Saturday, March 2, 2019

Good News: A runaway dog, a 200-mile trek, and a happy reunion!

As dog dads and dog rescuers, there is no better story than a lost dog being reunited with his/her family. Here's one of those stories from the Portland (Maine) Press Herald on Feb. 19, 2019:

A runaway dog, a 200-mile trek, and a happy reunion

Kaiser, a 5-year-old German shepherd-malamute mix, was recently picked up by his owner after a nine-month, 200-mile journey that led him from Ashby, Mass., to Bethel. 

Kaiser, a dog lost in June in Massachusetts, is reunited with his owner, Tom Wollacott, on Friday at Responsible Pet Care, an animal shelter in South Paris. (Photo by Jon Bolduc/Sun Journal)

 
SOUTH PARIS — On June 23 last year, Kaiser, a 5-year-old German shepherd-malamute mix, slipped his collar at a kennel in Massachusetts and wandered north.
     Last month, a homeowner in East Bethel spotted the dog. Her freezer had just died, and she kept meat on her front porch and noticed Kaiser stealing from the stash. She called animal control, and it took three and a half weeks until Sue Milligan of Bethel Animal Control finally was able to trap him.
From Bethel, Kaiser was taken to Responsible Pet Care, an animal shelter in South Paris, where caretakers were able to identify his owner as Tom Wollacott of Ashby, Massachusetts.
    Last Friday, Kaiser was reunited with his owner, some 200 miles from where they last saw each other  Kelly Ouellette, a technician at Responsible Pet Care, took care of Kaiser after he was brought to the shelter.
“For the first two days, he wouldn’t move. He shook in the back of his room,” said Ouellette, and she quickly grew attached to the animal. “He’s kind of a favorite right now, because he’s such a good boy,” she said. Ouellette, who recently lost a dog and took to Kaiser right away, planned on adopting the dog if no one claimed him.
    Wollacott said he was surprised to get the call that his dog had been found, but “I figured he was somewhere.”
     During his stay at Responsible Pet Care, the runaway became known as Grizz and many people wanted to adopt him. So Wollacott had to prove ownership. The man knew very specific information about some dental oddities in Kaiser’s mouth, and when shelter volunteer Morgan Miles approached the dog and called his name, Kaiser “lifted his head right up and stared me dead in the face,” she said.
    “He’s done fantastic for being out as long as he has; he’s been very quick. You see dogs that have been out less time than him that take significantly longer to come around,” said Miles, who is also a board member of Responsible Pet Care and volunteers with Maine Lost Dog Recovery.

   In 2018, Maine Lost Dog Recovery brought 1,073 lost dogs home safe. Kaiser’s case stands out, mainly because of the distance and the dog’s ability to quickly re-adapt after being on his own for so long.
   When Wollacott arrived at the shelter Friday, Kaiser sniffed his long-lost owner for a few seconds, then jumped on Wollacott and zoomed around the room, wild with joy. “A 5-year-old is looking forward to seeing him,” said Wollacott. First on the to-do list when Kaiser gets home? A nice bath, and a big steak.

Who I am

I'm a simple guy who enjoys the simple things in life, especially our dogs. I volunteer for dog rescues, enjoy exercising, blogging, politics, helping friends and neighbors, participating in ghost investigations, coffee, weather, superheroes, comic books, mystery novels, traveling, 70s and 80s music, classic country music,writing books on ghosts and spirits, cooking simply and keeping in shape. You'll find tidbits of all of these things on this blog and more. EMAIL me at Rgutro@gmail.com - Rob

A Classic Country Music Station to Enjoy