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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsA dog was missing. Cavers found her two months later 500 feet underground.
Washington PostShe was skinny with matted fur and had curled up on a slab of cold rock, too weak to wag her tail or whimper.
Keene had seen fish, frogs and other small amphibians on his previous trips underground, but the last thing he expected to see was a dog. There was no telling how long she had been stuck down there.
We realized it would be hard to get her out because she was too weak to walk, said Keene, 59, who was on a spelunking trip in Perryville, Mo., on Saturday with a small group that included several children.


NH Ethylene
(31,395 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(156,968 posts)3catwoman3
(29,791 posts)...time, could she? Poor baby.
I wish we could see an after picture.
question everything
(52,388 posts)question everything
(52,388 posts)Before Keene went back into the cave with Haley, he showed the photo of the dog to residents who lived near the cave. One of them recognized her as Abby, a neighbors mixed-breed poodle who had gone missing June 9. Haley and Keene speculated she might have chased an animal into the cave or was perhaps swept inside during a flash flood.
Knowing that someone was looking for her gave them even more motivation to go back in and get her.
They walked and crawled for about 15 minutes until they reached Abby, but it took them more than an hour to carefully haul her through low and narrow tunnels to the surface in a padded duffel bag, Haley said. The exhausted poochs head poked out of the top.
The cave tunnel system is about 22 miles, one of the longest in Missouri, which is known as the Cave State with more than 7,300 recorded caves. Abby was quiet and relaxed as they moved her through the tight spaces, perhaps because she knew she was being rescued, Haley said. She was also extremely weak and emaciated from lack of food, he said. She did have water in the cave. If not for that, she wouldnt be here.
When the pair surfaced with Abby, her grateful owner, Jeff Bohnert, 55, rushed over to get her and gingerly bring her home. He said a neighbor had alerted him about the photo taken by Keene. He was flabbergasted to learn that his adventurous dog had been found 500 feet underground, two months after she went missing.
He and his wife, Kathy Bohnert, gently gave Abby a bath, and they made a large batch of chicken broth to feed to her in small amounts. It had been a long time since shed had food, so we gave the broth to her in tiny increments to get her stomach moving again, Bohnert said. Shes still pretty weak, but shes responding to the nutrients.
Abby is now able to take short walks on a leash, and she seems happy to be reunited with her pal Summer and the family cat, Fuzzy, he said.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=
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Abby is recovering from her ordeal nicely and has become more steady on her feet, said her owner, Jeff Bohnert, shown here with her four days after the rescue. (Kathy Bohnert)
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=
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Abby, center, enjoys a short walk with Summer and the family cat, Fuzzy, on Aug. 9 in Perryville. (Rachel Bohnert)
Rhiannon12866
(258,762 posts)Kudos to her rescuers!
question everything
(52,388 posts)
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