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When Man's best friend goes overboard...

by Media Services on 30 May 2012
Tank tethered on his owner’s boat - missing and found, because he was wearing a life jacket SW
A sailing couple and their children from Chicago are glad they had followed the Coast Guard's advice about always wearing a life jacket when boating. Their dog Tank, a yellow Pomeranian, had fallen off their boat without anyone noticing this week and was missing. However, after a desperate 24 hour search by police, the Coast Guard and local news outlets, the little life-jacket wearing Tank was discovered on the riverbank.

After almost giving up hope on Monday afternoon, Linn Lewis says a woman from the Ravenswood neighborhood said she’d spotted Tank near the river. Tank was still wearing a life vest and was playing with some children.

'We went from complete devastation to complete elation. We are so overwhelmingly happy,' Linn Lewis said. 'We are overjoyed to have our family member back. We love him so much.'

Tank was only missing for 24 hours, unlike Australian dog Sophie Tucker, who was washed overboard in stormy seas as the family were cruising on their yacht off Mackay on the east coast of Australia. The dog's owner, Lyn Griffith said she believed that her pet had drowned.

Unlike Tank, who disappeared when the family wasn't watching, the Sophie's family saw her go overboard

Despite a frantic search there was no sign of the animal and Lyn Griffiths and her husband, Dave, resigned themselves to never seeing their dog again. Their children bought their parents a new pet — a red cattle dog named Ruby — and life slowly got back to normal.

Unknown to her owners, Sophie Tucker, a black and tan cattle dog, was not a quitter. It seems that the determined pet swam five nautical miles through seas inhabited by sharks to an island, where she survived for more than four months by eating wild goats.

The story of the canine Robinson Crusoe came to light after park rangers heard reports that a cattle dog had been sighted on St Bees Island, a nature reserve off northeast Queensland renowned for its koalas.

Faced with starvation, the dog reverted to her wild instincts and began hunting and eating feral goats that roam the largely uninhabited island. Reports from the rangers, who believed Sophie to be a wild dog, suggested that she had lost a lot of weight in her first few weeks as a castaway but soon began to look fit and healthy. The carcasses of baby goats were discovered soon afterwards.

Months later Mrs Griffith heard the reports of a cattle dog loose on the island and contacted the rangers in the hope that Sophie had survived. 'She had become wild and vicious,' Mrs Griffith said. 'She wouldn’t let anyone go near her or touch her.'

Mrs Griffith said some locals believed the dog was regularly swimming back and forth several hundred metres between St Bees and Keswick Island to hunt.

She said that Sophie Tucker, named after an American music hall entertainer, had been on deck with the family as they sailed past the Whitsunday Islands in November when winds began to whip up the waves. Suddenly she had disappeared.

'We hit a rough patch and when we turned around the dog was gone,' Mrs Griffith said. 'We were able to backtrack to look for her, but because it was a grey day we just couldn’t find her and we searched for well over an hour. We thought that once she had hit the water she would have been gone because the wake from the boat was so big.'

Sophie was returned last week when the Griffiths arranged to meet rangers who brought the dog to the mainland. Mrs Griffith said: 'We called the dog and she started whimpering and banging the cage and they let her out and she just about flattened us. She wriggled around like a mad thing.'

Viki Lomax, of RSPCA Australia, in Queensland, said that Sophie was lucky not to have drowned or been eaten by a shark. 'If this had been a Pomeranian, I don’t think it would have been a happy ending,' she said.

Caroline Bower, of the Veterinary Hospital Group, said that certain types of dogs could summon their wild instincts if their survival depended on it.

'Although all dogs share 95 per cent of their genes with the wolf, there are certain dogs with more predatory instincts,' she said. 'A King Charles cavalier would be poles apart from a collie, a cattle dog or a sheep dog. Herding breeds still have a strong instinct to chase. The only reason they don’t catch and kill the animal they’re trained to look after is because they’re carefully trained. When driven by hunger you would expect them to revert.'

Sophie Tucker has readjusted quickly to the comforts of home, Mrs Griffiths said. 'She surprised us all. She was a house dog and look what she’s done. She’s swum over five nautical miles, she’s managed to live off the land all on her own. We wish she could talk, we truly do.'

As for Ruby, the two canines are now the best of friends.

.........................................

Letter from reader:

Castaway Dog Content Here in the Virgin Islands, a boat owner lost a Jack Russel, also eventually buying another JR. The original was then found on an island about 2-3 miles from area where lost. Jack Russels are bred to be 'ratters' so the uninhabited island was probably a little more vermin free too.
W. Bostwick, St. Thomas, USVI
from Walter I. Bostwick

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