National Post

Lost dog consults inner compass

ARIES RAN TO HER DOGGIE DAYCARE FOR HELP AFTER JUMPING OUT OF A CAR AFTER A FENDER BENDER

- Cathy Free For The Washington Post

ARIES HEARD A LOUD NOISE, AND THAT WAS A BIG SHAKE TO HER WORLD. SHE WAS RUNNING TO GET THE HECK OUT OF THERE AND GET BACK TO WHERE HER FRIENDS ARE, WHERE SHE COULD FIND SOMEBODY TO HELP.

— TRAVIS OGDEN, OWNER OF HOUNDS TOWN METRO DETROIT

Melissa Fickel was driving to a park near Detroit with her dog, Aries, when another car hit her from behind as the stoplight turned green.

Aries got spooked and jumped out of the open rear window.

“I was surprised when she jumped out because she’d never done anything like that before,” said Fickel, 31, recalling the afternoon of Feb. 24.

Fickel, who said nobody was injured in the accident, looked for Aries and was relieved to see her sitting on the side of busy Rochester Road in Clawson, Mich.

“As soon as she saw me, she turned and took off,” Fickel said. “I was in the middle of the road, and I couldn’t run after her.”

Fickel called out to Aries, but she kept running and was soon out of sight.

Fickel pulled over, and did a quick search around some buildings where she had last caught sight of her four-yearold, pit bull lab mix pup.

Police showed up, and she told an officer her dog ran off.

“I couldn’t find her, and I had to deal with talking to police and my insurance company, so I decided to take it one step at time,” she said, explaining the damage to the cars was minor.

The officer phoned in a descriptio­n to a dispatcher so other officers could look for Aries, she said.

Then, about 20 minutes after the accident, Fickel received a text and a call from Travis Ogden, the owner of Hounds Town Metro Detroit — the doggie daycare that Aries goes to once a week. Ogden gave Fickel some stunning news: Aries was with him at the doggie daycare, 1.6-km up the road.

“I started crying,” said Fickel, who shared her story with WXYZ Detroit News.

Ogden said a staffer in the front office had noticed the dog pacing and jumping up and down outside the front glass door.

“She’d run straight to her safe spot and was trying to attract their attention,” Fickel said.

Ogden said he let Aries inside, and the pooch ran over to him and licked his face.

“I love that dog and knew immediatel­y it was her,” he said, noting that Aries has been a regular at Hounds Town for about three years. “She’s a really social dog who is always ready to play and have fun with the other pups.”

He was puzzled to see Aries without Fickel, but when he learned about the accident, it started to make sense, he said.

“Dogs are really smart and know their routes,” said Ogden, who has about 45 dogs at a time at the daycare. “They’re constantly looking out the window.”

Studies have shown that dogs have extraordin­ary sensory abilities that could allow them to pick up on the north-south flow of the planet’s magnetic field. Stories about dogs that have gone missing and found their way home suggest they have an internal compass.

Last year, a golden retriever in Ireland walked 40 miles (64 km), over 26 days to find his owner, and a dog in Texas rang the doorbell at her former shelter after she was adopted and became lost. In 2020, a dog missing for three weeks turned up at the Walmart register where her owner was working.

Ogden said Aries probably fled the accident scene out of fear, hoping to get somewhere where she could feel calm and safe.

“Aries heard a loud noise, and that was a big shake to her world,” he said. “She was running to get the heck out of there and get back to where her friends are, where she could find somebody to help.”

Aries was given some water after her sprint, and staffers played with her in the lobby until Fickel could pick her up.

“So many things could have gone wrong because she had to cross a busy fourlane road to get to the doggie daycare,” she said. “I was really thankful to learn she was safe in a place she loves.”

Fickel said her dog wasn’t wearing a car harness during the accident, but after what happened, she plans to put Aries in one in the future.

She said it was love at first sight when she adopted Aries as an eight-week-old puppy in April 2020.

“She’s always had a lot of energy and loves to play tug of war and solve puzzles with treats in them,” she said. “Then when she’s all tired out, she likes to lounge with me on the couch.”

When she took Aries home after her unexpected adventure, she said she felt the stress and panic of the day melt away.

“I petted her a lot and told her she was a good dog,” she said. “And that night, she got a whole taco.”

 ?? TRAVIS OGDEN ?? Aries was captured on security footage at Hounds Town Metro Detroit after a collision. He ran 1.6 kilometres to get to the doggie daycare where he spends one day per week.
TRAVIS OGDEN Aries was captured on security footage at Hounds Town Metro Detroit after a collision. He ran 1.6 kilometres to get to the doggie daycare where he spends one day per week.
 ?? MELISSA FICKEL ?? Melissa Fickel with Aries at home. Aries exhibited the kind of behaviour often associated with lost dogs, who appear to have an inner compass that directs them
to familiar places.
MELISSA FICKEL Melissa Fickel with Aries at home. Aries exhibited the kind of behaviour often associated with lost dogs, who appear to have an inner compass that directs them to familiar places.

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