Just a quick update: Midnight has been found. Coincidentally, he was missing for one month. Congratulations to Midnight's owners!
His blog has more details here: http://www.helpfindmidnight.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Help Find Midnight
We've learned of another missing dog, named Midnight. See his blog here. Right now his owners are feeling a little desparate. There have been no sightings in 10 days, and apparently a dog-fighting ring operates in the area near where he was lost.
They are having a flyering event this weekend. Sarah, Lucy, and I will not be able to make it, but if you want to help, details are on Midnight's blog.
You can download a copy of his flyer here.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Lucy Update, Pictures, and Deflyering Efforts
Lucy has settled in pretty nicely. Her energy levels are surprisingly high already, though not quite what they were before her walkabout adventure.
We found a tick on her. So now the list of ill effects Lucy has suffered from her month-long vacation in the District wilds includes two items:
- Lost 15% of her body weight (8 lbs.)
- A tick. One.
Sooooo, yeah, we think we're pretty lucky.
Also, I posted to Picasa some pictures taken since she got home. You can view the gallery here.
And lastly, we have been trying to take down all the fliers we put up over the course of the last month. It's going to take a few weeks of course, and we might miss some as we go. So we're asking for two favors from people:
- If you see any fliers, take them down (and please let us know where you took them down from).
- If you're free next Saturday, 3/14, come down and help us deflyer some areas. (Noon, at Carter Barron Amphitheater parking lot.)
And once again, thank you everyone who has so generously helped us in the course of this ridiculously difficult month. Special thanks to Steph, Lisa, Daphne, Donna, Nancy, Laura Totis & Chewy the Wonder Dog, and Maurice & Pollie. Thanks as well to everyone who posted fliers for Lucy, including Michele & Dave, Jill, Catherine, Alycia, Will the Wonder Lawyer, Fran, and Katie. HUGE thanks to everyone who spotted Lucy and took the time to call us. I'm sure I'm forgetting others, and to you I apologize. There were so many who contacted us, encouraged us, wished us well, and helped us, that I doubt I can remember to thank everyone individually. But know that your contribution, however small, helped us enormously.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Bah, More Help Needed
We are going to spend the next few weeks taking down all the fliers we posted during our Lucy Search Extravaganza. We could definitely use help doing it, though.
We'll be out there this Sunday, and next Saturday if anyone would like to join us. This task should be a lot more happy than the previous gatherings. We will also probably bring Lucy along for part of it (how long we keep her out there will depend on her stamina), so if you want to meet the dog who spawned such an effort, come on down. We will plan to meet at noon at the Carter Barron Amphitheater parking lot again (it made for a good meeting place the last few times), so anyone who is willing to help tear down some fliers, please come on by.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Doing Fine
So the vet thinks Lucy is in remarkably good health, all things considered. Normal temperature, normal heart and lung action, normal everything. She lost 8 pounds (was 55 lbs. before going on walkabout, now 47 lbs.), and we won't receive word about internal parasites until tomorrow. But otherwise, Lucy is well.
Lucy is Home!
Sarah nabbed her this morning around 6:30.
She went to check on a trap we set out last night, and saw Lucy inside the grounds of the embassy next door. So she laid down near the place in the fence where Lucy could squeeze out, put out some chicken, and waited.
Lucy eventually came over to sniff, and as soon as she realized this body was one of her people, she ignored the chicken and commenced a thorough licking of Sarah's face.
The rest is fairly unimportant. She's home. She's incredibly dirty. My white dog is really a gray dog right now. But she seems completely unscratched; I haven't found a single wound on her. She's skinny -- she definitely lost weight, but not nearly as much as I would have thought, for having been lost a month. (To the day today, it is one month.) She drank roughly half a gallon of water after getting home. I'm not exaggerating. Maybe more than half a gallon.
Now we're waiting to get a vet appointment to get her checked out. Great day in the morning my Lucy is home. What a good feeling.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
We Saw Our Own Damn Dog
Yep, you read that correctly. Sarah and I both saw Lucy today. We don't have her in our hands yet, but we were close. So very close.
