National Post

Dog named Hero helps save owner stuck in ditch

- Rob drinkwater

A dog called Hero lived up to his name earlier this week after spending two days by his stranded master’s side, keeping his owner warm and even fending off coyotes while the man waited to be rescued from a muddy ditch in southern Alberta.

The dog’s bravery and devotion have earned widespread plaudits online and prompted one local animal rescue organizati­on to raise money to cover vet bills for Hero and other pets inadverten­tly drawn into the 48-hour saga.

“It touched my heart. I cried almost immediatel­y just hearing this story. It’s heartwarmi­ng,” Alana Mcphee, acting president of the Taber Lost Paws Society, said in an interview Saturday.

The ordeal for Hero and his owner began on Thursday morning when Taber police said they received a complaint about a possibly injured dog at large north of the community’s sugar factory.

Officers went to check it out and couldn’t find the animal, but got another complaint a few hours later from a man who told them he and his dog were both bitten by a large dog in the same area.

Officers went to the property again and spotted what they described as an Akitacross laying on a berm. When they got closer, they began hearing cries for help.

A 61-year-old man from Taber was located near the dog in a muddy ditch that was hidden behind tall grasses, and he told police he’d been stuck there for two days while his dog stayed nearby and protected him.

Mcphee said her not-forprofit group has an arrangemen­t to care for dogs when their owners are affected by crime and crisis, so Hero was brought to their shelter after being checked by a vet. She said a staff member who is neighbours with Hero’s owner knew he also owned another Akita named Tora and quickly phoned the town’s bylaw department out of concern.

They were already looking for Tora, Mcphee said, and found her in her owner’s yard suffering from what looked at first like a broken leg.

It turned out her leg had been broken before, and screws in a rod in her leg had come loose.

“We’re not sure how that happened but I’m going to guess she probably went back and forth between the site where her owner was and her home quite a few times over the course of those two days. And it could have been from fighting — we don’t know exactly,” Mcphee said, noting Tora didn’t appear to have puncture wounds.

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