Dachshund Found Alive 6 Days after ATV Plunged over Cliff

Tom McTevia and Tina Hoisington were killed April 19 when the ATV McTevia was driving veered off a mountain road in Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho, and rolled 1,000 feet down a steep embankment. McTevia’s Dachshund, Daisy, had been with them, but she was not found at the accident site.

Some of McTavia’s friends descended the cliff to the crash site early last week, but did not see Daisy.

On Saturday, McTevia’s family and friends once again organized a search party. Using ropes, five men climbed down the rocky cliff, while others waited above with two-way radios.

“All of a sudden, from the radio we heard, ‘We found the dog,'” Tonya Reed, a friend of McTevia’s since childhood, told the Coeur d’Alene Press. “It gave me chills.”

It was McTevia’s son, Ryan, who found Daisy. She was in a small hole near a tree, not far from where the ATV had landed.

When they heard Daisy was alive, Reed said the group began cheering — and crying.

“There’s no reason that dog should be alive when we found her,” Reed’s husband, Rob, told KREM. “It never crossed my mind that in that steep of terrain, six days later in that kind of country, she was alive. Yeah, I can use the word ‘miracle’ on that. It’s amazing. It really is.”

The group rushed Daisy to a veterinarian. Amazingly, she had no injuries from the crash and no health issues from being stranded for nearly a week.

McTevia, a Navy veteran and former police officer, had been paralyzed by a spinal cord injury in an ATV accident in 2004. He became an advocate for people with physical challenges.

“To have this little bit of hope, and something to hang on to, to cheer for and love the way that he would have, that is just golden,” Dena Hankins, a friend of McTevia’s, told the Coeur d’Alene Press. Daisy is staying with McTevia’s sister.

This is the second time in a week that a Dachshund has been in the news for surviving being stranded for days. A Miniature Dachshund named Lucy was stuck under a concrete slab for 13 days in her backyard before her pet parents found her last week. Like Daisy, Lucy had no injuries or health issues due to her ordeal.

“We can’t believe there was no organ failure,” Lucy’s vet, Dr. Kelly Miller, told the Wichita Eagle. “Fourteen days without water, you expect the kidneys to have not survived through that. She somehow managed to make it. It’s amazing.”

And Daisy is not the only dog who has miraculously survived a horrific crash. Earlier this year, Harley, a Maltese/Terrier mix, was the only survivor when the car he was in plunged 150 feet off a freeway in Chatsworth, Calif. Harley stayed in the car with the bodies of his dog mom, Gwen Bolden-Smith, and the driver, Diijon Bishop, until help arrived. He has been adopted by a friend of Bolden-Smith’s.

Photo via Twitter

Lazarus the Miracle Dog Wakes Up After Being Put to Sleep

Apparently cats aren’t the only critters who have nine lives.

After he survived being hit by a car, and then was dumped at an animal shelter in Ozark, Ala., because his owner had to move away, a 4-year-old Shepherd mix woke up after being put to sleep.

Animal control officer Wanda Snell, who witnessed the dog being euthanized last month, told the Associated Press (AP) that after a veterinarian injected him with the lethal chemicals, the dog moved a little, as if he was resisting it, but then he was still.

According to Sonya King of Two by Two Animal Rescue, the vet heard a faint heartbeat, so he gave the dog another injection. “He rechecked his heartbeat and signed off on the records that the 4-year-old black Shepherd mix was dead,” King wrote on the rescue’s Facebook page.

But when Snell arrived for work at the shelter the next morning, the dog was standing up, drinking some water.

“He was back up and breathing, and going right about business like it’s nothing,” Ozark Police Capt. Bobby Blankenship, the shelter’s supervisor, told the AP.

The miracle dog remained wobbly for a few days. He was taken in by King, who named him Lazarus after the man who, according to the Bible, was raised from the dead by Jesus.

One month later, Lazarus is recovering from the euthanasia attempt as well as the leg injury he suffered earlier when he was struck by a car. He is being fostered by Jane Holston of Helena, Ala., and will hopefully enjoy a long (third?) life in a new forever home.

“He’s not skittish, he’s not afraid of anything, anybody, any sounds,” Holston told the AP. “I mean, it’s just amazing what all he has been through.”

Although it’s rare for a dog to survive a euthanasia attempt, it does occasionally happen. Dr. Robert Lofton, of the veterinary clinic at Auburn University, told the AP that Lazarus may have been given an improper dose of the drug, or perhaps the needle missed his vein.

One of the most famous cases of a miracle survivor dog also occurred in Alabama. In October 2011, a stray Beagle named Daniel walked out of a shelter’s gas chamber in Florence after being exposed to carbon monoxide for 17 minutes. He was adopted by an East Coast family and inspired “Daniel’s Law,” which prohibits the state of Pennsylvania from using gas chambers in animal shelters.

Because of pet overpopulation, about 2.7 healthy dogs and cats are euthanized every year in U.S. shelters, according to the Humane Society of the United States.

“Thousands of great animals are killed each week in your local community,” King wrote on Two by Two Animal Rescue’s Facebook page. “As you fume with anger, let me remind us all that if our communities regulated spay and neutering, then our shelters would not be overloaded. The shelters have a horrible job of killing the animals that should have never been born.”

For more information about Two by Two Animal Rescue, visit its website.

Photo via Facebook

Exit mobile version