Virginia Dog Found in Oklahoma 10 Years After Disappearing

Source: NBCPhiladelphia.com, October 1, 2009

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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 reunited with owner 14 months after taking off after cat, CA

More than a year had passed since Cheryl Chaudhary’s dog Sai took off after a cat in Watsonville and never came back.

It was a traumatic experience, Chaudhary said, like losing a child. She had, after all, helped birth the Jack Russell terrier herself.

Chaudhary looked for months, blanketed the town with fliers, gotten handfuls of false leads and eventually stopped the hunt.

Last Friday, however, thanks to a microchip the size of a grain of rice, Chaudhary and Sai were brought back together in the kind of reunion even the most seasoned animal services workers don’t get sick of.

“She honestly didn’t believe us when we called and it wasn’t until she came into the shelter on Friday that she believed us,” Tricia Geisreiter of Santa Cruz County Animal Services said. “She saw the dog, burst into tears, collapsed on the floor and the dog started whining.”

Animal control officers caught Sai after setting up humane dog traps off of Atkinson Lane in Watsonville. They had been alerted by citizens that two dogs had been seen loose in the area together, one friendly, one aggressive. The friendly one turned out to be Sai.

The dogs were taken to the shelter and scanned for microchips. Sai’s information came up and Chaudhary, who has since moved from Watsonville to Capitola, was contacted.

“I was having dreams of him and I hadn’t dreamt of him in a really long time,” Chaudhary said. “Like two nights before (I got him back), I could hear him crying. And I’m not a religious person, but I prayed I’d get him back. I honestly believe that I was hearing him wherever he was.”Sai hasn’t been the same, Chaudhary said, but owner and dog are adjusting. He still jumps up on the bed to sleep with her, but barks less than he used to and does a lot more laying around.

“He’s just really quiet but I take him to his favorite beach twice a week and he cheers up,” she said. “He was loose on the greenbelt in Watsonville. Who knows what happened to him.”

Because of the microchip, Chaudhary said she never gave up hope. And that’s the only reason she got Sai back, said Geisreiter. Sai had a collar but no tags when he was found. The device costs $15 including a registration fee and is easily injected under the skin with a syringe.

“A lot of people question us, ‘Do you really scan every animal that comes in?’” Geisreiter said. “And the answer is yes we do.”

Said Chaudhary: “I never truly gave up hope 100 percent because of the microchip.”

An overdue homecoming: Microchip leads dog missing nearly a year back home

Source:The Spokesman-Review, By Meghann M. Cuniff

Had it not been for an embedded microchip, a Spokane Valley dog missing for nearly a year might not have been reunited with his owners.

SPOKANE — If dogs could talk, this pooch might speak of rugged adventures on the streets of Spokane, scavenging for food, dodging cars and rumbling with street strays.

Or, if he truly understood his circumstances, he might start with a thank you. Had it not been for that microchip, he’d be locked in a cage awaiting adoption with a roomful of barking competitors.

Instead, Zeus the Maltese is home with his family after spending much of the year missing. Picked up by an animal control officer Monday, a microchip embedded in his skin as a puppy gave SpokAnimal his owner’s information.

Jana Erickson left her job at Car Toys early Tuesday for the reunion at SpokAnimal.

“We waited for months and finally realized we weren’t probably going to get him back,” Erickson said. “We’ve missed him so much.”

Now about 3 years old, Zeus disappeared from the Ericksons’ yard near Park Road and Sprague Avenue in Spokane Valley last winter.

The family scoured the neighborhood. Friends and neighbors kept an eye out, too, but there was no sign of the white, silky-haired dog until a SpokAnimal employee called Erickson this week.

Zeus had been picked up in the 2100 block of East Lacrosse Avenue, about six miles from the Erickson home. He returned home Tuesday evening, to the delight of Erickson’s sons, ages 2 and 4.

Zeus will have a new friend at home, too: a cocker spaniel named Bart. The family bought him a couple of weeks ago.

First on Zeus’ agenda? A haircut. The dog’s matted fur covered his eyes as he cuddled with Erickson at SpokAnimal. She’ll have him shaved by a dog groomer, then resume regular brushing.

Erickson hopes other pet owners learn from her experience.

Microchips like Zeus’ cost about $15, said Alicia Finch, an animal control technician at SpokAnimal.

“It is the one piece of owner identification that can’t fall off,” Finch said.

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