• September 16, 2022
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A miracle: Midland resident's six-pound Chihuahua returns after missing for nearly a month – Midland Daily News

A miracle: Midland resident's six-pound Chihuahua returns after missing for nearly a month – Midland Daily News

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Midland resident Dawn Hartley poses with her four-year-old pet Chihuahua, Buddy, on Sept. 14, 2022 in her Midland home. Buddy recently went missing for three weeks before being found in an old car.
Midland resident Dawn Hartley poses with her four-year-old pet Chihuahua, Buddy, on Sept. 14, 2022 in her Midland home. Buddy recently went missing for three weeks before being found in an old car.
Midland resident Dawn Hartley poses with her four-year-old pet Chihuahua, Buddy, on Sept. 14, 2022 in her Midland home. Buddy recently went missing for three weeks before being found in an old car.
Midland resident Dawn Hartley poses with her four-year-old pet Chihuahua, Buddy, on Sept. 14, 2022 in her Midland home. Buddy recently went missing for three weeks before being found in an old car.
Midland resident Dawn Hartley poses with her four-year-old pet Chihuahua, Buddy, on Sept. 14, 2022 in her Midland home. Buddy recently went missing for three weeks before being found in an old car.
Midland resident Dawn Hartley poses with her four-year-old pet Chihuahua, Buddy, on Sept. 14, 2022 in her Midland home. Buddy recently went missing for three weeks before being found in an old car.
Dawn Hartley had resigned herself to the inevitable. It was time to stop looking for her Buddy.
After three weeks of Facebook posts, contacting neighbors – and hoping – she accepted the reality that her canine best friend was not ever coming home.
Then, miraculously, the next day, she received the call she had been waiting for.
A Midland County Pit Stop animal rescuer found Buddy, Hartley’s 4-year-old pet Chihuahua, inside an abandoned car near her house.
Against all odds, and after almost a month on the run, the six-pound Chihuahua had been found. The wayward furball came back to Hartley three pounds lighter, but the bond between the two is stronger than ever since their reunion.
“We were really close (even before he got lost),” Hartley said. “He is like my second skin.”
Hartley adopted Buddy about three years ago as a 1-year-old rescue. Before going missing, he was a scared dog and shy around everyone aside from her.
While Buddy can be a wanderer, Hartley said he typically stays close to her.
One day, in the second week of August, Hartley went outside and through her backyard gate. An hour later, she noticed Buddy was nowhere to be found and assumed he had followed her out of the gate.
This realization was shortly followed by neighbors telling her they had spotted Buddy out on his own. Further sightings reported that he was seen crossing Lyon and Patrick roads. The tiny, fuzzy phantom apparently roamed the grounds of Dow and made his way to the Tittabawassee River, near Dow Diamond and the I-Park, an area that contains industrial operations of companies like Dow and DuPont.
I-Park workers occasionally spotted the dark-haired Chihuahua, but they were never able to catch up with him. Both Hartley and Gwen Drake, founder of the animal rescue group Midland County Pit Stop, said they were in contact with security and workers in the I-Park during the search.
“They were watching for him, but they could never find him,” Hartley said. “(Buddy) was very evasive.”
Rachel Miner, DuPont production leader of APT in Midland, said when workers saw a post about Buddy in the AskMidland Facebook group, they put up missing pictures of Buddy on her building’s bulletin board, due to the close vicinity of where the dog had been spotted.
“Not long after they did that, we saw him run by the building,” Miner said. “Everyone was like, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s Buddy!’”
It is rare for stray animals and lost pets to wander into the I-Park, which is why workers were surprised to see him running around there. One of Miner’s engineers put out food and a dog’s bed to lure him in so they could catch him. Miner added that there were seven or eight Buddy sightings around the building. However, he would always run away when workers approached him.
Both Hartley and Drake grew concerned about Buddy’s well-being and about the predators he might encounter. Coyotes, raptors and even raccoons could have targeted the tiny dog during his walkabout. Luckily, he only suffered bug bites while missing, Hartley said.
While these types of dogs may not be natural hunters, Drake said Buddy probably went into survival mode and may have tried hunting for food, though he may not have been successful. The food put out by DuPont workers might have helped Buddy survive in the wild.
“The resiliency (of Buddy) is amazing to me,” Drake said. “The fact that this dog was not hurt by an animal, hit by a car, (or) anything like that is huge.”
Buddy was actually not captured in the I-Park property. Two weeks ago, a resident spotted the severely dehydrated and malnourished Chihuahua inside an old car near R W Electric. A couple of people who were helping Hartley look for Buddy reached out to her with the news.
Drake was the one who delivered the news to Hartley – Buddy was back.
Once Buddy’s weakened body – he could not walk – was back in the arms of Hartley, she immediately went over to an animal clinic to get him some much needed water, food and rest. The dog was half his regular body weight when he was ultimately found.
In the two weeks since his return, Buddy has been eating regularly and has regained most of his weight. Even though he is still skittish, Hartley said Buddy seems overall calmer and more confident since his return.
If a pet goes missing, Drake suggests that the owner post photos and descriptions in Facebook groups such as Lost Pets in Midland, MI and contact local animal shelters. She also highly recommends pet owners microchip dogs and cats with up-to-date information so lost animals can be returned to owners sooner.  
Once a pet is found, Drake also said pet owners should test them for parasites, since they were likely eating dead animals and trash if they were missing for a long time. She also implores people who see pets wandering outside to help that animal in some way if possible.
“If you see a dog out, it should not be out,” Drake said. “(That is a) big part of the solution.
“Whether you can stop and help that dog or not, find some help (and) do something.”
Andrew Mullin is a reporter for the Midland Daily News.

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