Lost and found - a dear friend and companion

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Hillwalker

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After spending last Friday hiking a loop from the Caribou Pond Road S on the AT to Sugarloaf, Spaulding, and continuing to the Abraham Side Trail where.
I turned right (West) and looped around, descending to the CPR and out. With one mis-direction, 16 miles.

Yesterday, Wednesday Aug 29th I decided to return to the CPR and this time hike the Crockers and maybe try the path down to Redington with a walk out via logging roads and the CPR. Just before leaving the house ny old Yellow Lab gave me one of his "me too" looks. Considering that he did well on last Monday's Abraham from Rapid Stream road I consented.

We made quick time to the Crocker Cirque, who doesn't? Then the steeps began with two nice talus fields to traverse. Arriving at South Crocker's summit we took a snack break and made a brief foray out on the herd path to Redington. Looked very well trod, maybe we would give it a try.

We left SC and headed to North Crocker arriving pretty quickly. Emerson (my dog) was off leash for the entire hike so far. He would get ahead a bit, then stop to make sure I was coming, then proceed. At the summit of NC we met a couple of interesting people and chatted a bit.

Now I need to explain that Emerson is not a pure bred Lab. He is half tracking hound from Tennesse, a senior rescue. We're both seniors I just haven't been rescued yet. His only claim to fame is a hike with MEB last winter. But I digress.

Over the few months I have owned him I have discovered that he seems to be able to follow my spoor (scent?) for several days after I do a bushwhack without him.

When we headed back from N to S Crocker, he started out ahead and stayed that way. On top of SC he was gone. I passed two hikers who said that he had hooked up with some thru-hikers and was moving fast down the mountain.

At CPR, his big paw prints were found across the river in a mud hole. It was now around 3 PM and I was not about to climb up that ridge to Sugarloaf again.

As luck would have it I met up with a woman who was waiting for her son at the CPR crossing. She got on her cell phone and, sure enough he had passed the hikers with my big Yellow dog on the other side of Spaulding, heading for the shelter. He said that the thru-hiker was concerned that it was getting late and no owner was to be found. He was going to take the dog to the shelter and see if some NOBO hikers whould take him back to CPR with them in the morning.

At that point I decided to go home (1 hour) and return before daylight with my mountainbike and pedal into the CPR junction, leave the bike and bushwhack to the shelter using directions from this site.

At 5:30 AM I was peddling my way up CPR. At 7:15 AM I was at the Spaulding shelter, and yikes, no dog. Two southbounders told me that the hikers with my dog decided to start hiking that evening and camp on the trail and not stay at the shelter since there were no Northbounders there.

I immediately got my 72 year old body into motion and headed north over Spaulding, past sugarloaf and heading to CPR. Old Em's Paw prints were visible in almost every mud hole. Every hiker I passed asked me if I was the guy with the lost dog. That felt good even though I was a whole night behind them.

Well, I made up considerable time, and caught up with my dog and the thru-hiking trail Angel right in the middle of the Cabibou Pond Road and 10:30 AM I arrived 22 minutes behind them.

Right now Emerson is sleeping on the floor behind me.

It has occurred to me that since I had been up the AT SOBO three days before, he might have been following my scent as an added incentive to hike with strangers.

Lesson learned: Keep him on the stupid leash.
 
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Yowsa, yowsa - I can feel your relief all the way over in Manchester!

Glad you found her. I'll bet old Em got some special treats when you got home.
 
Soooo glad you found him.:) I will never forget the day Lauky broke loose and took off after a couple with a dog who had left the trailhead an hour before us. Three and a half hours later I got him back on top of Mt. Madison. He had caught up with the couple and dog and they waited on top until I arrived.

I was traumatized. Now he is not only on a leash but the leash is attached to a belt I wear. There are some dogs who will never leave you ( i.e.my Duffy) and some who will.

I thought you were going to say that he was off looking for MEB. He is a guy after all. :D
 
I felt your fear and obsession to find him ASAP.
Happy that the two of you were reunited.
 
Glad to see the good outcome! Every SAR dog handler I've ever known has lost a dog at some point. One of my own took up with some competitors in an orienteering event once, and it took the better part of a day to locate him.
 
Glad for the happy ending and your dedication to your dog.
 
Thank goodness!

I just had an unusual "disappearance" with Emma on the Hancocks. Luckily it only lasted a few minutes, but I panicked as she had never done anything like it before. So glad your story ended well. I know the gut-wrenching feeling!

KDT
 
Post Script - serendipity

This morning I drove up to the Caribou Valley Road to walk in and recover my Mountain Bike which I left while bushwhacking to the Spaulding shelter while chasing my lost dog on Thursday. Recovered with no problems.

On my way back home I decided, just on a whim to drive home by way of Rangely. No short cut but just for the ride.

When turning onto Route 4 in Rangeley I saw three young thru-hikers trudging up the long - long hill out of town so I stopped to pick them up. Took them to the IGA to resupply and then on the the AT crossing on Rte 4.

During our ride I mentioned my missing, then recovered dog. They said, "Oh you mean Emerson"? I nearly went off the road. These three guys were the hikers that Emerson hooked up with going down South Crocker. They gave me a nearly step-by-step description of how he ended up hiking with them until they turned him over to another hiker going back north late Wednesday. This northbounder was the hiker who eventually "Cowboy Camped" with Emerson on Wednesday night and delivered him to me on Thursday around noon.

Not only are there Trail Angels who work to help out thru-hikers, but there are Trail Angels hiking the Appalachian Trail too.

Thanks guys; Riverdog, Indy, & Alex (Flipflopped Southbounders 2012)
 
An anxious time indeed. I am glad it worked out OK.
Our first dog Clio wasn't a wanderer but when she got old (14 or so) she'd just shuffle where her legs took her and often I would just follow and watch out for her, including jumping in the pond to keep her from going under.
Genie was an independent soul and gave us a scare or two, including a 10-hour disappearance.
Leo would follow friendly strangers when he was a pup, especially if they had a dog. He stays nearby now, although the squirrel-chipmunk forays are getting a bit longer but he usually stays within earshot.
 
Glad for a happy ending to this story.

As a dog person, I so know how they can make you laugh, make you cry, make you crazy with worry, and heal it all up with a lick and a promise and a tail wag.

If only Emerson could post !

Breeze
 
I just had an unusual "disappearance" with Emma on the Hancocks. Luckily it only lasted a few minutes, but I panicked as she had never done anything like it before. So glad your story ended well. I know the gut-wrenching feeling!

KDT

That is a most gut wrenching feeling.

I met Emma, via Kevin and Judy, at STP. Emma is a very big dog in a very small package. I'll just bet she continues to surprise her mom and dad.

As squishable as she looks, and as delicate as her public demeanor, EMMA is ALL dog.

Breeze
 
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