Success Stories

Philbert 

Philbert at his foster home just after arriving in central NY.

Philbert is a puppy mill survivor who had just been transported from the horrors of mill life in Ohio to a local rescue. He was placed in a foster home in Mexico, NY. Not having known the outside world, Philbert was scared of everything and it seemed like this poor boy just wanted to make himself invisible. The first day in the foster home, he was let into the backyard off-leash. His foster mom went inside to get a jacket, leaving him unsupervised. When she returned just moments later, he was gone, having pushed through broken fencing and run away from what to him was a very frightening situation.

A sighting of Philbert in a road, shortly after his escape from the backyard of his foster home.

The rescue organization reached out for help. To get sightings of Philbert and narrow down his location, flyers and signs were posted all over town. A very kind business manager spread the word to all of her customers and one of them came through with a sighting, including extremely detailed information about Philbert’s location. Given this detail, Matt was able to find the spot easily. Philbert had definitely been there – Matt tracked paw prints through the snow that went into and out of an old, collapsed barn. And then Matt saw him – about 20 feet away, lying in a foot of snow, shivering in the freezing cold and a wind chill in the single digits. Now that Matt knew where he was, he didn’t want to risk scaring Philbert away, so he backed off.

Philbert had been lost for nearly a week at this point, probably without any food. There was a storm coming the next day that would dump two more feet of snow. Matt didn’t know how much longer Philbert could survive in this weather, so he did everything he could to trap him that night. He set the trap about 50 feet from him and loaded it with food. He sprayed nearly a gallon of scent mixture in and around the trap. This will usually draw a dog to the trap, but Philbert remained glued to his spot. There is no doubt he could smell the food and scent, and he must have been starving, but the fear he felt was just too great and he wouldn’t approach it.

After hours of waiting, adjusting the trap, moving the trap, and more waiting, Matt got a call. Someone had seen Philbert on the nearby road. Matt’s heart dropped. Philbert had left. After 14 hours of attempted rescue, Matt was devastated that he wouldn’t be able to bring Philbert to a warm, safe home that night. He also questioned if he was the one who caused him to move with the noise made setting up the trap.

Matt could do nothing but go home and hope for the best – that Philbert would survive the blizzard and he would get a call with a sighting in a couple of days.

To Matt’s great relief, Philbert was still alive after the storm passed. Even better – he had returned to the same location at which Matt had attempted to trap him. Philbert had ridden out the storm in the collapsed barn on the property.

Matt remembered that Philbert seemed to want to be invisible, so he next tried the same trap as before, but this time covered it. It is highly unusual to cover a trap because it creates a space that dogs typically see as a scary void with unknown contents and potential danger. Every once in a great while, however, it works. This wasn’t that time – Philbert had become brave enough to approach the trap but decided not to go inside.

The first trap Matt set for Philbert, who was too frightened to go near it.

Philbert peers into the covered trap and considers going inside. He decided not to.

Matt then switched to the large enclosure trap, which he set up outside of the collapsed barn with many bowls of food inside and outside of the trap, as well as a gallon-size bowl of water. Over the next couple of days, Philbert came out to eat and drink, but would often become scared and retreat back inside the barn, sometimes carrying the food with him to eat it where he felt safe. He spent nearly 24 hours a day holed up in the barn, which was a dangerous mess of debris inside.

Philbert’s tracks in the snow showed that he had gotten all four feet into the trap, just beyond the door. This is a sign that a dog is getting comfortable with the trap and will likely move farther back very soon.  On the second night that the trap was there, Matt predicted that Philbert would get far enough into the trap to trigger the door to close, so he set the trap and waited. After dark, Philbert emerged from the barn with the courage to explore the trap. He went in and out many times until finally moving to the sweet spot and triggering the door to close! Philbert would soon be warm and safe again.

Matt transported Philbert back to the rescue, who placed him with a new foster. Philbert is very slowly coming out of his shell and recovering from his former life. We know he will be showered with love and affection and become the dog he is supposed to be. We wish you the best life buddy!

See more of Philbert’s rescue in our video compilation on Facebook or Instagram.

Philbert heads into the collapsed barn that he used for shelter. After taking refuge here, he spent nearly 24 hours a day inside.

Philbert peeks out from inside the collapsed barn.

Philbert ventures outside of the collapsed barn for some food. A few seconds later, he became scared and retreated back inside.

Philbert looks out from within the trap after triggering the door to close.

Philbert meets Matt.

Philbert settles in for the ride back to the rescue.

Philbert warm and safe again after his ordeal.

Lucy 

Lucy approaches the garage. The door of the garage is rigged to close once Lucy walks toward the back and breaks a laser beam.

After her family left for vacation, Lucy was being cared for in her home by a relative. Although she had met this relative before, she was not familiar enough with him to be comfortable, especially without her family there. Her instinct was to get away from this uncomfortable situation and she slipped through an unlatched gate after being let out later that evening.

Lucy did not travel far and sightings were frequent. Unfortunately, many well-intentioned neighbors spread out looking for her and calling her name. Lucy was already scared and the people and noise made her even more frightened. She ran whenever she saw or heard someone, especially men.

Lucy peers into the garage as she works up the courage to walk inside.

Matt could tell Lucy was trying to return home, but because there was so much activity and noise in the neighborhood and around her house, she was too nervous to approach. The area around Lucy’s house needed to be made as calm and quiet as possible so that she would feel safe walking onto the property. Matt advised Lucy’s family to update social media posts asking everyone to stop searching and, if they happened to see her, to just ignore her and go about their day. The pet sitter also left the house, leaving it dark and peaceful.

Matt’s plan was to capture Lucy in the family’s garage, rigging the door to automatically close once Lucy walked far enough inside. This works by using a laser beam, electromagnet, and bungee cords. Once Lucy walked to the back of the garage and broke the beam, it would release an electromagnet holding the door open. Once released, the door would slam shut, yanked by bungee cords connecting the door to the exterior wall.

Lucy’s blankets and a pile of high-value food were placed behind the laser beam. With the property quiet and dark, Lucy felt comfortable approaching the garage after nightfall. It took a few minutes, but she walked into the building and toward the food. When she broke the laser beam, the magnet released and the bungee cords slammed the door shut. Lucy was safe!

Fencing was placed around the door in case Lucy tried to bolt once it was opened. Because she was scared of men, Matt waited outside while Hannah from CNY SPCA dog control went into the garage to greet Lucy and get her on leash. Hannah lived nearby and knew the family, who agreed that Hannah should watch Lucy and her canine sibling until they returned from vacation. Lucy was rescued just before cold, rainy weather set in. Thankfully she would be in a warm, safe house and be back in her family’s arms within a few days.

Lucy walks into the garage and sees her blankets and smells the food at the back.

Lucy looks over her shoulder before heading to the back of the garage.

Lucy looks at the door after it slams shut and she is safely trapped.

Lucy and Hannah prepare to exit the garage. Hannah took care of Lucy until her family returned from vacation.

Haley

Haley finds the trap.

At just one year old, Haley arrived at her third new home. Nervous about yet another uncertain situation and following her instinct to escape, she slipped through an open door within 24 hours.

Haley stayed close by, but she would not let anyone get near her. Some kind neighbors a few doors down began leaving food and water for her, and soon set a trap for her in their yard. However, it was not the right sized trap for a big dog like Haley and was not properly set up. Although Haley entered the trap, when the door released she was able to back out of it. This happened three times before Haley had had enough and would not go near it. 

