Dog Rescued from L.A. River Adopted by Woman Who First Spotted Him

Lucky, the dog rescued by firefighters last week from the raging Los Angeles river, has a new forever home — with the woman who called 911 after she spotted him struggling to stay afloat.

“I happened to see something out of the corner of my eye that looked like a piece of a log just bobbing along, but there was a rhythm to the movement that caught my attention, and I was able to look closer and confirm that it was, in fact, the head of a small dog,” Rachel Dably told CBS Los Angeles.

She told the 911 dispatcher she wanted to adopt the dog. “He says, ‘Well, let’s get him rescued first,'” Dalby told KABC.

When firefighters arrived, the dog had been swept nearly two miles down the river. Firefighter John Terrusa was lowered on a cable from a helicopter, swam to the terrified dog and scooped him up in his arms.

But the rescue wasn’t a done deal yet — as the helicopter flew the two toward an embankment, they started spinning in circles, nearly hitting some tree branches.

Once they were safely on the ground, the firefighters named the pup, appropriately enough, “Lucky.” (Earlier reports said Lucky was a Shiba Inu, while CBS Los Angeles and KABC are now calling him a Welsh Corgi mix, which he really appears to be.)

Lucky was treated for hypothermia as the North Central Los Angeles animal shelter tried to locate his owner. He was wearing a collar and leash, but no identification tags, and he wasn’t microchipped.

Dably told CBS Los Angeles she has been wanting to adopt a dog for a year, and visited Lucky in the shelter every day.

“It was sort of a waiting game to see if there would be a claim of ownership,” she said.

When no one claimed Lucky after the seven-day holding period, Dably became his new dog mom.

“I’m excited — very excited,” she told CBS Los Angeles. She has set up the account luckytherescuedog on Instagram, where you can follow Lucky’s future adventures — which, it’s a sure bet, won’t include any swims in the L.A. River.

Photo via Instagram

Here’s a KNBC video of Lucky’s nail-biting rescue.

Firefighters Rescue Shiba Inu from Raging L.A. River

FEB. 5, 2015 UPDATE: No one claimed Lucky, so he has been adopted by Rachel Dably, who called 911 after seeing him struggling to stay afloat in the L.A. River.

As a thunderstorm passed over the San Fernando Valley this afternoon, an employee at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank saw a dog struggling to stay afloat in the rushing Los Angeles River.

She called 911, and by the time firefighters arrived minutes later, the small Shiba Inu had been swept two miles down the river. Firefighter John Terrusa was lowered on a cable from a helicopter, swam to the terrified dog and scooped him up in his arms.

The rescue wasn’t a done deal yet — as the helicopter flew the two toward an embankment, they started spinning in circles, nearly hitting some tree branches.

Once they were safely on the ground, the firefighters named the Shiba Inu, appropriately enough, “Lucky.”

“It was quite a team effort, quite a concert,” Terrusa told KNBC. “It is definitely a loved animal. It’s just one of those things where I’m sure the dog just got out of somebody’s yard and got in the wrong place, at the wrong time.”

Scot Sweet, who witnessed the rescue, told KABC-TV Lucky was “shaking, a little scared, but he was alive. A lot of people were cheering. It was something to see.”

Another witness, Carolynn West, told KCBS, “I think it was marvelous. It was just absolutely amazing. Everyone was astonished that they could pluck this little, shivering, tan dog out of this gigantic river.”

The 7-year-old Shiba Inu, who was wearing a collar and leash but no ID tag, was transported to the North Central Los Angeles animal shelter.

“He’s doing exceptionally well right now,” KNBC‘s Mekahlo Medina reported a couple hours later. “We saw him eat a short time ago. He had a bit of an appetite.”

Lucky, who is not microchipped, will be kept overnight for observation at a local animal hospital. The shelter is hoping to locate his owner. If no one claims him within seven days, he will be available for adoption.

“I’m sure if it has a home, it will go back. And, if it doesn’t, hundreds of people will want to adopt it,” West told KCBS.

The firefighter who plucked Lucky from the raging river was identified late Friday as John Terrusa. Let’s call him “Hero.”

Updated Jan. 31, 2015 at 10:30 a.m.

Photo via KNBC

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