than a month. Held is relieved to have her companion back at home.

“I know he knows that we love him, and maybe he didn’t want to leave us hanging dry,” said Held. “Maybe he wanted to make sure to give us more love before his dying day.”

Virginia Dog Found in Oklahoma 10 Years After Disappearing

Source: NBCPhiladelphia.com, October 1, 2009

093009+Brindle+Now+and+Then

A dog missing from northern Virginia for a decade may soon be reunited with his owner after showing up in Oklahoma.

Tristan Rohde, 8, her family found Brindle under a bush in their Lawton, Okla., neighborhood a couple of weeks ago – more than 1,300 miles from where he disappeared. The Rohdes thought Brindle was dead, but when he lifted his head, Tristan decided to take him in.

“If I didn’t, then he would just be sitting there right now with no family, no friends, no nothing,” she said.

The Rohdes took Brindle, who was near death, to a veterinarian who found a microchip with tracking information under Brindle’s skin.

“I’m just so proud of my daughter being so caring like she is, taking in the dog that was probably knocking on heaven’s door,” said Tristan’s father, Jon Rohde.

The family then used Facebook to track down Brindle’s owner, Gary Rowley.

Brindle was a smart dog, Rowley said. He could open doors.

“He would hook his toenails into the side of the door and he opened it,” Rowley said Wednesday.

On Super Bowl Sunday 1999, Brindle opened the door and never returned.

The circumstances surrounding Brindle’s disappearance, past 10 years and incredible journey to Oklahoma are unknown.

“I’m not mad at the dog,” Rowley joked. “All I want to ask him is, ‘Why in the hell did you run off 10 years ago?’”

The reunion awaits Brindle’s recuperation. He’s not yet well enough to travel, but if the vet OKs him Friday, Brindle and Rowley could be together again next week.

Lost Dog Gathers Clues to Find its Family, TN

Source: CBS News, September 28, 2009

Over the last 20 years, the Love Me Tender animal rescue in central Tennessee has rounded up more than 1,000 abandoned dogs. And although most are timid and untrusting, one Rottweiler named Ella was notably different.

“I could just tell right away she was somebody’s baby. She just didn’t act like a stray dog to me,” said Kathy Wilkes-Myers, who found the dog a few months ago.

Ella was emaciated and drinking from a drainage ditch along an empty stretch of highway. Kathy says it’s typical for people to dump unwanted pets in the middle of nowhere – but again, the dog’s demeanor convinced her there was more to the story. So she did some detective work, and what she found is a heart-wrenching tale of unending loyalty.

“She was hoping her family could come back. But they couldn’t. They couldn’t come back. It just breaks your heart,” said Kathy.

Kathy found the first clues to this mystery – broken glass and tail lights – right near where she found the dog.

And just down from there, she found a second set of even more intriguing clues: personal items gathered up. By the dog, she assumed.

“It was like she was sleeping with them – or waiting with them,” Kathy said.

She took a picture with her cell phone and then gathered the items. They were mostly random, personal things – toothbrush, comb, razor, a candle that said Michelle, but nothing that would explain anything – although now, she did have a hunch.

Kathy remembered two weeks earlier she’d driven by an accident on the same stretch of highway. She remembered because it was such a horrible crash. A single car had flipped over and landed on the side of the road, at just about the same spot where she found the dog.

Based on what she saw that day, Kathy figured there was no way a person could have survived, but what about a dog? So she called the highway patrol.

“She gave me the mom’s name and the dad’s name and the mom’s name was Michelle. And I thought, ‘Oh my God, this is their dog,” she said.

Thrown from the car, rescue crews never saw the dog. She spent 13 days scavenging for food along the highway – and 13 nights bedding down with whatever she could find that smelled like her lost family.

“That’s the last spot she saw her family and she was going to stay there,” Kathy said.

Kathy figured it all out. But fortunately, she got one thing very wrong. Someone did survive the crash. In face, all five family members survived.

“I’m lucky to be sitting here with my family,” said Joe Kelly, the family’s father.

After two weeks believing that their dog, Ella, had died, the family of Joe and Michelle Kelly got the most wonderful, slobbery surprise of their lives.

For the first time since the accident, the Kelly’s had a good reason to cry -all thanks to a dog who refused to forget her family – and the stranger who refused to take lost for answer.

Unfortunately, it was a bittersweet reunion because of the accident and the medical expenses, the Kelly family has had to temporarily relocate to a place that doesn’t allow dogs.