These good Samaritans reached out to the rescue for help bringing Haley to safety. Matt advised to remove the trap but continue to leave food and water until he could get there the next evening. When he arrived, Matt set up the large enclosure trap and then retreated out of sight to monitor the trap through a remote camera. Haley found the trap in less than 30 minutes and could not have cooperated better with her rescue – she walked right in and when she got to the back of the trap triggered the door to close. If only they were all so easy!

Matt transported Haley to the local animal shelter. We hope that Haley’s next stop is her last and a forever home is in the near future.

 
 

Haley settles after she meets Matt.

Haley arrives at the shelter, ready for a safe, quiet night after weeks being lost.

Zoey

Zoey at the trap on the first night.

In late June, Zoey was on vacation from Illinois with her family in Pittsfield, NY when she was let out of the house off leash and ran out of the unfenced yard. She was seen a few times in the immediate area but then disappeared. In early September, she resurfaced 13 miles away in Sherburne. She was thin and it looked like she had been through quite an ordeal while she was lost. She would not get close to people, but was seen near houses. When lost dogs approach houses like this, they are looking for food. The best thing anyone can do is feed them. This gets them much needed nourishment and also gives a rescuer a place to capture them without having to go find them.

A kind resident began leaving food for her. She also reported her sightings of Zoey on social media, trying to determine if anyone was looking for her. She eventually made contact with the local dog control officer. Together, they tried to trap Zoey, but unfortunately it did not work – Zoey stretched out while trying to get the food at the back and her body was still partially outside of the trap when she set it off and she backed out when the door was released. Stretching to get the food at the back of a trap is a sign that a dog is unsure about the trap and nervous to be entering it.

The rescue was then contacted for some extra assistance. Because Zoey had been scared by the first trapping attempt, Matt advised to remove the trap and just leave food and water. Zoey began to return every six hours for a meal. The food was being left in a big, vacant garage, which is where Matt assembled the large enclosure trap the next day. He left the trap unset for the first night so that Zoey could get used to it and he could observe her behavior. This would let him know exactly how to set the trap for her when she was ready.

Zoey was comfortable enough to enter the trap and get all the way to the back on the first night, but was nervous enough to keep stretching out as she made her way in. Since she was coming frequently to this spot, the next day Matt decided not to wait until nightfall and to try to capture her during daylight hours. He set the trap in the early afternoon and Zoey showed up shortly after. She cautiously made her way into the trap, still stretching out to reach the food. But she was brave enough to make it to the back and trigger the door to close. After three months on her own, hungry and scared, she was safe at last.

Zoey was cared for without charge by a local boarding facility after she was trapped. Sadly, Zoey’s family had had to return to Illinois without her. They made the two-day drive back to central NY to pick up Zoey, who had a joyful reunion with her mom! Zoey is now back home, warm and safe with her family.

 
 
 

Zoey meets Matt after being safely trapped.

Zoey relaxes in the trap and enjoys some back scratches from Matt.

 

Zoey is transported to the boarding facility to await the arrival of her family.

 

Fresh from a much-needed bath, Zoey rests soundly after her three-month ordeal as a lost dog.

Zoey and her mom are reunited!

Victoria

Victoria finds the trap.

Victoria had been brought into a local shelter as a stray after a good Samaritan was able to catch her by hand. As is often the case, the shelter environment was scary and Victoria wanted out. A perfect storm of factors created an escape route and she was able to make a break for it by opening two closed but unlatched barriers – a guillotine style kennel door and then one of the building’s exterior doors. The shelter had a network of trails on the property and Victoria disappeared into the woods.

When they realized what had happened, the shelter staff were dismayed and began searching for her. There were sightings of her on the property and she even came back to the building once, but she was too scared to approach anyone. A trap was placed behind the building with food inside, but it was not set up in a way that made Victoria comfortable going near it and she just walked around it in wide circles. She wanted the food but there was no way she was going inside the trap to get it.

A staff member at the shelter reached out to the rescue for guidance. Matt advised to leave Victoria alone, remove the trap, and just leave food and water. He would be able to get there soon and begin the trapping process. Unfortunately, others felt that continuing to search for her would be best and a large group of staff and volunteers went into the woods trying to find her. She was seen but, not surprisingly, she ran away every time anyone got close. They were extremely lucky that she stayed on the property after this – most of the time a search party pushes a scared dog out to another, unknown location.

When it became clear after nearly a week that nothing that had been done was working, they agreed to bring Matt in to help. On one of the woods trails, he set up the large enclosure trap, a different style than the trap that she had been scared to approach. The trap was set, and Matt hoped Victoria would have the courage to enter the first night. Although she got close to the trap, she was not ready to go inside, so Matt latched the door open for the night. The plan was to allow Victoria to get used to the trap the following night, and then set it on the third night. The second night, after just 10 minutes, Victoria worked up the nerve to enter the trap and go all the way to the back. The next day brought a deluge of rain and booming thunder. Matt told the shelter staff to keep an eye out for her around the building. She may give in and go back inside to get out of the treacherous weather. And although she did return to the back of the building, she was not ready and retreated into the woods.

The rain subsided later in the day and Matt set the trap before dark. Victoria was there shortly after nightfall. She took little time to eat her way through the bowls of food to the back of the trap, triggering the door to close. After more than a week scared and alone, she was safe! Matt transported her back to the shelter, where she spent just one night before the good Samaritan who had saved her the first time came to adopt her. Victoria was finally home!

Victoria strikes a pose for the camera before heading into the trap.

After removing all the bowls and eating her fill, Victoria takes another look at the trap.

 
 
 

Victoria says hi to the staff when Matt returns her to the shelter.

Victoria is happy in her new home!

Be a part of bringing a lost dog home.

Butch

Butch finds the feeding station left for him the day after he became lost.

Butch was being cared for by a pet sitter while his mom was on vacation. During some outdoor time, the line he was attached to disconnected from his harness and he took off out of the unfenced yard. After a sighting was reported the following day the pet sitter requested help from the rescue.

Matt was able to get to the area of the sighting that evening and set up feeding stations at strategic locations. Within an hour, Butch was caught on camera at one of the stations! Matt set up a trap at this site the next morning. Around the same time, someone reported a sighting of Butch close to the woods behind a nearby business. Unfortunately, the pet sitter went to this location and came face-to-face with Butch, who turned and fled into the woods upon seeing her. Butch had been headed in the direction of the trap, but became so scared when he saw the pet sitter that he never got close again. This is an example of the damage that can be done by going to the location of a lost dog sighting. Dogs in survival mode will not come to anyone, even their own family, and may become so scared when they see a person that they move to a new, unknown location, putting rescuers back at square one.

Day after day dragged by with no sightings of Butch. Matt continued to scout the woods in the area and found animal tracks that looked the right size and shape to be Butch’s. It seemed that Butch may still be nearby but staying out of sight. Matt set up a camera at this location, but did not see any animals coming through and could not confirm that the tracks were Butch’s.

It was feared that Butch was not going to be seen again. But then, after five days with no sightings, he resurfaced less than a mile away in the town of Phoenix, NY, caught on a security camera passing through a homeowner’s yard! Butch was seen in various locations running around the town that day, obviously very scared, and then went into hiding. He was seen again the next morning, still in the town of Phoenix. Unfortunately, people attempting to catch him chased him and the next sighting was about a mile away near a local business. Butch had found a spot to rest, but then the workers at the business approached him and he took off into the woods.

Matt thought there was a good chance Butch was hunkered down, waiting to emerge from the woods in the evening when the surroundings became peaceful and quiet. Around 6:30, Matt set up a trap on the edge of the woods. About 45 minutes later, he watched from a distance as Butch found the trap and gobbled down the food near the entrance. Less than a minute later, Butch was safely in the trap with the door closed behind him! Shortly thereafter, he was reunited with his pet sitter. She called Butch’s mom, who had been having a miserable vacation worried sick about him. They cried tears of joy and relief at having Butch safely rescued. Butch and his mom were reunited when she got back into town a few days later – both grateful to be back together!

