Rottweiler Saves Pug Stuck in Well for 10 Days

Spooked by fireworks during a walk earlier this month, a Pug named Olive bolted. She seemed to have vanished from Wick, a village in England.

For over a week, Saffron Mackeson, along with friends and strangers, searched for her little dog. Their hopes for Olive being able to survive in the wintry conditions began to fade.

Ten days after Olive disappeared, Nichola Jones walked Bear, her 2-year-old, 110-pound Rottweiler, about a half mile away from where Olive ran off. Bear suddenly began to act strangely.

“I was just walking past a hedgerow and Bear stopped. He wouldn’t move,” Jones told the Daily Mail. “So I went through the hedge, and I found a well and looked down, and there was this black Pug.”

It was Olive who was looking back up at her. Jones climbed into the 5-foot-deep well and pulled her out to safety.

“I was worried she might have hurt herself,” Jones said. “She was petrified, but then her tail wagged. She was fine.”

Mackeson couldn’t be happier to be reunited with her beloved dog. “I’m so relieved,” she told the Daily Mail. “She’s lost a lot of weight, but other than that, she’s fine. We were so happy when we got the call.”

People that Mackeson said she doesn’t even know have been coming by, bringing Olive treats as the Pug recovers.

You know who else deserves to be showered with treats? Bear the hero dog.

“Bear is amazing. He is beautiful and has saved Olive’s life,” Mackeson’s mom, Zed Hale, told the Daily Mail. “He deserves a medal.”

Here’s hoping the gentle giant will get what he deserves.

Photo credit: joaquin uy/Flickr

Someone Really Wonderful Put $8,000 in Pasadena Humane Society Donation Box

With the constant bombardment of bad news, some days it seems like the world is pretty much an overfilled dog poop bag. September 21, however, was not one of those days.

Why? Because a very generous donor left $8,000, in cash, in a donation box at the Pasadena Humane Society & SPCA in California. You have restored my faith in humanity, you amazing mystery person, you.

“This was a wonderful surprise,” spokeswoman Jamie Holeman told the Pasadena Star News. “The donation is going to really help us.”

The 400 $20 bills were discovered in a collection box in the shelter’s Neely Cat Center yesterday morning.

“It was an anonymous donation,” Holeman told the Pasadena Star News. “If they want to come forward and identify themselves, we’d love to thank them in person.”

Holeman told Pasadena Now the philanthropist may have been a woman visiting the shelter who was seen near the donation box yesterday morning.

“She also expressed interested to our staff about adopting a cat, but did not visit the adoptions office,” Holeman said. “We can only guess it was this person, as the donation was left anonymously.”

The Pasadena Humane Society & SPCA takes in 12,000 unwanted pets every year, Holeman said, and relies on donations to help keep it running.

“This $8,000 donation is going to go a long away to provide help, food and shelter for the critters that we have in our care,” she told the Pasadena Star News.

Photo via Twitter

Congrats to Hooch! French Mastiff with No Tongue Wins 2016 American Hero Dog Title

Hooch, a French Mastiff with badly cropped ears, a broken tail — and no tongue to make him a better bait dog in dog-fighting rings — was announced as the American Hero Dog of 2016 at last night’s sixth annual American Humane Association (AHA) Hero Dog Awards ceremony.

The awards, presented by the Lois Pope LIFE Foundation, “celebrate the important role dogs play in our lives,” said Dr. Robin Ganzert, AHA president and CEO. “The American public and our special judging panel now have an extraordinarily tough task ahead of them in determining who our top dog will be because all are worthy winners.”

That’s for sure. Over the past five years, millions of votes have been cast online for nearly a thousand dogs competing for the award. The program reaches more than 1 billion people each year.

Hooch was the finalist in the Emerging Heroes category, which honors ordinary dogs who do extraordinary things. When the starving, skittish dog who’d been taken in by a shelter refused to eat, instead thrashing his food and water bowls around “like a maniac,” according to the AHA, a veterinarian discovered his tongue had been cut off at the base.

Zach Skow, of Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue in Tehachapi, Calif., adopted Hooch. He nursed him back to health by hand-feeding him, which he still continues to do.

Patient and gentle, Hooch is now a therapy dog with Marley’s Mutts’ Miracle Mutts, helping autistic, abused and special-needs kids. He’s living proof that it’s possible to overcome any adversity.

“Well, Mutt Militia, WE DID IT! You did it!!!!” says a status update today on the Marley’s Mutts Dog Rescue Facebook page. “Your commitment to our mission and the big orange bear led to a huge victory last night! Hooch won not only his category but the overall Hero Dog Award!”

Last night’s ceremony was dedicated to Harley, the winner of the 2015 Hero Dog Award. Harley, a 15-year-old Chihuahua who spent the first 10 years of his life in a puppy-mill cage before becoming a “spokesdog” against these cruel facilities, died in March.

Save the date: The AHA Hero Dog Awards is scheduled to air on the Hallmark Channel on Oct. 28 at 8:00 p.m./7:00 p.m. CT.

Hooch and his dog dad, Zach Skow.
Photo by Chris Weeks/Getty Images for American Humane Association

Meet the 2016 Hero Dog Awards Finalists

These were the finalists in the other Hero Dog Awards categories. To help hero dogs everywhere, AHA will donate $2,500 to each finalist’s charity partner, and an additional $5,000 to Hooch’s charity partner, Pets for Patriots.

Arson Dogs: Judge

As an arson K-9 with the Allentown Fire Department in Pennsylvania, 7-year-old Judge, a Labrador Retriever, has worked 275 fire scenes over the past five years. The evidence Judge discovered has led to many arrests and civil penalties for insurance fraud cases, and the number of arson fires in the city has dropped nearly 53 percent. Judge is currently participating in a pilot program to provide autistic children with lifesaving information.

