Oh Lassie! Missing Dog Found Stuck In A Tree
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
For days, the owner of a 7-year-old border collie thought her dog was gone for good.
But turns out, the missing pooch had not gone very far — he only went up.
On Sunday morning, “Laddy” was found stuck up in a tree two blocks from his Davenport, Iowa home, the Quad-City Times reported.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
"I asked where they found him, and the officer said, 'You'll never believe this,'" said his owner, Cynthia Weeks.
Ron Stevenson was working in the yard of his home when he heard a dog. He had previously heard the dog barking, but he didn't want to complain. But something was different this time.
- Town In Spain Mails Poop To ‘Crappy’ Dog Owners
- Dog Aims To Set Guinness World Record Riding Scooter
- Brazil’s Carnival is Going to the Dogs
- Chinese crested-Chihuahua mix deemed ‘ugliest dog’
- From Shih Tzus to Schnauzers, Dogs Meet in Cuba
- Dog Sled Sport Finds Warm Weather Fans
- See The World’s Ugliest Dogs
"I heard a whining, and I knew something wasn't right. This time, it sounded in distress," Stevenson said.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
He followed the sound along his driveway and, counter-intuitively, looked up. There was the dog, at least 10 feet up in the tree.
"He was kind of shielded by leaves on the tree," Stevenson said of the dog, who he thinks maybe ran up the oak tree's gradually sloping trunk but then became too scared to run back down.
Stevenson told the newspaper that he called police and accepted one dispatcher's skepticism.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
"They got here pretty fast, but I was getting impatient," he said. "I didn't know if the dog would bite me, but I just sort of shimmied up the tree. I grabbed him by the collar and sort of pulled him. I said, 'It's time for you to get out of this tree.'"
A responding police officer had seen fliers about Laddy and knew where the dog lived. The dog reunited with his owner a short time later.
Weeks said she believes Laddy escaped Friday from an invisible electronic fencing system thanks to a non-working battery in his collar. She said his love for squirrels and chasing things probably led him up the tree. Despite a few abrasions on the pads of his feet, he's otherwise fine.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
"He was pretty subdued when he got home," she said. "He's been doing a ton of sleeping."
Based on reporting by The Associated Press.
Follow us on twitter.com/foxnewslatino
Like us at facebook.com/foxnewslatino