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.
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.
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.
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,
Korea, Malaysia,
Nepal, New Zealand,
Panama, the Philippines,
Slovenia,
the Netherlands,
the UK and the USA.
Today’s program features
one of these
courageous teams,
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia (SARDA).
Based in
Mornington Peninsula
in the state of Victoria,
Australia, SARDA is
an all- volunteer,
non-profit organization
that provides
professionally trained
search-and-rescue dogs
that work together with
human partners to locate
lost and missing persons.
The group’s services are
provided free of charge
to law enforcement
agencies.
On call 24-hours a day
and 365 days a year,
members are always ready
to provide assistance.
Julie Cowan is president
of the dedicated
organization.
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia (SARDA)
was started
about 15 years ago.
And we have teams in
Victoria, Queensland,
New South Wales
and Western Australia.
And we just train dogs
to save lives.
Depending on
their personality
and fitness level,
team member
Andrew Cowan says
certain types of dogs
will excel in
search-and-rescue missions
more than others.
Often we have to
evaluate the pups
in the litter to see,
there may only be
one or two pups out
of that complete litter
that’s suitable.
Now there are certain tests
that we do with the pups,
but basically what
we want to see is the pup
to be very inquisitive
and not frightened at all
of humans.
So these dogs really
are very friendly,
it doesn’t matter
who they are,
they’ll run up to them
and they just love people.
It’s very difficult,
the stats are worldwide
that probably one in 400
dogs will actually make it
to an operational status,
passed all the tests and that.
An enormous amount
of time is put
into diligent training in
various activities, situations
and search methods in
preparation for missions.
How long did it take you
to train your dog?
This is Will,
he’s only 18 months old.
He’s been training since
he was seven weeks old.
And he’s about
up to his Fundamental
Skills Assessment Level,
which is all the basic
search training, which
involves obedience,
agility, and
general searching area.
And then I think
probably in about six
to eight months
he’ll be ready for his
basic operational standard
where we’ll be able to
go on a search.
And how often do you
actually train the dogs?
I do something with them
every day,
something small, it’s
not necessarily a search
but it’s a bonding thing.
We officially train
every weekend.
And then we do go away
for camps and
do different exercises
away on camps.
It’s a huge commitment.
It takes probably around
about 5,000 hours
to train
an operational search dog.
So it’s a lot of hours
and a lot of commitment.
With their acute senses
and great agility,
the dogs are invaluable
in conducting timely
search-and rescue-missions,
and learn to work
under varied conditions,
such as in wilderness
or open country and
during urban disasters.
In wilderness searches,
the canines are asked
to locate individuals
such as hikers, climbers
and vulnerable people
such as children
and the elderly
who have gone missing.
In urban searches,
the teams are asked
to find victims
of human-caused
or natural disasters.
Our area search dogs
are refined dogs where
the dogs come back
to the handler
and let them know that
they’ve found someone,
then take the handler
back to them
in an area search.
But in rubble,
a disaster area,
they have to stay with it.
The standard for
urban search and rescue
says the dog must stay
with the victim.
A strong relationship
between the dog
and their human partner
is essential
to build a successful
search-and-rescue team.
We like to what we call
“imprint” the pups,
so virtually as soon as
the pups are born,
we’ll take over
an article of clothing
that we’ve worn,
and that’ll go in the litter
with all the pups
and then the pups would
be attuned to our smell.
It’s very important
to build the bond
between you and the dog.
I’ve had him
from seven weeks old.
He actually sleeps
in the bedroom with us,
so that they’re constantly
with us.
He goes to work with us.
Anywhere we go,
the dog goes.
So, you have to
expose them to all
different environments,
different surfaces,
steel ladders,
just put the dog into as
many different situations
you can
when they’re young
and then
nothing will faze them
when they get older.
When we return,
we’ll see one of
the more challenging
training exercises for
the canine members of
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
featuring
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia (SARDA),
a non-profit organization
that provides certified
search-and-rescue,
dog-and-human teams
to help law enforcement
agencies in various
Australian states find
lost and missing persons.
Currently,
the all-volunteer SARDA
has 28 members,
20 active dog teams
and 8 support members.
The people involved
come from
diverse backgrounds,
professions and skill areas,
an advantage
that greatly contributes
to the success
of the group’s activities.
Let’s now meet another
brilliant canine hero
and his human caregiver.
This is Kuno.
My husband and I
joined together; we’re
both really interested
in making a difference
and SARDA gave us
the opportunity to do that
with our dog as well, and,
yes, ultimately, hopefully,
save a life one day.
Kuno has been training
since he was
about nine weeks old.
