Truck-Driving Dog Hits Tree and Parked Car (He’s OK, Though)

As his dog dad shopped at a Kwik Trip market in Mankato, Minn., yesterday afternoon, a Labrador Retriever apparently decided to take their semi-trailer truck for a little spin.

He jumped into the driver’s seat and may have somehow put the truck, which was parked across the street from the store, into gear. It lurched forward, crossed the street, took down a tree and came to a stop after crashing into a parked car just a few feet away from a gas station’s fuel dispensers.

“In my career here, I’ve not had an accident reported like this one,” Daniel Schisel, of the Mankato Police Department, told FOX9.

David Stegora was pumping gas when the dog went for a drive.

“I heard the tree snap and I thought somebody decided to turn around, but then it just kept going forward,” he told the Mankato Free Press.

Marie Brace was in the Kwik Trip parking lot and took the photo above of the aftermath, with the dog still at the wheel of the truck.

She told FOX9 the dog seem unfazed. “The dog kept coming to the [driver’s side] window, then jumping down, then coming back,” she said.

Fortunately, no one, including the four-legged driver, was hurt. The dog dad was not issued a citation, but the Minnesota State Patrol removed his truck from service.

It may have been a mechanical problem that was responsible for the wild ride rather than the dog putting the truck into gear.

“EVERY trucker is in habit of setting the parking brake on his semi when parked,” wrote Russell Hibbs in a comment on the Mankato Free Press story. “This parking brake restricts air from his truck and trailer brakes, allowing them to spring out against the drums.

“In order for a dog to shove the truck into gear it HAS to be idling at the correct RPMs in order for it to go into gear. Now, even if the dog did accidentally throw it in gear, the truck would stall out because of lack of movement. There is NO way in hell this can or would happen.”

No matter the cause, it’s a sure bet this dog will be kept restrained the next time his dog dad leaves the cab for a short break.

Photos: Twitter; Twitter

Aww: High School Yearbook Includes Photos of Service Dogs

Among the hundreds of photos in the 2015 yearbook for Minnesota’s Blaine High School are those of Caramel Thomas and Dakota Comancho.

But the photos of Caramel and Dakota stand out just a bit from the others. The two are service dogs.

Caramel belongs to Rebecca Thomas, who is hearing impaired and teaches American sign language at Blaine High. For the past nine years, her service dog Caramel has joined her in class.

Dakota, a certified therapy dog, belongs to Vicky Camancho, who teaches a special education class at the school and brings in Dakota once a week.

“The students love seeing the service dogs in the yearbook,” Thomas told Yahoo Canada.

The photos were originally posted on Tumblr two weeks ago.

“A couple teachers at my school have service dogs and they get their own picture in the yearbook,” wrote Kate, who uploaded the photos. “It’s amazing.”

Photos of the two dogs have previously been included in the staff section of Blaine High’s yearbooks. It all started a couple years ago, when Dakota’s photo was taken for an identification badge on class picture day.

“When we got the disc of student and staff photos, we automatically flowed the pictures into the yearbook page sections,” Faculty Adviser Jill Farrell told the Star Tribune. “The editors and I giggled like mad when we saw that a picture of Dakota was included in the images.”

Lynn Florman, head of the special education department, told Yahoo Canada the photos send a positive message.

“Sometimes the unique services they provide are not understood or valued by others, so seeing them recognized in such a public and memorable way as a yearbook sends a strong message to all that they are an integral part of the team that supports our students,” Florman said.

She said it warmed her heart to watch distraught or shy students be comforted by Dakota’s presence

“In many ways, Dakota represents the best qualities we hope to teach our students,” Florman said. “Unconditional love and acceptance, patience and tolerance for those who are different.”

Photos via Twitter; Tumblr

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