Three Poodles Survive Illinois House Explosion

The very same day two Dachshunds miraculously survived a house fire in Pennsylvania, three Standard Poodles in Illinois miraculously survived when the house they lived in blew up due to a natural gas leak.

As with the Dachshunds, the Poodles were initially thought to have been killed Saturday. The three dogs were in kennels in the basement of the house in Caseyville, and had no way of escaping. The homeowner and his son and daughter-in-law, who are Poodle breeders, were not home at the time of the explosion.

“If anyone had been inside, they would not have survived,” Hollywood Heights Fire Dept. Chief Buddy Moore told KTVI Saturday.

Sunday afternoon, next-door neighbor Larry Arnold — who happens to work for the fire department — was in his front yard, talking to other neighbors, when he heard something.

“I said, ‘Shut up, you guys, I hear those dogs crying,’” Arnold told the Belleville News-Democrat. “They said I was crazy. We walked over there and those dogs got real quiet because they must have been scared. But then they started barking.”

Arnold called Moore, and six firefighters soon arrived with a backhoe to dig out the Poodles. About two feet of water covered the basement floor.

St. Clair County Emergency Management Agency Director Herb Simmons told the News-Democrat one of the kennels had been partially crushed. Firefighters cut it open to rescue the Poodle inside it.

“I couldn’t believe they were still alive because of the explosion, the heat of the fire and then they almost drowned,” Arnold told the News-Democrat. “But it was probably the water that saved them from the heat.”

A fourth dog, thought to be an Australian Shepherd, ran out of the house after the explosion, neighbor Darlene Jonas told the News-Democrat. That dog has not been found.

Photos via TwitterFacebook

Two Dachshunds Found Alive Day After Pennsylvania House Fire

When their house in East Fallowfield Township, Pa., went up in flames late Saturday afternoon, a family thought they had not only lost their home, but two precious four-legged family members as well.

According to WPVI, investigators believe the two-alarm fire was started by someone smoking. Two women in the house were able to escape without injury, but their two Dachshunds were left behind. It took firefighters about half an hour to put out the flames.

As the family mourned their losses Sunday morning, someone spotted the Dachshunds sitting in what remained of a second-floor bedroom.

Modena Fire Company Chief Frank Dowlin happened to be finishing a report on the fire when he got a call from the East Fallowfield Police Department.

“They’re alive,” Dowlin was told, according to a news release he wrote today.

Firefighters and the relieved family rushed to the house. Once they got there, “it was truly a great sight,” Dowlin wrote.

“Standing at the rear of the house, looking through the large hole, there they were — tails a-wagging, looking down at their owners.”

Firefighter Charlie Johnson climbed a ladder and, attached to a rope, entered the unstable structure, walking across the bedroom to the dogs. One at a time, he scooped up the dogs brought them to firefighter Justin Carlo, who carried each of them down the ladder.

“The dogs were amazingly both doing well and, after a reunion with their owners, were cleaned up a little, and given water and food by neighbors, and then spent some time running around the yard,” Dowlin wrote.

“The event was truly a miracle to witness. Our crews were glad to bring a little happiness to the family.”

Photos via Twitter; Twitter

‘Hugging’ Shelter Dogs Rescued Together Hours Before Being Euthanized

Hours before they were both scheduled to be euthanized yesterday at a high-kill Atlanta shelter, Kala and Keira were rescued — just two hours after a touching photo of the pair was posted on social media.

In the photo, posted on the Angels Among Us Pet Rescue Facebook page, Kala, a brown terrier mix, is clinging to the neck of her cellmate, a black-and-white Boxer mix named Keira.

Angels Among Us Pet Rescue is a nonprofit dedicated to saving the lives of pets in high-kill shelters in northern Georgia. Someone from the Atlanta shelter sent the organization the photo of Kala and Keira, hoping it would help get them rescued — and it worked.

“I’m Kala. This is Keira. We’re so scared in here,” reads the photo description, which is as moving as the photo itself.

