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FINDING
YOUR LOST GREYHOUND "Finding
Your Lost Greyhound" written by Michael McCann, Boston, MA Okay, you've lost him. He slipped his collar, or ran out of the open gate. He was spooked by lightning and jumped the back fence. You dropped the leash, or you let him run off lead, he saw a squirrel and suddenly he was gone. It all doesn't really matter now. What matters is the steps you have to take to get him back. He's out there and he's depending on you to find him. He's lost and can’t find his way home. It's been a couple of hours now. You've scoured the neighborhood, and you are hoping to see him in every yard and around every corner. But, you are beginning to realize that you can’t find him. Here's what you have to do: Change your mindset: This is most important, and most difficult step. You have to stop checking every street and back yard yourself, and start recruiting an army to do it for you. Most greyhounds are found within a mile or two of where they were last seen, but a two mile radius is nearly 13 square miles, an impossible area to search adequately alone. You have to stop looking for your dog, and start looking for people. Everything that follows depends on it. With every hour that goes by, your chances of finding your dog, on your own, diminish. You now have to find someone who has seen your dog. You need a sighting and in order to get a sighting, you need help! Ask everyone you know, including your friends, co-workers, adoption group and son's Cub Scout pack to help you. Don't wait until tomorrow, do it now. Get the word out: Whether you have help or not, you've got to get the word out about your lost dog. You and your volunteers are going to search yes, but while you're searching, you're going to post flyers on every available telephone pole, in every super market, drug store, school, church, police stations, vets' office or any other public place surrounding the area. Ninety percent of lost dogs who are found, are found because someone saw a flyer. The flyers don't have to be fancy, but get them printed on the loudest, gaudiest paper available. "LOST GREYHOUND" in big letters, "If sighted please call (555) 555~5555", a silhouette of a running greyhound works great as an attention grabber. 500 of them is a good start, but you may need more. The area should be so saturated with flyers that you can't turn around without seeing one. Don't expand your search area until you've totally covered the area where he was last seen. * Knock on doors and talk to everyone
you see; the mail person, the UPS driver, the local landscaper. Any of
these people may see your dog, and if they do, now they won't just think
it's some dog on his way home, they'll know he's lost. Give everyone you
talk to a flyer. Tools you'll need and how to use them: Print some maps of your area to give to the volunteers. Make notations of areas that have been well posted. Set up grids and utilize them to cover all the locations in your search area. Send teams to each grid area get some heavy duty staple guns and use those for putting up your posters on telephone poles. If available, try to keep in touch with your teams with cell phones or walkie talkies so that when you get a sighting, you can have them go immediately to the sight. Make sure that there is always someone available at the phone number you posted. You don't want people calling, then hanging up because they got a message machine. Don't assume anything: Don't assume your dog has been picked up. It's the trap that everyone seems to fall into . "No sighting, someone must have picked up my dog". Greyhounds are notorious for disappearing in the woodwork. A person can walk right by a brindle greyhound laying in a pile of leaves and never even see him. .Some go for months or even years without being found, because people assume they have been picked up or are dead. Don't assume that the call you got about a dog five miles away is yours. Follow it up, yes, but when you start getting calls about dogs, ask questions: What color was the dog you saw? How big? Which way was it heading? Have you ever seen him before? You don't want to be running out of your search area just to find that someone called you about a beagle they saw running through the yard. These false leads are actually a positive sign, they mean your efforts are working; people are looking out for your dog. It’s just that they don't know the difference between a greyhound and a Jack Russell Terrier. Don't lose hope: A few days or weeks of searching can be discouraging. A lack of sightings or no word at all, can be tough on a positive attitude. Just remember, your hound is still out there, and someone has seen him. All you have to do is to find that person. It's only natural to start thinking the worst. But, as non-street savvy as greyhounds are, they are survivors. Keep looking. Don’t give up. Your grey is counting on you. |
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