Laura

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Laura
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Parenting & Family > Pets > Flooding: Pet Rescues
 

Flooding: Pet Rescues

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While I was waiting to be rescued from my home, I still had television, and carefully observed the news footage showing rescuees getting off the helicopters. I wanted to see how big a suitcase they were allowed, and if they had pets with them. It looked like one suitcase, no matter how large was allowed, and the pets were right there.

My own experience proved this out: there was no hesitation about me having to catch the cat (inside the house) before we could leave. At the evacuation shelter I was offered kitty litter and a foil pan. Another woman had her kitty with her, and described how Sydney was zip-lined across the river in a carrier, and the Red Cross helped her find pet-friendly hotels to stay in until she could get a flight home.

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Here is a news item about it:

"BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- Some helicopters rescuing people after massive flooding in Colorado carried more dogs, cats and fish than people. Rescuers using zip lines to evacuate people over raging rivers also risked their lives to make sure the four-legged members of families were safe.

In contrast to stories of people forced to leave their pets when New Orleans was swamped by Hurricane Katrina, the motto during one of the largest evacuations in Colorado history was "No pets left behind," said Skye Robinson, a spokesman for the National Guard air search and rescue operations during Colorado's floods. That's because including pets in the rescue effort helped convince even reluctant residents to leave their homes. Officials also had more than enough space for the animals and even carried animal crates with them.

More than 800 pets have been ferried to safety with their owners via helicopter, the National Guard said. Hundreds more were rescued by ground crews. Livestock, like horses and cattle, were left behind, but a monkey was among those saved.

Once safely on dry ground, Red Cross shelters had water bowls, on-site dog kennels and all the necessary supplies to ensure already stressed evacuees wouldn't be separated from their pets.

"We kind of learned after Katrina, when people wouldn't evacuate because of their pets," said Kathy Conner, a worker at a shelter at a YMCA in Boulder.

Evacuees Jerry Grove and Dorothy Scott-Grove said they never would have abandoned their vacation cabin in Estes Park without their two golden retrievers. But they didn't have to make that hard choice. Firefighters carried the two large dogs to safety on the same zip line used to rescue the retired Ohio couple.

"They put them in a harness and one of the firefighters hooked himself to them and brought them across," Dorothy Scott-Grove said. "We will not be separated."

Once out, the Red Cross found the couple a pet-friendly hotel where the dogs the next day "were resting comfortably on our king-sized bed," she said.

In a state where dog passengers are as common as humans in cars, Lisa Pedersen, CEO of the Humane Society of Boulder Valley, said taking care of pets has become a central part of disaster planning.

It appears to be working. One week after floods and mudslides forced the local evacuation of more than 3,000 people, Pederson said the Boulder area shelter had just 72 pet evacuees - all but two of which were delivered by their owners for temporary shelter after they were forced from their homes.

"It just makes sense that you bring the pets along. They are part of the family," Robinson said. "You wouldn't leave a family behind because they had kids."

posted on Sept 20, 2013 12:12 AM ()

Comments:

Socks was a real hero to stay with his friend.
comment by elderjane on Sept 21, 2013 6:25 AM ()
Whenever the sheriff would mention the number of people evacuated on a given day, he always said how many animals. There was a lesson learned after how things were handled with Hurricane Katrina: not only is there the emotional impact of leaving our pets behind, but then people would take great risks to get back to them sooner than they should, and there would be lots of homeless animals to be rounded up and either find the owners or place them in shelters out of state that would take them.
reply by troutbend on Oct 2, 2013 6:07 AM ()
I am so glad that they did this.
comment by elderjane on Sept 20, 2013 3:01 PM ()
There was one picture of the most beautiful golden retriever riding serenely across some water in a rubber raft, and I thought about Rex.
reply by troutbend on Sept 20, 2013 4:41 PM ()
comment by jondude on Sept 20, 2013 1:17 PM ()
Our plan had been to put Eloise in a closed room when final departure was pending so we could keep better track of her. It worked out the way it turned out, so all's well. Since I was able to bring a suitcase, I packed a big bunch of her favorite food: Yummm! Gravy! by Friskies.
reply by troutbend on Sept 20, 2013 4:49 PM ()
I do hope that they get reunited with their families.
comment by fredo on Sept 20, 2013 8:13 AM ()
I think there was one story about a woman who had ten or so cats, and she wasn't able to catch them all. One day while I was waiting for rescue, Eloise got out and I couldn't find her for several hours. If the rescuers had come, I'd have to leave her. Turned out she was napping in the back garage because I'd accidentally shut her in.
reply by troutbend on Sept 20, 2013 4:47 PM ()
comment by greatmartin on Sept 20, 2013 7:19 AM ()
I have to give Miss Eloise credit for not crying in the cat carrier while the fireman was driving us to town.
reply by troutbend on Sept 20, 2013 4:45 PM ()
So glad to see that engaged, proactive rescue has fully embraced rescuing people and their precious fur families. I have been worrying about farm animals, too....
comment by marta on Sept 20, 2013 5:22 AM ()
The farm animals were left to find high ground, and then ranchers and farmers rallied to get them moved when they could. There was one horse that had everyone upset because the news media was saying it was tethered to a piece of fence so it couldn't save itself. It just stood there by this L-shaped fence, standing in about a foot of water, facing into the current. When the waters receded, a newsman tracked it down. The horse's name is Socks, and he wasn't tied there, he went there to be near another horse that was standing with some cows and calling out to him. Socks reached that spot which was slightly protected behind that fence, and just stood there stoically until the water receded. When you looked really hard, what looked like a tether was just the sun glinting off the wires in the fencing.
reply by troutbend on Sept 20, 2013 4:45 PM ()

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