“Can you see our faces. Keira knows what will happen. You can see it in her eyes. She’s putting on a brave face for sure, but I can feel her heart beating fast while I’m clinging to her. If no one saves us, someone will take her away from me. I’ll see her as she goes down the hallway. She won’t come back and I’ll cry. They’ll come for me next and I won’t be as brave. We’ve comforted each other while we were here. She gave me hope when I had none. Now it’s over. Unless…”

The photo quickly went viral. Exactly two hours and six minutes after it was posted, Kala and Keira were leaving the shelter — not via the euthanization room, but with the man who rescued both of them.

“There are no words to tell you how happy we are that these two best friends are safe and together!” Angels Among Us wrote on its Facebook page yesterday.

“Thank you for your shares, donations and offers! Just look at these two!! This is why we rescue. We can do amazing things when we all work together!”

To make a donation to Angels Among Us Pet Rescue, click here.

Photos via Facebook

Military Family’s ‘Dead’ Dog Found Alive Years Later

In 2012, the Harworth family of Georgia was reassigned to a U.S. military base in South Korea. They had to leave their beloved dog, a Chow Chow/German Shepherd/Rottweiler mix named Zeus, with a family friend who lived in North Carolina.

A few months later, the Harworths were heartbroken when, for some unknown reason, the friend told them Zeus had died.

Fast forward three years. Laura Williams of Durham, N.C., (that’s her in the photo above) was concerned when she saw a scrawny Rottweiler mix wandering along a road.

“He was looking all lethargic and out of it, and not really too well,” Williams told WNCN. “He let me put a collar and a leash on him, and he jumped into my car.”

She took him to a vet, who discovered the dog was microchipped. His name was — wait for it — Zeus! And his owners were the Harworths!

Williams was able to track down and phone the Harworths, who are now living in Washington state. It was a strange call, to say the least.

“When I said, ‘We found your dog, Zeus’ – because he was listed as lost — they said their dog was dead,” Williams told WNCN.

“We all got chills. The girl from the vet got chills. I got goosebumps, and I almost started crying because for the past three years, they thought their dog was dead.”

WNCN reporter Sean Maroney (that’s him in the photo) arranged a Skype reunion for Zeus and the Harworths. The dog’s tail wagged nonstop as Melody Harworth and her two teenage sons cried, “Zeusy! Hi, Zeusy!”

“He looks great,” Melody said. “My husband is going to be so excited. He has no idea. He’s going to be coming home from training.”

Zeus is being treated for heartworm, so he would have to wait six months to be flown back to his family in Washington. Since that’s more than three years in dog’s years, other options to transport Zeus across the country are currently being considered.

Hopefully, he’ll be home in time to greet his dog dad at the front door.

Photo via Twitter

RIP Chester, Terminally Ill Dog Who Enjoyed Bucket List

Nicole Elliot did what many people wouldn’t. In late June, after falling in love with his photo on the Animal Ark Rescue website, she adopted Chester, a scruffy, 14-year-old Miniature Schnauzer mix who was dying of a rapidly spreading cancer.

And that’s not all Elliot did. To make Chester’s last days on Earth as pleasant as possible, Elliot created a bucket list for him. She shared their adventures on social media, quickly gaining more than 80,000 fans.

Chester was treated to oatmeal milk baths, trips to a dog park and extra treats.

“I only hope someone would do the same for me if I was terminally ill,” Elliot, of Columbia, Ga., told CNN Tuesday. “I think he deserves it. He seems to have been neglected in his past life. He is such a sweet boy.”

Chester was only able to enjoy about 11 days of being spoiled by Elliot. He crossed the Rainbow Bridge yesterday.

“I held him until his last breath and then some,” Elliott wrote on the Chester’s final journey Facebook page. “I told him it was okay to let go, and how loved he was. I know without a doubt Chester died knowing that he mattered.”

As of Saturday morning, more than 11,000 Facebook fans have left their condolences.

“He is now pain free and running around with all of your babies that have gone before him,” Elliot wrote. “Chester’s journey with us was too short lived, but his presence with us will never be forgotten.”

Photos via Facebook

Exit mobile version