Guide/Hearing Dogs: Hook

Ten-year-old, 12-pound Hook is a hearing dog for his handler. As the two walked across train tracks in Sacramento, Calif., the woman couldn’t hear an oncoming train. Hook began jumping on her, alerting her to the train and saving her life. He is always by the side of his handler, who’s a family therapist. Whenever her patients are upset, Hook will jump into their laps to comfort them. Hook also chased off an intruder who broke into the office.

Law Enforcement Dogs: Roo

K9 Roo is a ballistics/bomb dog with the Boston Police Department. After the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, Roo searched for secondary devices and was the only police dog there for the capture of Dzokhar Tsarnaev. During his career — Roo is retiring this year — he recovered 12 firearms (three had been used in homicides) and more than 300 shell casings involved in shootings. Roo answered at least 200 calls to investigate suspicious packages. When he’s not working, Roo visits children in hospitals and performs demonstrations at community events.

Military Dogs: Layka

In 2012, as Layka’s team fired on an enemy compound in Afghanistan, rifle fire was returned from the compound. Layka was sent inside to look for combatants and explosives. She was hit with four rounds from an AK-47 in her right shoulder. Layka was rushed to a location where medics worked on her, and then flown to a base where her right front leg was amputated. After additional surgeries, Layka was medically retired from service three months later.

Search-and-Rescue Dogs: Kobuk

Kobuk, a trained and certified member of the non-profit Maine Search and Rescue Dogs team, found a 77-year-old woman suffering from diabetes and dementia who had been lost in the woods for over two days without food, water or her medications. Running almost a quarter mile into the woods, Kobuk spotted the woman and then ran back to alert his handler, and ran back with him into the woods to rescue the woman in time to save her life.

Service Dogs: Gander

Gander, saved from a Colorado shelter and trained by a women’s prison program, is now a service dog and was the first mixed breed to win the American Kennel Club’s Award for Canine Excellence (ACE). He and his handler travel the country to raise awareness of PTSD, veteran suicide, service dogs, and people with visible and invisible disabilities. They have helped raise a million dollars for veterans’ groups, veterans, service dog charities and people in need.

Therapy Dogs: Mango

As a stray, Mango was hit by a car, paralyzing her rear legs. She was going to be euthanized by a shelter when Emma’s Cleft Palate Chihuahua Rescue stepped in. Mango is now a therapy dog for her dog mom, a veteran. They participate in the Emma’s Rescue Reserve program, in which paralyzed dogs work with disabled veterans, showing them that if a small dog in a wheelchair can overcome her handicap, then so can they. Mango’s Freedom Wheels, named in her honor, has donated over 150 custom-built wheelchairs to help other animals become mobile.

Photos via Facebook

Happy News: Pit Bull Stabbed Saving Woman’s Life Has a New Home

There’s a happy update to the story about Hero, a 7-year-old stray Pit Bull from Baldwin, Ga., who was stabbed five times on July 22 while saving the life of a woman he didn’t even know.

When Hero lunged at the man attacking the woman, the man started stabbing the dog.

Hero was lying in a pool of blood when police officers Timothy Clay and Daniel Seely arrived at the scene. They rushed him to the nearest animal hospital, where they gave him his appropriate name.

“I don’t think we could have let that dog suffer and die,” Sgt. Clay told WATE. “We felt like we needed to get that dog some help after what it had been through.”

Hero almost didn’t make it through surgery, but he managed to pull through.

Despite Hero’s ordeal, he recovered and is a very mellow and social dog, according to Carla Welch, founder and director of the Fighting for the Bullys rescue organization in Knoxville, Tenn.

“He has had a bum back leg and a bum front leg, but he gets around fine and he’s looking for a good friend,” she told WATE.

“He’s very laid back, very sweet,” she told WBIR. “He likes to talk to you. He’s going to make somebody a great companion. Hero will get his second chance. He will get a fantastic family, and he will finally get his happily ever after.”

They Were Looking out for a Hero

Welch was right. Two months later, Hero has been adopted by Sarah Simpson and her family, which includes two other dogs.

Simpson tried to apply to adopt Hero weeks ago, but had difficulty getting the online application to work. So she and her husband, David, went in person to meet the Hero they were looking for at a Petco adoption event last weekend.

“I’m really excited to give someone who’s never had a home, a home,” Simpson told WATE today. “And I say ‘someone’ because dogs to me are more than just dogs. They’re people. They’re your family.” Nice!

Welch said it’s bittersweet to say goodbye to Hero. “We’re bonded already, and I try not to, but with this boy you can’t help it. He’s very amazing,” she told WATE, wiping away what she said were tears of joy.

“He’s healthy and awesome now. He loves everybody. He’s just a great boy.”

Photo via Twitter

Pit Bull Brings Popsicles to Police Who Helped Save His Life

Troy, a Pit Bull who lives in Amsterdam, “pawed” it forward to his rescuers. He hand — er, mouth — delivered a gift to the police officers who saved his life.

While walking through Rietlandpark with his owner last month, a bee stung Troy’s neck. Troy went into shock and couldn’t walk. When his owner yelled for help, he was fortunately heard by officers at the Piet Heinkade police station across the street from the park.

The officers rushed Troy and his owner to a veterinarian. Because they got him there so quickly, Troy was able to make a complete recovery. The veterinarian said Troy would not have been so lucky if it had taken longer for him to get treatment for the sting.

Today Troy showed his appreciation to these heroes — with a box of popsicles.

“Troy gives his saviors ice cream as a thank you!” Politie Amsterdam posted on their Facebook page, along with a photo of the happy dog making his delivery.

Dank je wel, politieagenten!

If your own dog is ever stung by a bee, here are tips for what to do.

Photo via Facebook

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