Butch walks into the trap and eyes the food at the back.

Butch sits with Matt shortly after being safely trapped.

Butch gets some pets and cuddles from his sitter after being rescued.

Lily

Lily enjoys a meal after her rescue.

It was the morning after Lily had been adopted. She was nervous in her new surroundings and when she saw the opportunity to escape through an open door, she took it, bolting past her family and into the surrounding neighborhood.

The rescue was contacted the same day for help and Matt was able to get to the location in the late afternoon. Lily was staying close by and Matt thought she might come back to her new house. He was right! As she approached, Matt coached Lily’s new mom over the phone on what to do to get Lily to keep coming toward her. Sit down, remain calm, put food near you, and talk to Lily like you would at home. Be prepared to wait – this technique can be effective but you must go at Lily’s pace. Lily slowly and cautiously made her way toward her mom. It looked like she would be able to get Lily by hand. But just then a neighbor came out of the house next door and the noise scared Lily, who was gone in a flash.

Disappointed but determined, Lily’s family plastered the neighborhood with flyers. In case Lily came back to her house, Matt set a trap in the yard. The night was uneventful, but the next day Lily was seen traveling back and forth between a nearby park and elementary school. Then in the afternoon she was spotted just one street over from her house. She didn’t quite make it all the way home, but Matt was confident that she would get there soon.

Sure enough, Lily braved a downpour that night and found her way to her new house at about 3AM. The trap was still set in the yard and Lily made short work of stepping inside and triggering the door to close! She chowed down on the food inside while her family made their way out of their house and to the trap. They carried the trap inside and then released Lily into a warm, dry towel. She is now safe again and ready for a happy life with her new family!

Lily stands in the trap just after triggering the door to close. What a mug!

Lily waits patiently in the trap for her new family to come get her.

Teddy

Teddy finds a feeding station.

When Teddy showed up in Parish, he was in bad shape - he had clearly been lost for quite some time and had not been finding enough to eat. Some kind people left food out for him and Teddy’s condition improved. However, he was very scared and would not go within 50 feet of anyone. After an unsuccessful attempt to trap him, Matt was contacted with a request for help.

Matt worked with homeowners in the area to set up feeding stations. Teddy found one in a backyard that he often visited. After Teddy had come to this feeding station several times, Matt set up a trap at the edge of the yard. The first trapping attempt had likely made Teddy nervous about standard-size traps, so Matt used a large enclosure called a Missy Trap. Because Teddy seemed so anxious, in addition to food, Matt left toys and bones for him at the trap. Teddy could relieve some of his anxiety by chewing on these things.

The first time he found the trap, Teddy was willing to go in, but only about halfway. He took the first several bowls out of the trap to eat the food. He then took the toys and bones one at a time, carrying them into the woods. Over the next few days, Teddy became more comfortable going in and out of the trap, walking all the way to the back to get the bowls of food. He was also caught on camera having a ball playing with a stuffed toy!

 
 

Teddy seemed most at ease in the mornings, so on the day Matt planned to trap him, he drove up early. Teddy had the same idea and just as Matt pulled up, pictures started coming in from the remote cameras showing Teddy at the trap. After Teddy left, Matt got everything set up and then went out of sight to wait. Unfortunately, Teddy had seen Matt at the trap and became very nervous. He returned to the trap, but was too scared to go all the way to the back, where he needed to be to trigger the door to close. He took the bowls closest to the door and ate the food, but then retreated into the woods. It seemed like it would not be the day to trap Teddy, so Matt unset the trap and hoped he would have better timing the next day.

Just as Matt was about to drive away, Teddy came back! He seemed more comfortable, took more bowls of food out of the trap, and then walked away. Matt decided to give it one more try, so he reset the trap and waited. Sure enough, Teddy returned a short while later, this time brave enough to walk to the back of the trap. He triggered the door to close, finally safe after months of living lost and scared.

After consulting with the local dog control officer, it was agreed that Teddy would be fostered at the home of the director of a nearby wildlife rehabilitation center. Although very nervous at first, Teddy settled in and before long was playing with the resident dogs! Teddy’s adoption will be managed by a local rescue.

After setting up the trap, Matt left two toys for Teddy and a line of bowls to lead him to the back of the trap.

Teddy triumphantly carries a bowl out of the trap.

After carrying one bowl out of the trap and eating the food, Teddy heads back for another.

After triggering the door to close, Teddy waits inside the trap for Matt to arrive.

Teddy waits patiently in the trap while the humans coordinate the next phase of his rescue.

Teddy in the backseat of Matt’s truck after his rescue, with a new toy for the ride.

Teddy settles in and enjoys the breezy ride to his foster home.

Charlie

A sighting of Charlie as he looks down from the rooftop of the abandoned building.

Charlie was just a baby when he was dumped on the south side of Syracuse near an abandoned building. The structure was built up against a hillside. Charlie investigated and found he could get onto the building’s roof by circling up to a road above the building, down a very steep hillside, and through a small gap in the fence that ran the length of the roof’s back wall. The roof was secluded and quiet, and Charlie could look down on the streets below to see what was happening around him. All in all, a great place for a lost dog to take refuge.

Charlie was too afraid to approach anyone, so Matt’s help was requested. He started by setting up several feeding stations. Charlie visited multiple stations, but spent the most time at the one on the roof. Matt returned later the same day to set up a trap against the back wall of the roof. About an hour and a half after the trap was set, Charlie appeared. He approached the trap and examined it, getting his front feet in and then backing out several times. After just three-and-a-half minutes, he moved his front feet far enough into the trap to trigger the door to close. When this happened, Charlie was stretched out with his back feet still outside of the trap. But when the door came down and bumped him, he moved forward, allowing it to close and securely latch behind him.

Now came the tricky part. The trap could not be taken over the fence and up the hillside. To get Charlie down, Matt set up two ladders against the building, and with the help of two Syracuse dog control officers and one law enforcement official, used ropes to carefully slide the trap down the ladders. Lost dog rescue requires meeting the dog on their terms, which can lead to some very unusual circumstances. Charlie was Matt’s first rooftop dog, but may not be the last.

After his rescue, Charlie was transported to the city shelter, and then stayed in a foster home for a short while before being adopted!

Charlie at the top of the steep hillside that led down to the street.

Charlie heads down the hillside to the street.

 
 
 

Charlie meets Matt and Syracuse city officials after he is safely trapped.

Charlie enjoys the wind in his fur as he rides in the backseat of Matt’s truck after his rescue.

Charlie hangs out on the couch at his foster home.

Charlie with his new mom on adoption day!

Ollie

Ollie approaches a feeding station.

Ollie was enjoying some time outside with his family in their front yard when he decided he wanted to visit a canine neighbor across the street. Ollie was not secured in any way and simply trotted out of the yard and into the road. To the horror of his family, Ollie crossed in front of an oncoming car. The car was slowing down at a stop sign and bumped into him. Ollie was not badly hurt, but was so scared by what happened that he entered survival mode and took off running.

Fortunately, Ollie did not travel far or stay hidden and there were several nearby sightings. Ollie’s family worked with Matt to set up feeding stations, which Ollie found and began returning to. Ollie’s family hoped that he might approach them if they sat a distance from a feeding station and waited for him to show. However, because Ollie was in survival mode, when he sensed them nearby he moved farther away, staying completely hidden in the woods while they were there. He wouldn’t even make an appearance for his favorite person, his 9-year-old human brother. A dog in survival mode avoids all people. Sadly, even members of their own family are perceived as potential threats.

