Bark Out For Velvet!!!!

Big Barks and Howls to Velvet, the hero dog!!! If you've been in the doghouse for the last few days, you may not have heard...

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Big Barks and Howls to Velvet, the hero dog!!! If you’ve been in the doghouse for the last few days, you may not have heard that the Labrador Mix Velvet is being credited with being a BIG part of saving the lives of the three Oregon hikers caught in the snow.

Also happy barks to the news media like ABC’s Good Morning America for interviewing Velvet’s team AND shining a big light on how dogs save lives.

Dogster Ziggy barked in to share his affection for velvet.

Ziggy and family wrote:

Just wanted to give a huge bark out to Velvet, the black labrador mix who is accredited with helping to save the lives of those Mount Hood climbers by lying
across them at night to keep them warm. Odd. I lay across my humans every night and all I get is shoved off the bed. Hmph. Yay Velvet!!

Ziggy also barked in this article from Yahoo:

Mount Hood rescue aided by beacon, dog,
By SARAH SKIDMORE, Associated Press Writer

GOVERNMENT CAMP, Ore. – Thanks to a high-tech electronic gadget and a big warm dog named Velvet, three climbers rescued after a harrowing fall and a night in the wind and cold high on Mount Hood are expected to be fine.

They were found at about the 7,400-foot level on Monday and hiked down the mountain with their rescuers.

“I’m really glad they were there for us,” Matty Bryant, one of the three climbers, said of the rescue teams. “They did an incredible job. They were amazing.”

Searchers credited the group’s rescue to two things Velvet, a black Labrador mix who provided warmth as the three climbers huddled under sleeping bags and a tarp, and the activation of an emergency radio beacon the size of a sunglasses case that guided them to the group.

“The most important part of this rescue is that they did everything right,” said Lt. Nick Watt of the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office.

The three climbers set out on Saturday with five other friends all in the 20s and 30s and from the Portland area to scale the 11,239-foot mountain, Oregon’s tallest.

However, a storm moved in and on Sunday they started their descent in blowing snow.

“You had no visual reference around you to determine if you were going up or down,” said one member of the group, Trevor Liston. “You could make out a climber at 30 feet at best.”

Then he saw the group of three all roped together with Velvet disappear over an icy ledge.

Liston and the four others used a rope to lower one of their climbing party over the edge in an unsuccessful attempt to locate the trio.

Then they used a cell phone to call for help as the wind howled at up to 70 mph.

Liston, who described himself as a veteran of Mount Hood climbs, said all eight had experience at either rock climbing or mountaineering.

They’d known about the Mount Hood disaster in which three climbers died in December. But Liston said that wasn’t the reason the group decided to take Mountain Locator Units, the small beacons that can send out radio signals to rescuers.

“We’ve been up on the mountain for many years,” Liston said. “With the group we were going up with this time, we just wanted another extra level of security, just in case something happened, especially with winter conditions.”

In addition to Bryant, 34, a teacher in the Portland suburb of Milwaukie, the rescued climbers included Kate Hanlon, 34, a teacher in the suburb of Wilsonville.

The other woman, whose name was not released, was being treated for a head injury in Portland, said Jim Strovink, spokesman for the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office. “She’s going to be fine,” he said.

Velvet, owned by Bryant, had minor cuts and abrasions on her back paws and legs from prolonged exposure to the snow, but she was cleared to go home.

“The dog probably saved their lives” by lying across them during the cold night, said Erik Brom, a member of the Portland Mountain Rescue team.

Follow this link to read the rest of the article.

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