The good news is, Kathy has promised to hold onto Ella for as long as the Kelleys need to get back on their feet.

Missing dog found after a decade, UK

Source: BBCNews.com, August 16, 2009

A dog has been reunited with his owners more than nine years after going missing from his Essex home.

_46213238_kennyptKenny, a cross bichon frise, was found wandering alone in Epping Forest by a passer-by. His owners were traced using a microchip.

He was aged two when he went missing and the dog’s owners presumed that he had been stolen.

Joshua Donnelly, Kenny’s owner’s son, said: “I had long since given up hope of ever seeing Kenny again.”

“I was overjoyed to be reunited after such a long time.”

It is not known where Kenny spent his missing years.

Husky still missing * Plea for help

Source: NYTimes.com, July 30, 2009

Assemblyman Joe Lentol has made dog-napping a priority with a plea for the return of Laika, Natalie Barratt’s still-missing husky. “As a dog owner I cannot imagine what this must be like,” Mr. Lentol said in a news release. “If anyone has any information at all, please contact the owner and help bring Laika home.”

Laika, lost dog

Well, only a few of us here at The Local are dog owners, but we too are hoping for the speedy return of the elderly husky. We checked back in with Ms. Barratt to see if there have been any new developments and we’re sorry to say that, as of yet, her dog has not been found or returned.

An 11-year-old Clinton Hill girl did claim to see a gray dog of similar description alone near Atlantic Avenue a couple of nights ago, but there hasn’t been a reported sighting since. To follow the search, check out Ms. Barratt’s new blog, GoneLaikaGone.

Also take a look at the security camera footage above and do excuse the poor quality, it’s the only surveillance tape available. Around four seconds you’ll notice Laika walking off with a wheelchair-bound man and the woman pushing him.

Missing dog Muffy found after nine years, Australia

Source: TimesOnline.co.uk, July 30, 2009

muffy

Just like Lassie the adventurous collie dog, a scruffy pet named Muffy will finally return home after a nine-year, 2000km (1250 mile) odyssey down the east coast of Australia.

The terrier-cross (or “bitsa” as her type of cross-breed is more affectionately known) was last seen by her owners on the Gold Coast in Queensland in 2000 ago when she took off from a friend’s house one day and never came back.

The Lampard family had given her up for dead and even replaced her with a Rottweiler named Jack, who died of cancer four months ago.

Incredibly, earlier this month, Muffy was discovered in Melbourne, Victoria, by the RSPCA, who had been tipped off by a good Samaritan concerned about a sickly looking, flea-ridden dog living in decrepit surroundings in a suburban backyard.

“We found her living in pretty awful conditions on a piece of cardboard, she had matted hair and was riddled with fleas and had a really severe dermatitis condition,” Victorian RSPCA inspector Gail Coulter told The Times.

After a vet cleaned up the scruffy white-haired dog and gave her medication for her bad skin condition, the welfare agency officers discovered the then-unknown pet had a microchip which meant she could potentially be traced to owners.

“We had to get the tracing department to track down the details because it was such an old microchip, and when we found the owner we rang her and said we’d found Muffy, and it’s fair to say she was pretty surprised,” Ms Coulter said.

On the Gold Coast, Natalie Lampard was stunned when the RSPCA phoned. “I just couldn’t believe it, it’s absolutely amazing,” Ms Lampard told The Times. “I told my daughter Chloe and she was just over the moon, she can’t wait to see Muffy again.”

Ms Lampard said Chloe Rushby, now 17, had been inseparable with the dog, which was her best friend when she was a child.

“They stuck together all the time and Muffy would sleep on Chloe’s bed every night,” she said.

“Chloe was devastated when Muffy went missing. After about a year I thought we would never see the dog again, but Chloe would often talk about her. It’s a pretty happy ending.”

Earlier today Chloe was preparing to fly to Melbourne to be reunited with Muffy, who will return to live with the family in Queensland.

According to Ms Coulter, the dog will still need ongoing veterinary attention and will need to be closely looked after by the family because of her severe skin condition, which is caused by a flea allergy and makes her hair fall out.

“I don’t mind at all, we’re happy to look after her, we’re just happy to have her come home,” said Ms Lampard.

While the RSPCA have confirmed the dog lived in filthy conditions in the house in Melbourne for at least a year, the real story behind the rest of Muffy’s journey – she somehow travelled across three states and the Australian Capital Territory – will never be known.

“I’m sure she’s been through some incredible adventures over the years,” said Ms Coulter. “If only she could talk, she’d have a great story to tell.”

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