After Ollie was consistently visiting a single feeding station, Matt set up a large enclosure called a Missy Trap for this big boy. Ollie found the trap the next morning and with just a little hesitation entered and moved toward the back, triggering the door to close. His family lived just a mile away and hurried as fast as they could to the trap location. By this time, Ollie had come out of survival mode and was overjoyed to see his mom, dad, and brother as they approached the trap! Ollie is now safe again in his loving home.

Ollie finds the Missy Trap and ponders whether he should go inside.

Ollie sniffs at the door of the trap after cooperating with his rescue by entering the enclosure and triggering the door to close.

 

Overjoyed to be back with his family, Ollie rides between mom and dad on the way home.

 

Be a part of bringing a lost dog home.

Rose

A sighting of Rose in a driveway, without the harness or leash she had on when she escaped. She almost certainly became stuck when the harness and leash were tangled on something, and then managed to free herself by slipping or chewing through the harness.

After being adopted from across the country, Rose spent the first night with her new family in one house and the next day went with them to a different house. This was a huge amount of change and exposure to new people and places for Rose in a very short amount of time, and she was nervous and scared in these unfamiliar surroundings.

On the day she became lost, Rose was out in the backyard with her new family. Her leash was attached to a chair, but was dropped when someone untied it. Rose sensed the opportunity to escape and dashed out of the unfenced yard. She didn’t travel far and was spotted in the neighborhood several times over the next few days.

Matt was contacted by Rose’s family four days after she became lost. But then the sightings stopped. Rose ran off wearing a harness and dragging her leash, and it was likely that either or both had become tangled on something and she was stuck. Fortunately, the weather was not too hot or cold, but the longer Rose was stuck the longer she had to go without food or water.

Two days went by before Rose was spotted again. She was no longer wearing her harness and leash. She had almost certainly become stuck, and then managed to free herself by slipping or chewing through the harness. It was a great relief to see Rose again, but she was still lost and in danger.

Matt planned to set up feeding stations to get Rose eating at a specific location, but before he arrived there was a sighting of Rose under a deck. Although a neighbor chased her off in an attempt to catch her, Rose later returned and hid under the deck again. She may have been attracted to this spot because she smelled the food in a compost pile next to the deck and was surely very hungry at this point. Matt asked the homeowner to put out some food for Rose but otherwise leave her alone. Rose chowed down on rotisserie chicken, possibly the first time she had eaten anything since becoming lost.

When Matt arrived, Rose was still under the deck. This was a golden trapping opportunity - the dog was in a known location, without anyone chasing after her, and she wasn’t moving. Without looking at Rose, Matt slowly and quietly set up a trap on the lawn as she watched from under the deck. Matt then left to wait and see if Rose would investigate the trap and go inside. The remote camera was not picking up a signal so Matt could not monitor the trap through pictures and video. Instead, he hid behind a tree a good distance away and listened for the clang of the trap door closing. Matt waited for nearly two hours until the sweet sound of the door releasing and swiftly latching shut rang out. Rose was trapped! Matt came out of his hiding spot to meet Rose, and then transported her back to her new home and very grateful family.

Two-and-a-half weeks later, Rose surprised everyone by giving birth to five puppies! No one had known, but Rose was pregnant when she was adopted. Everyone was doubly grateful that Rose was able to be trapped in just six days so she could have her puppies safely at home.

Rose settles down in the trap as Matt arrives. The deck Rose was hiding under can be seen in the background.

Rose rides in the trap on the way to Matt’s truck and the reunion with her new family.

Rose wags her tail excitedly as she and Matt approach the door to her house.

Rose enjoys pets from her family after being safely trapped and brought back home.

Bruno (now Brew)

Bruno eats food left for him in the second backyard he stayed at. Bruno let the homeowners get up close to take this shot.

After first being spotted in Nedrow, this boy made his way to Onondaga Hill and was seen at numerous locations over the next week. Matt then became involved, starting at the location he had spent the most time. However, he never visited the feeding station Matt set up. It became apparent that he had decided to move on and was already gone by the time Matt got there. A short time later, he turned up in another backyard nearby. Rescue efforts shifted to this location.

Bruno takes a nap in the backyard he stayed at while working up the courage to make himself part of the family,

The family whose backyard he had chosen began calling their visitor Bruno. Bruno spent most of his time lounging in their backyard. While most lost dogs in Bruno’s circumstances would be in survival mode and run when they saw people, Bruno seemed happy to be near them. He would walk right up to members of this family when they stepped off of their back deck into the yard. If he wasn’t in sight, they would normally find him in his other favorite spot a short distance away, and he would follow them back home. It was impossible, however, to get Bruno by hand. Although he enjoyed being near people, he was scared enough that any time someone moved a hand toward him, he would retreat.

The homeowners allowed Matt to attempt to trap Bruno in their backyard. As Matt set up the trap, Bruno stood just a few feet away and watched. Matt left food in the trap, but did not set it so that Bruno could get used to going in and out, a process known as conditioning. Unfortunately, a miscommunication resulted in the homeowner closing the trap later that night. It is not good for a lost dog to see a closed trap. If they are smart enough, which Bruno was, they can understand that they could become stuck inside the trap. After Bruno saw the trap with the door closed, he was not interested in going in it. Matt switched to a large enclosure called a Missy Trap and positioned it next to the back deck. Although Bruno would walk in and out of this trap, he would never go more than about halfway in, staying close enough to the door so that he could quickly get out. Talk about a trap-savvy dog!

 

Bruno eyes the trap from just a few feet away as Matt sets it up.

Bruno and Matt share a glance as Bruno watches Matt place food in the Missy Trap.

Bruno became more and more comfortable with this family over the next few days. He seemed particularly interested in the family’s two dogs and began playing with one of therm. Then, just like that, he followed his new friend onto the deck and into the house! The homeowner closed the door behind them and Bruno was onto a new life!

After consulting with local authorities, it was decided that this family would foster Bruno for several days. When no owner came forward, they considered keeping Bruno. He had chosen them, after all. Understandably, however, they decided three dogs would be too many. Bruno was transferred to Powerful Paws Rescue and a new foster family. After shortening his name to Brew, they fell in love and adopted him several weeks later. Brew is loving his new life, especially hanging with his canine sister!

Although in the end Bruno/Brew did not need to be trapped, we wanted to share his story because he was such an unusual lost dog - seeking a family but too scared to let himself become part of one. In the end, it just took time for him to let his guard down and find his way home.

Bruno and his new friend take a short break during a day full of play.

Bruno becomes brave enough to follow his buddy onto the family’s deck and into the house.

Bruno (now Brew) rides in the car with his canine sister after being transferred to the foster family who would later adopt him into his forever home.

Bruno (now Brew) plays with his new sister. They became fast friends and love spending time together!

Amunah

A sighting of Amunah on a doorbell camera as he visits a front porch looking for food.

Amunah had recently been adopted and was still very nervous at his new home. He was out for a walk with his new mom on a trail in the woods, when his leash was accidentally dropped. Amunah immediately took off.

When a dog gets lost hiking or trail walking, they will most likely find their way back to the car or entrance to the trail. The best course of action in these cases is to wait for your dog at the car or trail entrance. They will usually return by the time darkness falls or within 24 hours.

Amunah and his new mom lived in a very remote area and it was feared that Amunah would disappear into the wilderness, or that his leash would get caught on something and he would become stuck. Fortunately, he went in the right direction and after five miles of traveling found the few houses nearby. He began visiting them, walking right onto porches looking for food.

