Dog rescued after 13 days stuck in culvert - Action News
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Dog rescued after 13 days stuck in culvert

A dog named Koda survived 13 days trapped in a culvert, with only ditch water to keep her alive.

Check culverts for missing pets advises the Lac La Biche Regional Humane Society

A dog named Koda survived 13 days trapped in a culvert, with only ditch water to keep her alive.

GeriSkjersvenwas working in her garden Sunday at her homenear Lac LaBiche,Alta.,when she heard whimpering.

"Something told me you better go look, because this doesn't soundright," Skjersven said. "It's not the right whine or cry of a normal dog. It was ahurting cry."

She thought the sound was coming from behind the neighbour'shouse across the road, so shegot a flashlight and returned to theculvert.

"I knelt down under there and I looked, and I saw two little eyeslooking at me. And she was stuck there ... she was squished inthere."

Skjersvenand her husband, Ivan, own a company that does waterand sewer work. They got their backhoe, called thegas company to mark the gas line and used the bucket to skim awaythe dirt.

'She looked pretty pathetic'

They recognizedKoda, an eight-year-old part German shepherd,soSkjersvenwent to fetch the owner. Theythen all worked with hand shovels to remove part of theculvert.

"She was in rough shape, shedding, skinny as ever, not a bark orwhine," Skjersven said of the dog. "She looked pretty pathetic, very thin."

They wrapped the muddydog in blankets and offered the animal food.

The rescue has promptedthe local humane society to warnpet owners about this previously overlooked hazard.

"As part of searching for a missing pet look in the area culverts," said M.J. Siebold, chair of the Lac La Biche Regional Humane Society.

In the country, dogs and cats chase mice, porcupines or rabbits and could easily be ledinto a culvert, she said.

The dog had gone missing from her owners' property on June 20, Siebold said,and likely would have died had there not been water in the culvert.

"It was dirty water, but the fact that she was able to keep herself somewhat hydrated I think is what saved her," she said. "To be trapped for 13 days with no water, I don't think an old girl like her would have made it."

Siebold said the rescue was "kind of like fate," given that the people who found Kodahad the equipment and the know- how to rescue her.

Koda is now under the care of a veterinarian in Lac La Biche, about 200 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.

"I'm glad it turned out well," Skjerseven said. "We were kindof worried it wasn't going to, but she's doing fine.It's amazing."

With files from The Canadian Press