Then,
last week, Dove's phone rang: Charlie had been found alive near the
south Alabama town of Brewton. A veterinary clinic tracked her down
using a microchip that Dove had implanted in the dog when it was young.
"I was shocked, overwhelmed. I cried," Dove said in an interview Thursday. "It's amazing."
No
one knows where the dog has been for the last decade, but Charlie has a
gray muzzle now and a cancerous tumor in his chest. Charlie will
undergo surgery at a veterinary clinic in Mobile as soon as next week,
and Dove plans to bring him home as soon as possible afterward.
"It
will be a lengthy road for him, but he'll be home," said Dove, who
lives near Birmingham in Corner and works as a dental assistant.
Dove
was living in Cullman with her then 8-year-old son when Charlie
disappeared a decade ago. Charlie is a German Shorthaired Pointer, a
breed favored by hunters, and Dove believes someone stole him from an
enclosure outside the house.
"It's an expensive hunting dog. We just kept him as a pet," said Dove. "He was a spoiled rotten pet."
After
Charlie disappeared, Dove kept updating her contact information in an
online database used to match animal owners with pets that are implanted
with microchips for identification, but she never thought she'd see the
dog again.
Charlie's
road back began when a neighbor told animal rescuer Renee Jones about a
dog that was lying on the steps of a church near Brewton, about 250
miles from the dog's last known home. Volunteers took the dog to Spring
Hill Animal Clinic in Mobile, where a worker found the microchip.
"We
often get dogs with microchips, but often the information hasn't been
updated and the phone numbers don't work," said Jones, director of Souls
on Board Rescue Ride, a nonprofit organization. "When the number
worked, it was pretty wild."
Dove didn't know what to think when the call came.
"I
was shocked and at first I thought 'This has got to be a scam' because
it's been 10 years," she said. "They sent me a picture and I talked with
them, and it's my Charlie."
Donations from an online fundraiser will cover the cost of the dog's surgery, and Dove plans to be there when it's done.
"He's
too weak and sick to make the trip home, so I am going to stay down
there with him until he's well enough to come home," she said. "And then
he'll be my dog again."
No comments:
Post a Comment