There was an attempt to capture Amunah using a relatively small wildlife trap, which is not suitable for dogs and which Amunah was able to easily escape from. During this escape, Amunah’s leash got snagged on the trap and he slipped out of his collar. After this incident, Matt was contacted. Since Amunah had been scared by the small trap, Matt knew he would have to use a large enclosure called a Missy Trap.

Matt worked with some of the homeowners in the area to make sure Amunah was only being fed in one location. After several days Amunah was regularly eating at one house. Matt set the Missy Trap up against the porch of this house. When Amunah arrived for a meal, he investigated the trap for about ten minutes and then worked up the courage to go inside. After about a minute of sniffing around inside the trap, he moved into the spot that triggered the door to close. Matt and Amunah’s mom were waiting nearby and quickly arrived to transport Amunah home. He is now safe again and continuing to adjust to his new routine.

Amunah paces around the Missy Trap as he works up the courage to go inside.

Amunah says hi to Matt and his mom after being safely trapped.

Amunah watches Matt set up a crate inside the trap that will be used to transport him home.

Amunah eats chicken nuggets from Matt before being transported back to his new home.

Amunah enjoys pets from his mom after being brought safely back home.

Max

One of the first trail camera shots of Max after rescue efforts began. At this point she had been lost for over four months. Those eyes say it all.

Max’s story is one of survival, determination, and perseverance. Max escaped in late summer from her backyard through a gate that had not fully latched when closed. Although there were several sightings, Max was unable to be definitively located and the trail ran cold. Then in late November, nearly three months later, Matt received a call in response to flyers he had hung for a different dog. Someone had seen a loose black dog in his backyard. Matt was willing to help, but the sighting information was vague and it was unclear if this was actually a lost dog. Because lost dogs tend to repeat patterns of behavior, Matt asked the person who reported this sighting to call him if he saw the dog again.

At the start of January, Matt received another call. The black dog had been returning to the backyard again and again for the past six weeks to eat cat food left out for strays. The dog could also be heard barking in the woods at night. This was good news, but would have been even better if the person had called when he saw the dog again after talking to Matt the first time. It is not a bad idea to feed a lost dog because it gets the dog coming back to the same spot repeatedly, which is what a rescuer needs in order to trap them. However, it is crucial to report sightings of the dog quickly so that they can be rescued and taken out of harm’s way as soon as possible. In this case, the depths of winter were approaching and it was feared that the dog would succumb to exposure if not rescued soon.

Matt immediately set up feeding stations in the woods that bordered the property. The black dog found the food. Trail camera footage showed distinctive white markings on the dog that identified her as Max. She had resurfaced four miles from home.

Max eats food out of the first trap Matt set for her. She became comfortable enough to walk in and out after a few days.

It seemed this would be a typical dog trapping that would take a few days. Matt placed a trap but left it unset for several nights to allow Max to get used to it, a process known as conditioning. Max became comfortable enough to walk in, eat the food inside, and then walk out. On the night Matt set the trap, Max walked in as usual. However, when she triggered the door to close, the sound of it releasing scared her and she was so fast that she was able to turn around and burst out of the trap a fraction of a second before the latch secured. It is not unusual for dogs to become scared as they are trapped, but Max was particularly sensitive to the noise and much quicker than most. (Matt has since changed the latches on the trap to ensure this will not happen again.)

It is not often that a dog gets out of trap like Max did, but when it happens it is devastating for a trapper. Max being scared by the trapping attempt was disastrous. What had seemed straightforward had in an instant become a complicated, intensely delicate operation. After this incident, Max would not go near anything that looked like a trap. It also made her scared of picking food up directly off the ground, so all food had to be placed in bowls, which she often liked to pick up and move to a new location before eating. Most difficult of all, Max now associated Matt with a scary experience, so any time she sensed that he had been somewhere, most likely by smell, she avoided the area.

Making her way through the snowy woods, Max looks directly at the camera as it takes this nighttime shot.

Max was still at large when bone-chilling subzero temperatures set in. But she was a determined survivor and made it through the worst of winter. Rescue efforts never ceased, including providing food each day. Matt tried several different kinds of traps, but Max would not approach any of them.

At this point, flyers were distributed house to house in the neighborhoods surrounding the wooded area Max was staying in. Max had become elusive and Matt needed to know if she was getting food at any other locations. If she was, this would make it difficult to get her repeatedly coming to a location to trap her. Matt received over a dozen calls from people who had seen Max, nearly ten of whom had been providing food to her or had seen her eating food they left out for stray cats. One sighting went as far back as September, just weeks after Max became lost. Until a flyer was received and people knew who to call, however, none of these sightings was reported. Everyone agreed to stop leaving food out so that Matt could attract Max to a trap location.

The second trap Matt set up for Max. After her experience with the first trap, she would not go near it.

The third trap Matt set up for Max, a large enclosure called a Missy Trap. Max would not go near it.

What to do now that Max would not go near a trap? There was a backyard Max visited that had a shed. With permission from the homeowner, Matt could rig the door of this shed to close when motion was detected inside, essentially converting the structure into a trap. As with most lost dogs, Max was hesitant to enter small enclosed spaces. The technique used in these cases is to gradually ease the dog into the space by placing food farther and farther in as the dog becomes more and more comfortable going in and out.

Max, nervous to go into the shed, stretches to get the first bowl of food inside.

Matt started by leaving a bowl of food just a few inches inside the shed, but it proved difficult to make progress getting Max to step fully inside. She would put her front feet in but not her back, eating the food close to the door but no farther. To try to make Max more comfortable, Matt got her toys from her mom and put them near the shed door. Max seemed to recognize her toys and took many of them to a spot in the woods. But still she would not go in the shed. Even though he had been taking measures to disguise his presence, Matt suspected Max was nervous because she could sense that he had been there. Matt decided to remove himself from the equation and enlisted a volunteer to help by visiting the shed each day and leaving bowls of food. Two days after the volunteer started, Max began walking fully inside! Each time Max ate food at one distance, the bowls were placed a few inches farther the following day.

 

Getting Max comfortable entering the shed began with leaving food at the entrance. Once Max took food at one distance, it was moved a few inches farther back.

The farthest bowl at 4’3”. It took Max almost three weeks to become comfortable going this far into the shed.

The farthest bowl at 6’3”. By this time we had gained some momentum and Max was making a few inches of progress each day.

The day before Max was trapped, the farthest bowl at 9’6”.

Max carries a bowl of food out of the shed. She preferred to eat the food outside. She would often carry the bowls into the woods.

Max takes the fourth and last bowl of the day out of the shed. This picture was taken by a camera mounted on a tree behind the shed.

Matt enters the shed to install the equipment necessary to rig the door to shut. He wore a special coverall suit to try to prevent leaving any trace that he had been there.

Matt needed Max to be comfortable enough to walk ten feet into the shed before rigging the door to close. Knowing how fast she was, Matt would place the motion detector ten feet deep so that Max would not be near the door when it was triggered to close. It took over a month of inching food deeper and deeper into the shed for Max to comfortably walk ten feet in. Matt had to return to the location at this point to install the equipment necessary to trigger the door. Making changes at a trap location often causes a lost dog to become nervous, so Matt hid everything behind objects already in the shed. He then returned the next morning to put food inside the shed and rig the door to close. Max appeared at her usual time, but took one sniff of the shed and turned around. Whether it was the scent of Matt, the smell of the new equipment in the shed, or both, Max knew something was up and would not go in.

