Police Officer Uses Drone to Find Dog Lost in Woods

While drones may be generally regarded as an annoyance rather than an asset, they can actually serve some very positive purposes (like saving endangered whales, for instance). In Pennsylvania over the weekend, Upper Gwynedd Township Police Officer Yin Young found another great way to use an unmanned aircraft: to find a young dog lost in the woods.

After Kasi, a 10-month-old German Shepherd, escaped from her yard Saturday, her dog dad, George Burns, tried to find her on foot, according to the Upper Gwynedd Township Police Facebook page.

When that didn’t work, Burns got the attention of Officer Young, who came up with the idea of attaching a high-definition video camera to his personal drone. He sent it flying over the nearby woods.

It took only about 20 minutes for the drone to find Kasi. She and Burns were happily reunited soon afterward.

“It was a good idea,” Sergeant John Brinkman told NBC10. “We don’t want the owner to get hurt unnecessarily looking for the dog.”

In the near future, this good idea might be used more often by the police department to locate missing pets as well as people. “It’s all about keeping people safe,” Brinkman said.

Photo via Facebook

Drone Captures Big Wave Knocking Small Dog off Hawaii Cliff (He’s Okay)

A small dog left behind on a cliff in Oahu when his irresponsible dog dad jumped into Maunalua Bay was swept into the water himself by a giant wave.

The dog tried running away from the sudden swell, to no avail. Fortunately, he survived and his dog dad was able to rescue him.

The entire scary incident was captured on camera by Donny Klotz’s drone.

“The owner jumped off the ledge at China Walls,” Klotz told Hawaii News Now. “The dog went down one level and was looking for his owner. Then the wave came [and] the owner didn’t even see the dog getting washed off.”

Although warning signs — and no dogs allowed signs — are posted at the entrance to China Walls in Hawaii Kai, Honolulu Emergency Services Dept. spokeswoman Shayne Enright told Hawaii News Now people ignore them. In January, a 23-year-old man died when he was swept off the same ledge by a wave.

“That [dog] could have easily been a child or [an adult] person,” Enright said. “It just shows how incredibly dangerous that area really is.”

Many angered animal lovers have left comments criticizing the dog’s owner on the Hawaii News Now Facebook page.

“Only a complete idiot would allow their dog to even be here,” wrote Lily Gilmore, and I agree with her. “Thank goodness for happy endings.”

Photo via Twitter

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