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Dog rescued by a drone with a sausage

(57 Posts)
Dinahmo Thu 20-Jan-22 19:26:55

Who'd have thought. A Jack Russell whippet cross got stranded on mudflats after slipping her lead. Police, firefighters and coastguards weren't able to get her. They'd used drones and someone had the bright idea of attaching a sausage to a drone in the hope that she would follow the scent. And she did.

Today's good news I think.

Shropshirelass Sun 23-Jan-22 10:24:35

Drones have their uses! They are being used more and more to locate lost pets, even humans in some cases. They can so easily check difficult terrain. My dogs will do anything for a bit of sausage! ?

madeleine45 Sun 23-Jan-22 03:03:09

After the adventure I expect she felt a little "ruff"

sodapop Sat 22-Jan-22 21:44:04

I love onion gravy as well, sausages are secondary for me. smile

Callistemon21 Sat 22-Jan-22 20:29:46

Josieann

^JosieannI had one who was perfect during training but had selective hearing too. He took after DH.^

Callistemon do you entice your husband with sausages then?!

Of course, Josiaeann!

Actually, he has got better at cooking over the years and can do a mean sausage and mash with onion gravy.
It's the onion gravy which is my recall treat.

GreyKnitter Sat 22-Jan-22 20:17:55

That was close to where I live. We’re been following the story on the local Facebook page for a couple of days. Such a great result.

Oofy Sat 22-Jan-22 19:39:56

I can echo the variable recall pooch. Ours is a pampered cocker spaniel, no excuse of being a rescue (in fact the only rescue we owned, a few years ago, was great at recall, he never let us out of his sight in case we disappeared).
The spaniel is terrific at recall in the house, and in a big hall at training classes with plenty of treats, our training teacher advocates bits of frankfurter, but take her out in the park and let her off the lead and she is off like a winky. We even tried extra classes just for recall, with small numbers of “pupils”. Great in the classes, but outside…………..

Josieann Sat 22-Jan-22 18:46:02

JosieannI had one who was perfect during training but had selective hearing too. He took after DH.

Callistemon do you entice your husband with sausages then?!

CarlyD7 Sat 22-Jan-22 17:09:25

Having had several terriers (mainly JRs) I can vouch for their uneven recall - more a case of: Call Them: They think about it; Then decide if it will be worth their while or not ... We worked with a dog trainer on one of them and it worked for a few weeks. We thought we'd cracked it but then she spotted a squirrel and was off !! But, she would ALWAYS come if we had sausages (what is it about dogs and sausages??) Lovely story.

Iam64 Sat 22-Jan-22 16:34:28

Hmm- I’m not smug. If you’d seen me at training with my young lab today, you might even have felt a bit sorry for the woman with the excitable giddy giant.
I’ve rescued and fostered dogs for over 40 years so I’m well aware of the baggage they arrive with.
Recall is an essential part of owning a dog. If you can’t be sure your dog will come back - keep it on a lead or long line. Like my daft young giddy giant lab is currently. His recall was superb till his teens hit. It’s good but not 100% so for now he gets great free time and recall practice in an enclosed field.

Callistemon21 Sat 22-Jan-22 15:02:41

smug confused
Not a bit.

In fact, if I wanted friendly advice about a dog I'd ask Iam64

Callistemon21 Sat 22-Jan-22 15:01:00

JeSuis

Iam64.
Your comment about “ No mention of recall training”, was a bit uncalled for. In fact quite a smug retort on the part of whoever Iam64 is!

The owner maybe hadn’t thought of that, or maybe cannot afford such a thing!

The owner maybe hadn’t thought of that, or maybe cannot afford such a thing!

Strange post, JeSuis
It just takes patience, not money.

Essential if you don't want yur dog to run off and annoy other people or, as in this case, to lose your dog.

Josieann I had one who was perfect during training but had selective hearing too. He took after DH.

Alioop Sat 22-Jan-22 14:56:14

Iam64 My wee dog was found on the streets, she was about 4, her recall is still terrible over 4 years later. Some dogs have had it so bad it's just built in them to run, sometimes trust can never be fully built up with them. My dog has a warm bed, is safe, happy and her epileptic seizures are under control, so recall was the least of my worries.

Josieann Sat 22-Jan-22 14:04:33

I'm puzzled, JeSuis, it doesn't cost anything to teach the dog the "recall"? My young dog is 99% there just with the command, "X come" followed by a "good boy pat" and occasionally a biscuit.
However, I did have one who was selectively deaf when called!
Dogs can slip their collars, ours are safe on rope leads.

JeSuis Sat 22-Jan-22 13:55:38

Iam64.
Your comment about “ No mention of recall training”, was a bit uncalled for. In fact quite a smug retort on the part of whoever Iam64 is!

The owner maybe hadn’t thought of that, or maybe cannot afford such a thing!

JeSuis Sat 22-Jan-22 13:45:34

What a lucky wee girl she is. Thanks to today’s tech stuff, to say nothing of a good sausage, it all worked out for the best. Hat a lovely story! Thank you so much.

Josieann Sat 22-Jan-22 13:39:35

Were they Romanian sausages? I bet Aldi or Lidl sell this range in the meat section.

Dinahmo Sat 22-Jan-22 13:34:50

Apparently the helpers not on someone's door. She had sausages from Aldi in her fridge and cooked some for the rescuers to us.

Luckily there was a happy ending.

Iam64 Sat 22-Jan-22 13:26:36

patpat1

I know this dog, she is not a serial runner but a very timid ex-Romanian street dog. She is very easily frightened and not happy around people she does not know. A lot of work is going into socialising her.. she was eventually located in a bushy area and only came out when the owner’s father arrived with his dog, whom she knew well.

Good to hear more patpat1. My experience is many street dogs run if they get the chance. It’s happened to 3 people in training groups I’m involved with. As you say, it’s often fear related. I hope the dog and owners get the support

poshpaws Sat 22-Jan-22 13:22:41

How nice to have a good news story for once! I have the greatest fear of losing any of my dogs like this - sometimes they just become selectively deaf to my recall! It makes me so happy to know she's safe back home, especially since patpat1 has told us that she is an ex-Romanian street dog: she deserves all the love and home comforts coming her way.

Rosina Sat 22-Jan-22 12:56:08

Dogs and sausages - a great combination and, it seems, a lifesaving one. What a lovely story.

posset Sat 22-Jan-22 11:56:06

Saw this on BBC Breakfast. It is a lovely story and reminds me of when I had my moment of fame when I was 8. We had a deep well in our garden covered by a grill. I discovered a kitten which had fallen to the bottom of it, so my father and I attached an old fashioned floor mop to a rope, lowered it and the kitten clung to it while we hauled it up.........made the front page of the local paper!
I was somewhat irritated by Naga Munchetti's reaction to the sausage, she went all squeamish about the sausage, just like a teenager!

4allweknow Sat 22-Jan-22 11:18:17

Would have worked for me too!

ayse Sat 22-Jan-22 11:06:38

What a great use for a drone. I’m so pleased the dog was rescued.

GrammarGrandma Sat 22-Jan-22 11:03:56

So great to have a happy story in the news.

patpat1 Sat 22-Jan-22 11:01:39

I know this dog, she is not a serial runner but a very timid ex-Romanian street dog. She is very easily frightened and not happy around people she does not know. A lot of work is going into socialising her.. she was eventually located in a bushy area and only came out when the owner’s father arrived with his dog, whom she knew well.