Let me back up a little. I promised to give more details about this embassy sighting, and it leads directly to today's excitement.
DC Animal Control called me last night to say that a stray dog, white, same collar as Lucy, was spotted behind an embassy on Massachusetts Ave. The dog matched the description of Lucy on the lost dog report they have, so someone over there put two and two together, and called me. Apparently, two Animal Control officers responded yesterday, but the dog ran away from them and they didn't want to give chase because the area is near the Rock Creek Parkway. So the plan was for them to call me today before they headed back out, so I could go with them and try to coax the dog out if it turned out to be Lucy.
The plan went slightly awry, but that was harmless error. A nice Animal Control officer named Ted went to the area today, the dog wouldn't let him get anywhere near it, so he called me. Sarah and I came down, met Ted at the Metro station, and he took us over to the area.
Behind a row of embassies on Massachusetts Ave. is a strip of land; it runs down a steep hill, then levels off briefly before running into an offshoot of the Rock Creek Parkway. It is not a terribly large area, and a dog in there has nowhere to go until late at night when traffic on the parkway dissipates.
So. We traipsed around a bit with Ted, calling Lucy's name. Within about 10 minutes, I caught sight of a white(ish) tail moving through the trees, away from me. Shortly after, Sarah, lower down the hill, saw Lucy. Thus began the most frustrating afternoon in recent memory. To shorten a long story, in the course of the next hour and a half, we each saw Lucy, quite clearly, 4-5 times. Each. The nearest I got was probably about 30 feet away. We made eye contact, she turned and went the other way.
I tried calling her name and issuing commands, like "come;" I tried talking quietly, sweetly, whistling, making play noises, using her various nicknames, all for naught. Clearly she has gone into whatever survival mode they go into when dogs have been on the loose for a few weeks. She doesn't seem to really recognize me or Sarah, and treats us as she treats all humans: things to be avoided.
So that's the bad news. She's completely unresponsive to me or Sarah. Which is so incredibly frustrating, because we were so close, and we kept seeing her. But the good news is that she clearly has made this area something of a home base. Her tracks were all over the place, and readily visible thanks to the snow and mud. We could see the track she had worn along the top of the hill, behind the embassies, and down the hill and back around. There's a loop she has worn into the ground. She has been here for days, and hopefully will stay here until we get her fuzzy butt into a trap.
I'm still a little stunned. I can't believe I saw her little Goose face so close, and she wouldn't even respond to me.
In any case, we set out some feeding stations, and set up a trap. There is pretty much an entire rotisserie chicken there (minus the bones of course), plus about 5 pounds of dog food, a few cans of cat food (which is really stinky, so attracts dogs well), and a few bowls of water.
SIDENOTE: Sarah came up with a brilliant idea. Because it's supposed to go down to 11 degrees tonight, we were worried about all the available water freezing, and Goose not getting anything to drink. So Sarah bought some of those adhesive, muscle pain relief, heating pads (click here to see what I mean), and stuck them to the bottom of the plastic water bowls, so the heat would keep the water from freezing (hopefully) for 12 hours. Fine work, Sarah.
The hope is that at the very least Lucy will get some good meals, and some solid nutrition in her body. Hopefully she'll think that this area is just brimming with free food, so there's no reason to move on to another area. And eventually, as we reduce the number of feeding stations, the only place she'll find food is inside the trap.
PLEASE NOTE: If you are anywhere near this area, please DO NOT go there in search of Lucy. Do not try to approach her, do not try to do anything anywhere in the vicinity. The worst thing that could happen right now is for well-intentioned people (including myself) to drive Lucy out of this area and into the unknown. As long as she's sticking to this spot, we want her there. We'll eventually get her into a trap. So for everyone wanting to help us locate Lucy, please avoid this area of woods behind the embassies on Massachusetts Ave. Consult the map if you need to be sure.
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