HOST:
Search-and-rescue dogs
serve on the frontlines
locating people missing
after natural disasters,
lost children,
injured hikers and others,
being ready
at a moment’s notice to
bravely endure the elements
and save lives.
Supreme Master Ching Hai,
world renowned
humanitarian, artist
and spiritual teacher,
speaks of her admiration
and concern
for these devoted canines.
SM:
And I saw many dogs,
you know, they used
for rescue mission.
Oh, they just walk in
like nothing, but
I feel so bad about them.
The dogs walk in
the sharp, broken glasses
or anything like that,
even chemical leaking
or anything, or germs
or danger.
SM:
And these are
precious dogs.
They have been trained
for years.
And they even
lay down their life
for anyone at command.
You have to
protect that dog.
HOST:
To show her loving
support for search dogs
and their human partners,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has generously
contributed over
US$80,000 to
search-and-rescue teams
in 18 countries, including
Australia, Belgium,
Canada, Chile, China,
the Czech Republic,
Ecuador, France,
South Korea, Malaysia,
Nepal, New Zealand,
Panama, the Philippines,
Slovenia,
the Netherlands,
the UK and the USA.
On today’s program
we’re delighted to feature
two of these brave teams,
one from Montana, USA
and the other
from Baoding City,
Hebei, China.
Chris Dover (f):
It is a labor of love
and I’ve worked
with search dogs
for 20-something years
and I’m still fascinated
when I watch them work.
And I just like to sit back
and watch the dog do
what they do best,
and they certainly love
what they’re doing.
It’s inspiring
to see just how much
they get focused on
just finding that person
that’s out there.
HOST:
Absaroka Search Dogs is
an all-volunteer
search-and-rescue team
dedicated to finding
lost or missing persons.
Chris Dover (f):
We’ve been in operation
since 1987, so I think
that’s close to 25 years
and we used to cover
the entire state
of Montana (USA).
We were the first
search-dog organization
in Montana,
and we’ve since
branched out and formed
smaller organizations
around the state
that cover smaller areas.
But we pretty much cover
about the eastern
two-thirds of the state now.
HOST:
Human team members
are professionally trained
and well-equipped
for search-and-rescue
operations.
Most of them
have learned wilderness
emergency medicine,
while all have advanced
first aid certification
and can provide
immediate life support
to injured victims.
Currently the group has
four working search teams.
Crystal Arnold (f):
We generally can be loaded
and in the car
within a half an hour.
We keep all of our gear
according to
what type of search,
whether we're going
into the mountains,
whether we're going out
into fields, or if
we're dealing with snow.
HOST:
The canine members
of Absaroka Search Dogs
are trained in trailing
and air scenting.
They have experience
in conducting drowning,
avalanche and
human-remains searches.
Chris Dover (f):
There’s
trailing certification,
which is following where
people have walked,
the scent that they leave
on the ground and the scent
that comes off their body
and gets caught
along the pathway.
There’s
area search certification,
which is searching for
the airborne scent that’s
blowing off the subject.
We also have certifications
in water search,
cadaver search,
and avalanche search.
There’s
national certification
in collapsed-structure
search which we have not
done very much of
because we don’t have
a training facility for that.
There’s evidence search.
But primarily
our dogs become certified
in trailing or area search
or both.
Then once they start,
they will go on
and specialize in water,
which we get
a lot of drownings
in water searches,
cadaver search
and avalanche search.
HOST:
Let’s meet Lila,
a six-year-old
Belgian Tervuren, who
specializes in air scenting
as well as water
and cadaver searches.
Crystal Arnold (f):
Lila specializes in air scent.
So she works into the wind
and she will look for
any human scent as well
as being scent specific.
So we can give her the scent
of one specific person
and she'll find them.
She also does
water searching
and cadaver (searching).
Crystal Arnold (f):
Last year we seemed
to focus primarily
on rivers and drownings.
So we did quite a bit of
river work, and the dogs
can work from a boat or
they can work from shore.
Again, we try
to work into the wind.
River work is probably
the hardest thing to do
because you're working
towards the scent
and you just kind of watch
the dog's body language
and then once
you've gone past the scent
where the person may be,
they'll lose interest.
So you have to try
and pinpoint
and figure out where
that lack of interest is.
And then you can go back
and zero in and then
we call in divers.
And it's a different resource
that we bring in.
HOST:
Our Association
members presented
Absaroka Search Dogs
with US$1,000 from
Supreme Master Ching Hai
to purchase protective
gear for the adorable,
selfless canine heroes.
Chris Dover (f):
Well, thank you very much.
This will go a long ways
towards keeping
our dogs safe.
And this is just fantastic,
and this is what allows
our dog unit to stay
at the top of the game.
I thank you very much.
HOST:
Later Mark Polakoff,
vice president
of Absaroka Search Dogs
sent a kind letter to
Supreme Master
Ching Hai,
the following of which
is an excerpt.
