Watch a Hero Dog Stop Traffic When Her Owner Has a Seizure

It’s not uncommon for trained seizure detection dogs to spring into action to help their owners during medical emergencies, but what an untrained, one-year-old Maremma mix named Clover did this week was pretty doggone amazing.

As Haley Moore was walking Clover in their Ottawa neighborhood Tuesday, Moore suddenly had a seizure and fell to the ground. After checking Moore, the big white dog removed her leash from her dog mom’s hand and then ran into the street to stop a passing driver.

“It was really impressive, the dog actually blocked my way,” the driver, Dryden Oatway, told CTV. “The whole time she was backing down the street she had eyes on Hailey; didn’t look away from her. She kept her distance from me but made sure her owner was okay and that was amazing,”

As Oatway tried to help Moore, Clover got the attention of another driver, Danielle Pilon, who also stopped to help.

“You could tell she didn’t want to leave her even when we were with her, but I think it just came to her that she was like, ‘I need to go home to let them know she needs help,'” Pilon told CTV.

As Oatway and Pilon tended to her dog mom, Clover ran home and barked frantically at Moore’s dad, Randall Moore.

Thanks to Clover and the good Samaritans who stopped to help, Moore was taken to a hospital and has recovered from her seizure. “All I remember is waking up in the ambulance and being really confused, just like, ‘What is going on?'” she told CTV.

Moore doesn’t know what caused her to have a seizure. “If this ends up happening again, I feel 10 times safer and I know she will be there for me,” she told CTV.

As a reward — and I’m betting there will be official hero dog honors for Clover in the near future — Clover was treated to a delicious dinner.

“[My wife] Diane comes home with a couple of big steaks and I thought, ‘Wow, this is great, I’m getting a big steak,’ and she said, ‘No, it’s for Clover for doing such a great job,'” Randall Moore told CTV.

Clover’s heroics were captured by a security video camera. Really good girl, Clover!

Photo: CTV News/YouTube

Meet Two 4-Legged Burn Survivors Who Became Inspirational Firehouse Dogs

In what seem to be ideal win-win situations, two dogs that survived severe burns have been adopted by fire departments in Florida. They not only serve as fire safety ambassadors and inspire burn victims, but they also help provide comfort to their stressed-out, two-legged coworkers.

Meet Clover and Ruby, who will hopefully motivate fire departments across the country to adopt four-legged burn survivors of their own.

Clover

Two years ago, when Clover was only five weeks old, a propane heater ignited a fire in the Alabama shed in which the Cur Hound mix was living with her mom and littermates. The other dogs made it out unharmed, but when a piece of wood fell on Clover, she suffered severe burns to her head, paws, chest and back.

Clover was taken in by the Suncoast Animal League, a Palm Harbor, Fla., nonprofit dedicated to caring for homeless pets and wildlife. The league posted photos of the resilient puppy as she recovered, and Clover’s fan base quickly grew. Among those following her amazing progress was the staff at Florida’s Madeira Beach Fire Department (MBFD), who, coincidentally, had been thinking about getting a firehouse dog.

Suncoast Animal League arranged a meet-and-greet. For the firefighters, it was love at first sight. When Clover was four months old, the department adopted her, and she was officially sworn in as Fire Station 25′s new firehouse dog.

Clover visits local schools as a fire safety ambassador and shows kids how to stop, drop and roll. She’s also proven to be an inspiration for two-legged survivors of fires and health issues.

“We ran into a young child who saw the scars and he goes, ‘Oh, I have scars, too.’ His scars were from cancer,” MDFD firefighter-paramedic John Sleppy told FOX 13. “She was just really, really loving with him. It was just cool to see them relate – two fighters.”

Having Clover around the station also lifts the firefighters’ spirits. The 12 who work there take turns walking, feeding and bathing her.

“In our line of work, we see things and do things that a lot of people don’t see in their entire lives, and sometimes that can affect you,” Sleppy told FOX 13. “It’s nice to come back to the station, where it’s more like a home now when your dog’s always got a smile and wants to lick you.”

You can follow Clover on her Facebook page.

Ruby

Ruby, who appears to be a Pit Bull mix, was only a few months old in 2018 when a fire broke out in the Georgia home where she lived with her owner and another dog. Running through the flames to escape, Ruby was the only survivor. She suffered third-degree burns and was in critical condition for over a week. Like Clover, Suncoast Animal League eventually took Ruby in.

In the meantime, Florida’s Palm Harbor Fire Rescue (PHFR) heard about Clover being adopted by the MBFD, and thought it would be a great idea to adopt their own furry burn survivor. Later that year, Ruby was sworn in as the official firehouse dog of PHFR Station 65.

Like Clover, Ruby serves as a fire safety ambassador, helping with public education outreach programs.

“She already knows how to stop, drop and roll and we’ve been teaching her to crawl low under smoke,” Elizabeth Graham, PHFR public information officer, told FOX 13 in 2018. “She’s a part of the family now and I can’t wait to see how many lives she will touch.”

As Clover has also done, Ruby attends camps with children who are burn survivors. To have her there “and show everybody that she is a survivor and that she can make it through, it’s amazing,” Graham told ABC News.

Ruby has proven to be a welcome addition around the fire station. “As a department, having a dog around, if you are having a low day or something, the dog is always going to be there, always be loving,” firefighter-paramedic Tyrell Platt told FOX 13. “The dog has no negative. So I definitely think it is going to be good for the department and people individually.”

This story was originally published on Care2.com.

Photo: Clover the firehouse dog – MBFD/Facebook

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