Max needed to be gradually worked back into the shed. Fortunately, it only took six more days for her to walk 9’6” inside. Expecting her to be comfortable enough to walk ten feet in the next day, Matt taught the volunteer how to rig the door so that he would not have to enter the shed himself and leave behind any indication of being there. Early the next morning, everything was set. Max showed up about two hours later and didn’t suspect a thing! As she liked to do, she took the first three bowls out one by one. She then entered the shed to retrieve the fourth bowl, ten feet inside. As soon as she moved to pick up the bowl, the motion detector activated and the door slammed shut. Finally, seven months and one week after becoming lost, and 94 days after rescue efforts began, Max was safely trapped!

 

Matt and Max’s mom open the door of the shed to transfer Max into a crate. Fencing was placed around the door as a precaution in case Max tried to run.

Before opening the shed to release Max, Matt placed fencing around the door. It was possible that Max would try to run and every precaution needed to be taken. A crate was then placed in front of the door. With Max’s mom on one side and Matt on the other, Matt opened the door. Max surged forward and into the crate. She was then transported in her mom’s car and into her house while still in the crate. She immediately knew she was home and when released from the crate jumped into her mom and dad’s arms. A long awaited, joyous reunion for all!

Matt transports Max into her mom’s car for the ride home.

Max is overjoyed as she is released from the crate into mom’s arms.

After the reunion with her parents, Max cuddles up to Matt!

Bella

Bella eats frozen hot dogs at a feeding station.

Bella had recently been adopted and was out with her new dad when she slipped her collar. Although she was wearing a Martingale collar, it was not properly fitted and she was able to escape.

Fortunately, Bella did not travel far from her new home and was spotted close to the property. Matt wanted to get to her before she moved on, so he quickly placed feeding stations nearby. Though the food was frozen by the time she found it, Bella was hungry and cleaned it up.

The next day, Matt set up a large enclosure called a Missy Trap and placed food inside. The following morning, Bella walked into the trap and triggered the door to shut. She was soon reunited with her new family!

Bella waits inside the Missy Trap to be reunited with her new family.

Bella at home about a month after she was safely trapped. You can tell she was becoming more comfortable in her new home!

Be a part of bringing a lost dog home.

Stella

Stella out for a walk with her new family shortly after being adopted.

A few days after being adopted, Stella was still nervous in her new surroundings. Scared and looking for an escape, she seized the opportunity to slip past her new parents and dash through an open door. It happened in an instant and she was gone before anyone could react.

Two sightings placed her in nearby woods, making it clear that Stella had picked up the railroad tracks next to her new home and followed them across a bridge to this location. Matt tracked Stella’s movements and found an unsettling discovery: her footprints near the bank of a fast-moving river.

Continuing to scope out the area, Matt suddenly came face to face with Stella! Not wanting to scare her any more than she already was and cause her to run farther away, Matt immediately got low to the ground and moved out of the area. After retreating far enough, Matt quickly set up a trap and placed food inside. He then left and waited, watching the trap through the feed from a trail camera. In just an hour, Stella found the trap. Ten minutes later, she was safely inside and ready to get out of the cold! Matt quickly returned. Stella was then reunited with her very relieved new family.

Stella’s footprint along the railroad tracks she followed after escaping from her new home.

Stella waits patiently in the trap as Matt makes his way there.

Trucker

A sighting of Trucker in the area where he was dumped.

Matt named this guy Trucker because he spent a lot of his time near a road used as a truck route. Trucker was dumped, alone, and in danger. Matt got to work.

True to his name, Trucker kept moving, eventually finding his way to the backyard of someone Matt happened to know! After several days of scoping out the area, learning Trucker’s routine, and leaving food and water for him, Matt found the right location for the trap. Trucker was rescued one day later, on a happy Monday morning.

Matt transported Trucker to the CNY SPCA, where they began calling him Angel Baby because of his endearingly sweet and gentle personality. About two months later, Tucker/Angel Baby was featured as syracuse.com’s Pet of the Week. He was adopted by a wonderful family several weeks later and now has canine cousins to play with!

Trucker approaches the trap, ready to be rescued.

Trucker/Angel Baby at the CNY SPCA waiting for his new family.

Trucker/Angel Baby poses for his portrait as syracuse.com’s Pet of the Week.

Saffron

Saffron rides in the backseat of Matt’s truck after her rescue.

Saffron bolted before even setting foot into her new home. She was newly adopted and nervous of her new surroundings. Her new owner did not have a secure grip on the leash as Saffron was walked from car to house. Saffron became frightened and bolted, ripping the leash from her new owner’s hand.

Cattle dogs are notoriously difficult to trap and Saffron was no exception. After hundreds of flyers were hung, a sighting placed her in a large, hilly patch of woods not far away. Extremely fearful and too smart for her own good, Saffron’s behavior and patterns of movement were unpredictable and evasive. Matt tracked Saffron for two-and-a-half months, trying every technique in the book to safely trap her.

After hundreds of hours of dedicated effort, on the 76th day of her being lost and scared, Matt succeeded. Saffron’s new owner had decided that Saffron was not with the right family and it would be in her best interest to return to the rescue she was adopted from. Matt transported Saffron to the home she had been fostered at. Saffron had been at this home for months and was comfortable there. She easily settled back into her routine. About six months later, Saffron was adopted into her forever home!

Saffron looks directly at the camera as it takes a nighttime shot.

A rare daytime shot of Saffron. She came out almost exclusively at night.

Val

Val investigates the trap as she works up the courage to step inside. This shot was captured by a remote camera mounted on the trap.

This gal became known as Val because her journey began in Westvale. Sadly, Val had been dumped. In the five days following the first sighting of her, she traveled quite a distance as she moved from town to town. She was spotted about eight miles away in Camillus, then another two farther along in Warners, and then 10 more in Marcellus, where Matt was able to catch up with her.

The sightings suggested she was traveling mostly on roads. In a way, this was good because people were able to see her and report sightings. Of course, it was also very worrisome because she was in danger of being hit. Matt responded to a midday sighting and headed out to investigate. That evening, as he was preparing to circle the area in his truck, Val appeared in the rear view mirror!

She was traveling along the side of the road. Matt’s strategy was to drive to a spot ahead of her and set a trap in her path. Each time he slowed down, however, Val would become scared and retreat in the opposite direction. Matt knew she needed more distance and he pulled far enough ahead so that when he slowed down she was comfortable enough to keep moving. He set the trap along the roadside, placed food inside, and drove out of sight. Just then, traffic began to pick up. Fortunately, Val stayed out of the road, but it was another 30 minutes before traffic slowed and she made her way to the trap. After 10 minutes of investigating, Val worked up enough courage to enter the trap. She then triggered the door to close, safe at last!

Val was super sweet and ate right out of Matt’s hand when he came to get her. Matt had consulted with local dog control authorities and it was agreed that a local rescue would take care of Val. She was picked up at the trap location by The Home Stretch Dog Haven, who cared for her until she was adopted - after just one week! Val now lives a safe, happy life full of love.

Val relaxes in the trap after triggering the door to shut behind her.

Val sits with Matt while they wait for The Home Stretch Dog Haven to arrive.

Val enjoys some outside time as she is cared for by the The Home Stretch Dog Haven.

It was love at first sight for Val and her new parents!

Who disturbs my sleep? Val is now safe, happy, and queen of her family’s house.

Brass

The image of Brass taken from Ed’s security camera, which he posted on social media to report this sighting.

After escaping from his yard, Brass seemed to vanish, until two months later when he appeared on a home security camera about seven miles away. Brass was on the front porch helping himself to some cat food the homeowner Ed had left out for strays. Ed kindly reported the sighting by creating a post on social media. Brass’s parents saw the post and went to the location during the overnight hours that Brass had been caught on camera. However, Brass was in survival mode and would not make an appearance.