VOICE1:
On behalf of the members
of Absaroka Search Dogs,
I would like to express
our appreciation
for the generous donation
that your Association is
making to our organization.
Your donation
will assist us
in equipping our teams
with important items
for assuring the safety
of our canine partners.
The donation
will be used to purchase
canine flotation devices
for each of the dogs.
We will also be
purchasing veterinary
first aid supplies including
special dressings
that stop active bleeding
from wounds,
and booties designed
to fit over bulky dressings.
We will be purchasing
fleece coats for the dogs,
which we use in
the extreme temperatures
of our Montana winters.
Again, thank you for
your generous donation
to Absaroka Search dogs.
HOST:
We’ll next visit
the Baoding
Search and Rescue Dog
Training Center based
in Baoding, a city located
in China’s Hebei Province.
Wang (f):
We are a civil organization.
It means
that we take care of
all the training expenses
and give
all these training classes
by ourselves.
There are not many
rescue dogs in China.
We hope
that through our efforts,
more people will join in.
Now, We provide our services
free of charge
to those who need help.
For example,
last time in Beijing,
an old man got lost
at the Great Wall.
We just went there,
and we didn’t ask
for any payment.
We just want to
raise people’s awareness
of these kind of activities,
and let more people know
the value of rescue dogs.
We hope that more people
will support us.
Zou YI (m):
Rescue dogs
play an important role
in rescue missions.
They can shorten
the rescue time,
and find the exact location
of the victims.
HOST:
What types of dogs
are suitable
to take on the work
of search and rescue?
Interviewee (m):
The Belgian Shepherd
that we just took out
is the most common
dog breed used for
search and rescue
around the world nowadays,
even more common
than German Shepherds.
They get especially excited
when they are working.
Normally that kind of dog
needs to be trained
from a young age.
They are very loyal
to their caregivers
and like to have
one-on-one relationship
with the caregiver.
So the trainer should
spend time to establish
a good relationship
with them, in order to
strengthen their loyalty.
Interviewee (m):
To train dogs
for various purposes,
including
search-and-rescue,
we need to first pick those
that have
a real leader potential.
So in hundreds of dogs,
we perhaps
can only find one
that is suitable
for search-and-rescue
missions.
HOST:
Let’s join a training session
with the four-month-old
Princess!
SMTV:
Is she looking for you via
your voice or your smell?
Interviewee (m):
She is looking for me
via my feeble voice now.
Later, when she grows up,
she will learn to
look for me via the smell.
She will know
how to find someone via
the smell of their footsteps.
Princess. Okay. Princess.
SMTV(m):
Now I am going
to conduct a simulated
search training.
I will hide this bottle
somewhere
and let the dog find it
by following my smell.
This is to train him
in searching
for missing persons.
Wang (f):
Peter tracked the bottle
by following the smell
of the footsteps.
HOST:
During real-life
rescue missions,
brave, responsible
search-and-rescue dogs
risk their lives plunging
through ruins and debris
to look for survivors.
Interviewee (m):
Peter was the dog
who went with us to
the Great Wall last time.
During the rescue mission,
he was injured on the foot
by a caltrop.
His foot was pierced
by the caltrop’s spikes.
Actually, such injury cases
occur even more
during earthquake
rescue missions, because
after an earthquake,
there will be debris,
such as sharp broken
steel bars or broken glass.
Under that kind of
circumstances, rescue dogs
get hurt very easily.
We have bought shoes
for Peter.
Next time
when we encounter
similar situations,
we will put shoes on him
to effectively protect his feet
from being pierced.
Then he will be safer
in his rescue missions.
I think we should train
rescue dogs to wear shoes
when they are young.
Then he will get used to it.
It will be helpful
when they grow up and
carry out rescue missions.
HOST:
To prevent injuries
to the eager canines during
their benevolent work,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
contributed US$1,000
to the Center to purchase
safety equipment for them.
The Center
bought dog booties
with the funds.
As a token of thanks
to the Center
for its honorable work
of serving humanity
in times of need,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
also provided
the members
with some gifts
including her #1
international bestsellers
“The Dogs in My Life”
and “The Noble Wilds.”
Interviewee (m):
In the future, we will
let the dogs wear shoes
while carrying out
rescue missions
so that the dogs
can be better protected
and their missions
can be accomplished
more smoothly.
We will also
promote this idea and
tell other rescue teams
to put shoes on dogs
during their missions.
We will let more people
know about it.
For these two books,
we will read them carefully.
Thank you,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
and your organization.
Thank you!
HOST:
Absaroka Search Dogs
and Baoding
Search and Rescue Dog
Training Center,
may Heaven always bless
and protect
all your members
and we thank you for
compassionately dedicating
your time and energy
to safeguarding the lives
of others.
We wish you great success
in your future
noble endeavors.
For more details on
Absaroka Search Dogs,
please visit
www.AbsarokaSearchDogs.org
OUTRO:
Thank you for joining us
today on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
May humans and animals
forever live
in harmony and always
help one another.