Calgary family is in a panic:

Started by bosman, 2025-02-04 07:37

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After the dog unintentionally opened the rear gate, a Calgary family is in a panic: "I would do anything for her."
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Calgary family  panics after dog accidentally  left outside back  door: 'I would do anything for  him'
An Alberta family fears the worst for their dog after  he was accidentally  released from their northeast Calgary  yard by a utility  worker.
Joe Jesseau and Briana Jaroslawsky  - who live on Abberfield Way  - say their dog  wandered out of their yard around 9 a.m. Thursday and  hasn't returned home.
Jaroslawsky let  Bean, a seven-year-old Papillion  Australian Shepherd, out. At the same time, an Enmax employee went  out to check the  meter.
"I was making coffee,  I saw  him in the  yard and I heard a  knock on the front  window," Jaroslawsky  said. "It was the Enmax  guy." (I) opened the door and said,  "I left your dog  outside, I'm sorry," he said.
Jaroslawsky remembers grabbing  his jacket and hearing the Enmax employee  say, "I'll try  to keep an eye on  him," but he left  as soon as the dog was out of  sight.
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"I don't know how he could  have left without  help," he said. "When taking meter  readings, our meter readers follow protocols before entering  the yard to check for safety issues, including pets, and  they do their best to  make sure the gates are secure,"  an Enmax spokesperson said in an email to Global  News. Get the Edmonton  Daily News
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"We are saddened to  learn that the dog is still missing and  offer our  sincere apologies to the family and hope for the safe return of their  pet." In this  case, the dog ran out of the yard when the meter  operator opened the  door, and  the owner was immediately  notified. They then found  him on the  street and the meter reader  turned back because the dog  seemed nervous  around him. »
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Family says dog was last seen around 11 a.m. Thursday near 68th Street SE and 17th Avenue, before heading  toward Elliston  Park.
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Since Thursday, the couple  said they have been putting up posters,  leading search  parties and even  handing out business cards to anyone  they see on the street in an  effort to  recover their  dog.
They have spent hours in the dark searching streets and  parks, having barely slept in the past three days, they  said.
"She's my  daughter," Jesseau said, deeply moved. "I don't have  any children at home, so I treat my dog  the same way most parents  treat their  children." "I did something for her," he  added. With temperatures  remaining well below freezing, the couple  is worried that  the weather and the elements  may not be on  Bean's side.
Last year, the couple says  they had two other dogs  euthanized for health reasons and fear the worst for  Bean.
"It's a  huge blow." "I don't have  a dog anymore and it  hurts," Jaroslawsky said.

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