At this point, Matt was contacted for help. Brass would not enter the first trap Matt set up and instead tried his best to pull food out through the bars. The next night, Matt placed a larger trap with food inside, but did not set it. He wanted to give Brass some time to get used to the trap, a process known as conditioning. Brass was comfortable with the larger trap and walked in and out of it. The next night, Matt set the trap and Brass walked right in for his evening meal, triggering the door to close behind him.

Brass and his parents were joyfully reunited at the trap location and spent some time with Matt and Ed before heading home. Brass is safe and sound again, thanks to just one reported sighting!

Brass investigates the trap, which was initially left unset so that he could get used to it. He was comfortable enough to walk in and out of it on the first night it was placed.

Brass relaxes on good Samaritan Ed’s couch after being rescued.

Be a part of bringing a lost dog home.

Trey

A sighting of Trey as he takes a break from his travels.

Matt called this boy Trey because he was traveling on three legs. Trey was a stray that had been clipped by a car and had a dislocated hip. Remarkably, his injury didn’t stop him from covering at least 40 miles as he made his way across southwestern Oswego County.

Trey was first spotted in Volney and then a few days later in Granby, about eight miles away. Flyers were distributed in these areas and Matt received more than 20 sightings of Trey. It became clear that he was traveling on the roads and typically moving in an east-west direction. The objective became to catch up to him in one location and place a trap before he moved on. Trey was spotted in Martville, but as Matt was driving the area he got a call that Trey was about 10 miles north. Matt headed up there, but Trey was nowhere to be seen.

Trey had a pattern of returning to Granby and, sure enough, the next day Matt received a call that he was in Granby running along a road. Before Trey could skip town again, Matt grabbed his trapping supplies and headed over there. He quickly spotted Trey and attempted three times to set a trap in his path along the side of the road. This strategy often works when a dog is traveling along a road, but in this case, people were slowing down and following closely behind Trey, which made him too nervous to stop moving, so each time he went around the trap and kept right on going.

The fourth time Matt caught up with Trey, he was lying on the edge of a field. This was about five miles from the first trapping attempt on a much more remote stretch of road with very little traffic. Matt was able to pull his truck relatively close without scaring Trey, who watched as Matt unloaded the trap. Matt did not look at Trey, pretending to ignore him as he set the trap up and placed food inside. Matt then drove a distance down the road. The remote camera was not transmitting in this rural area, so Matt had to go low tech and use a pair of binoculars to monitor the trap. It didn’t take long for Trey to approach the trap and walk inside, triggering the door to close behind him.

Matt transported Trey to the shelter that had jurisdiction over the location in which Trey was trapped. Sadly, the shelter determined that Trey’s injury was severe enough that it would have limited his quality of life and decided euthanasia was in his best interest. We’re sorry we couldn’t do more to help you, Trey. You’ll always be remembered.

Trey investigates the trap before deciding to step inside. This shot was captured by a remote camera mounted on the trap.

Trey relaxes in the trap after Matt arrives.

Arthur

Arthur waits patiently for Matt to arrive.

Arthur slipped out of his house and decided to keep moving. After Arthur had been running around Syracuse University’s South Campus for four days, Matt was contacted with a request for help. Unfortunately, Arthur was one step ahead and left the campus before Matt got there. He was then spotted from one end of central NY to the other, traveling from South Campus to Eastwood, then Dewitt, Mattydale, Cicero, and finally back to Eastwood, where Matt was able to catch up with him.

When a dog is moving as quickly and covering as much distance as Arthur, the strategy is typically to get ahead of them and place a trap. When Matt got word that Arthur was sighted back in Eastwood, he knew this would be a good spot for a trap. Lost dogs usually establish a route that they like to travel, and Arthur had made Eastwood part of his. Matt set the trap and placed food inside.

While Matt was waiting to see if Arthur would return, commotion from sirens, lawn mowers, and people nearby caused so much noise that Matt thought Arthur would avoid the area. As he was scoping out a possible alternate trap location, Matt started getting notifications that the trail camera focused on the trap was picking up movement. It was Arthur, and he was walking into the trap!

After two weeks of running, Arthur settled right down after the trap door shut. He was then reunited with his family and had a very good night’s sleep!

Rocky (now Quincy)

A sighting of Rocky lost as a stray.

Matt named this little fellow Rocky because he was sighted on Split Rock Rd. He was a stray, wandering for at least a week before Matt was contacted with a request for help.

Matt placed a feeding station in the area where Rocky was spotted. Fortunately, Rocky was still around. He found the food, had his fill, and left. Matt then placed a trap at this location with food inside. The next day, Rocky returned to the spot every two hours to eat and investigate the trap. Matt set the trap in the early evening and Rocky cooperated beautifully, walking right in two hours later and triggering the door to shut.

Matt transported Rocky to the CNY SPCA, where he was later adopted and renamed Quincy. He is now loving life with his new family, including a canine brother!

 

Rocky enjoys a meal after walking into the trap and triggering the door to shut.

Rocky rides in the backseat of Matt’s truck after his rescue, ready for his new life to begin.

Rocky (now Quincy) out and about with his canine brother after being adopted from the CNY SPCA.

Romeo

Romeo rides in the car to his new home after being adopted.

Romeo had just been adopted and brought into his new home. He was nervous in these new surroundings and was startled by the sound of a screen door closing. Romeo was not secured in the house and before the door could be securely latched he seized the opportunity to escape, pushing the door open and taking off.

Romeo was spotted twice in the same area later that day. Matt set up a trap in the location but it appeared that Romeo had moved on. There was another location nearby that looked to Matt like someplace a lost dog might visit. He was right - a sighting of Romeo was reported in that spot the very next day. Fortunately, neighbors who saw Romeo running loose did not chase him and simply reported their sightings, letting Matt take it from there.

Matt relocated the trap and placed food inside. He also laid down a heavy trail of a special scent mixture that is used to draw a dog to a specific spot. Matt then waited nearby, monitoring the trap through the feed from a remote camera. Romeo found the trap in the late evening and made short work of stepping inside and triggering it to close. A few minutes later, Romeo was back in the arms of his very relieved new parents!

 

Romeo finds the trap.

Romeo considers stepping inside.

Romeo walks into the trap.

Romeo is safely trapped.

Blue Lady

Blue Lady walks along the railroad tracks she followed after slipping her harness and becoming lost.

Just a few days after arriving at her foster home, Blue Lady’s foster mom took her out in the yard for some outside time in the evening. She was wearing a Martingale collar, but it was dark and her leash was accidentally attached to her harness and not connected to the collar. She slipped her harness and ran out of the unfenced yard.

Nearby railroad tracks caught Matt’s eye as a route that Blue Lady would likely follow. He set up four feeding stations along and nearby the tracks. That evening, Blue Lady found one of the stations and visited four times throughout the night and once more the next day. This was clearly the right spot for the trap. Matt set up the trap later that day, expecting Blue Lady to return in the evening. She had other plans and decided not to make an appearance until 6:30 the next morning. But good things come to those who wait - Blue Lady was safely in the trap within a few minutes.

Blue Lady was being fostered through ABC Basset Hound Rescue after being saved from a puppy mill. Unbeknownst to anyone, she was pregnant at the time Matt trapped her. She soon gave birth to 10 beautiful puppies! She was later adopted and is now in a safe and loving home.

Blue Lady finds the trap and investigates.

Blue Lady looks into the trap as she considers stepping inside to get the food.

Blue Lady is safely trapped and waits for Matt to arrive.

After being safely trapped and reunited with her foster family, a pregnant Blue Lady relaxes on the porch.

Blue Lady poses with her new mom on adoption day.

Be a part of bringing a lost dog home.

Scottie (now Skeeter)

Scottie walks under the drop trap.

This boy became known as Scottie because he was rescued in the Scottholm neighborhood of Syracuse. Matt became aware of Scottie when someone from the neighborhood reported that she had been feeding him daily for eight months. Scottie came each night to eat the food she left in her backyard and then retreated to the nearby woods to spend his days. There were no other reported sightings of Scottie, even though there were hundreds of houses in the vicinity.

It is not a bad idea to feed a stray dog because it gets the dog coming back to the same spot repeatedly, which is what a rescuer needs in order to trap them. However, it is crucial to report a sighting of the dog after seeing them for the first time so that they can be rescued and taken out of harm’s way as soon as possible.

To rescue Scottie, Matt used a drop trap, which rests on the ground on one end and is raised on the other. When a dog walks underneath the trap into the right spot, the trap is triggered to drop, safely capturing the dog. Drop traps are typically used when a dog is too scared to enter other kinds of traps.

Scottie was rescued on a cold winter night. Matt transported him to the Syracuse city shelter, where he was later adopted and renamed Skeeter. Skeeter is now safe and loving life with his family!

Scottie sits with Matt after being safely trapped.

Scottie (now Skeeter) in his new home after being adopted. Is it time for dinner yet?

Chieftess

Chieftess takes one last look at her life as a lost dog before entering the trap and leaving it behind.

Chieftess was first spotted near the old firebarn in Syracuse. Sadly, she had been dumped. She roamed the city streets for two months before someone reported that she was living under an abandoned warehouse on the south side. Chieftess had found one heck of a hiding spot - it was only accessible by following the bank of Onondaga Creek.

Matt worked with Sarah, a volunteer with Cuse Pit Crew, to rescue Chieftess. Sarah set up a feeding station, which Chieftess found and then began returning to for meals. Early on a Sunday morning, after Chieftess had left the warehouse, Matt and Sarah set up a large enclosure called a Missy Trap at the spot she had been staying. In less than an hour, Chieftess returned. She walked into the trap with little hesitation and, after triggering the door to close, settled in and waited for her new life to begin.

Barb from Syracuse dog control and Tara, the Syracuse cruelty officer at the time, met Matt at the trapping location and Chieftess was transported to the city shelter. Before long, she was adopted and is now a beloved member of her family.

A sighting of Chieftess next to the old firebarn in Syracuse, where she was first spotted after being dumped.

A sighting of Chieftess on a Syracuse city street.

Chieftess sits in the sun at the edge of the abandoned warehouse she was living underneath.

Chieftess cleans up the food inside the Missy Trap after triggering the door to close.

Chieftess settles in and waits for her new life to begin.

Chieftess meets Barb from Syracuse dog control.

Chieftess enjoys a head massage from Barb after her rescue.

Chieftess at the Syracuse city shelter. She was adopted after just a short stay.

Blanco

Blanco

Blanco was being cared for by a local rescue. He was out for a walk with a volunteer, who slipped on some ice and dropped the leash. Blanco immediately took off.

Matt tracked Blanco for two weeks before catching up to him. Blanco cooperated perfectly with his rescue, walking right into a large enclosure called a Missy Trap. After the door closed and he was safely trapped, Blanco sat and patiently waited for Matt to arrive.

Sadly, Blanco passed away about a week after he was trapped. Although he was rushed to the vet when he began showing symptoms of illness, they could not save him. It seems that while he was lost he ate something toxic, most likely rat poison.

When a lost dog is found, it is important to take them to the vet as soon as possible for bloodwork to make sure they are healthy. As in Blanco’s case, they may appear healthy but could be very sick. When a dog ingests rat poison, if it is caught early enough, measures can usually be taken to treat the dog and give them a good chance of survival.

After being safely trapped, Blanco patiently waits for Matt to arrive.

Blanco meets Matt and considers taking a treat from him.

Balti

After being safely trapped, Balti looks directly at the camera as he waits for Matt to arrive.

Balti broke out of his fenced yard and began traveling. Two days later, he was spotted a couple of miles away at the inner harbor section of Syracuse. Unfortunately, people in this area chased him around trying to catch him, the worst thing you can do when you see a loose dog.

The relentless chasing caused Balti to leave the inner harbor area and keep moving. The worst was feared as severe winter weather set in. Against all odds, little Balti survived bitter single-digit temperatures, chilling winds, and a snowstorm.

A sighting was reported four days after Balti left the inner harbor. He was traveling a path along a creek. Matt was able to get to the location and set up a trap within an hour of the sighting. That night, after temperatures had dipped to 11 degrees, Balti appeared at the trap. It took little time for him to become comfortable enough to enter the trap and trigger the door to close. Matt quickly made his way there to get Balti out of the freezing cold. Balti was then reunited with his family, who were overjoyed to have their little boy back home.

After his rescue on an 11-degree night, Balti thaws out in Matt’s truck.

Balti looks forward to the reunion with his family.

Jake

A sighting of Jake during his travels as a lost dog.

Jake was the first stray dog that Matt rescued. He was initially seen in West Monroe on Toad Harbor Rd, at the edge of the Three Mile Bay Wildlife Management Area. Sadly, Jake had been dumped at this very secluded location. As lost dogs do, Jake established a pattern of behavior. His routine was to travel back and forth along a 10-mile stretch of trail between West Monroe and Cleveland. Along this route, he often stopped for a day or two in certain locations to search for food. He also enjoyed jumping into people’s backyards to play with dogs he met along the way.

About two weeks after Jake was first spotted, Matt was requested to help. He was able to pinpoint one location that Jake repeatedly visited. Matt attempted to get Jake eating at a specific spot near this location by leaving special scent trails to feeding stations. This is a common technique in lost dog tracking that works for most dogs - they simply follow the scent until they find the food. Jake, however, was not interested in the scent and just kept on with his routine.

Jake approaches the closed door of the Missy Trap. After seeing the trap with the door closed, he would not go near it.

Matt knew Jake was the kind of dog that needed to have food and a trap placed directly in front of him on the path he normally travels. Matt first tried a large enclosure called a Missy Trap. Unfortunately, before Jake got to the trap, the door somehow closed. It is not good for a lost dog to see a closed trap. If they are smart enough, which Jake was, they can understand that they could become stuck inside the trap. After Jake saw the trap with the door closed, he never went near it again.

To capture Jake, Matt built a drop trap, which rests on the ground on one end and is raised on the other. When a dog walks underneath the trap into the right spot, the trap is triggered to drop, safely capturing the dog. Drop traps are typically used when a dog won’t enter other kinds of traps. Matt placed the drop trap in Jake’s path with food underneath. Jake did not have a problem with this trap and walked right under it to eat the food. The trap was left unset at first to get Jake used to eating calmly in the spot he would need to be to trigger the trap to drop. After five days, he was ready to be trapped. The food was placed as usual and the trap was set. It took three visits, but Jake finally moved into the exact spot to trigger it to fall. The trap dropped and Jake was captured - safe at last!

After no owner came forward to claim him, Jake was fostered by Matt’s family. It proved difficult to find the right home for Jake and in the end Matt realized he was already there. Matt’s family adopted Jake into his forever home several months after his rescue. Jake enjoys spending time with his canine siblings, cuddling with his humans, and sleeping on the back of the couch.

Jake walks under the drop trap for a meal.

A close-up shot of Jake eating under the drop trap.

Jake inside the drop trap after triggering it to fall.

Jake looks directly at the camera after being safely trapped.

 

Jake and Ginger share the couch for an evening nap.

Be a part of bringing a lost dog home.