He’s probably
about halfway through,
so he’ll probably need
another year of training
before he will be qualified,
I think.
We start with baby steps,
usually, break down
whatever task we’re trying
to get him to achieve
into really small bits.
And constantly reward him
when he makes
a little achievement
so that you don’t throw
the real big daunting task
at him all at once.
When we are doing
the agility (training),
we reward as we go, but
when we’re doing searches,
he gets his toy
when he finds the person
he is looking for.
According to their
training and experience,
search-and-rescue dogs
may be versed
in air-scenting
or trailing-and-tracking
or even both.
In air-scenting,
a dog points
her sensitive nose high
in the air
to locate human scent
in open areas.
The dog will eliminate
all the other people
that are around,
but he knows that there’s
someone else out there.
So you don’t need
to give them
an article of clothing.
Yes, this is Gus.
He’s a male Labrador
(Retriever);
he’s coming up just
nearly eight (years old).
He’s an air–scenting,
search-and-rescue dog.
So he’ll find
trapped victims,
live victims under rubble
or situations where
they’re lost in the bush.
In that situation,
he’ll locate them,
come back to us
and give us a bark alert,
and then take us
back to the victim.
They’ve got
a fairly incredible nose
for what they can do.
Let’s now join Gus
for a demonstration
of his air-scenting
search training!
I am in the tree.
And I’ve got
a search-and-rescue dog
about to rescue me.
Come on. See how we go.
Gus!
What you find?
Is he there?
There’s a good lad.
There’s a good lad.
Oh, ho, ho, yeah, yeah,
hee, hee, easy. Good boy.
Oh, ho, ho. Good boy.
Well, I’ve been found.
Whew, thank you,
thank you.
Compared to
other types of searches,
finding a person
high in a tree
is a much more
challenging task
for a canine.
The scent goes up
quite high and then
dissipates with the wind,
so you saw the dog went
beyond the person first
and then worked out
the scent cone,
and the dogs will often
circulate around the tree
and then
make the circle smaller
till they actually
locate the person.
This morning,
because of the weather,
the morning sun,
it warms up
the top of the trees.
And because of
the cold air around
the base of the tree
and the hot air
rising from the person,
it was doing
like a chimney effect,
but all the foliage
from the tree was also
trapping the scent in
and around the tree itself.
So Gus had to basically
work his way around
and then come in
and in and in before
he found the person.
Plus, we didn’t have
a lot of breeze either
for the scent to travel.
But that’s what they’ll do,
we call it
the “umbrella effect”
when there’s a lot of
foliage on the trees.
How does the dog know
when he’s going to work?
In an area search,
he wears a jacket
with the bells on it.
The bells are a trigger
for him that he is working
in an area search.
And the jacket, you could
put the jacket on the dogs
now, our area search dogs,
and they would know
what they were doing but
with the rubble search
they just know.
We put all our PPE
(Personal Protective
Equipment) on, helmets,
gloves, kneepads,
they all know that
they’re going to be working.
But the area search is
with the bells;
we know where they are
in the bush at all times.
And in Australia
the bush is thick.
During one of Australia’s
worst bushfires,
or wildfires,
which seriously affected
the state of Victoria
in February 2009,
Gus and another dog
named River
were sent to help locate
deceased members of
disaster-stricken families.
Please join us again
tomorrow
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
to find out more about
Gus and River’s gallantry.
For more details on
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia,
please visit
Courageous viewers,
thank you for joining us
today on our program.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May kindness and love
grow among all beings.
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.
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.
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.
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,
Korea, Malaysia,
Nepal, New Zealand,
Panama, the Philippines,
Slovenia,
the Netherlands,
the UK and the USA.
Today’s program features
the second part
of our two-part series
on the courageous
team members of
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia (SARDA).
Based in
Mornington Peninsula
in the state of Victoria,
Australia,
the non-profit organization
provides
professionally trained
search-and-rescue dogs
that work together with
human partners to locate
lost and missing persons.
The group’s services are
provided free of charge
to law enforcement
agencies.
On call 24-hours a day
and 365 days a year,
members are always ready
to provide assistance.
In the aftermath of the
Black Saturday bushfires
that scorched
the state of Victoria
in February 2009,
the worst natural catastrophe
in Australia’s history,
many caring individuals
and groups were
on the scene to aid
the local people in
re-establishing their lives.
The devoted SARDA
team helped discover
18 deceased victims
following the wildfires,
which bought comfort
and finality to the
disaster-stricken families.
River is my operation dog,
he’s been internationally
assessed and accredited
the last four years.
We used him and Gus
In the bushfires
that we had here
in February of last year.
We were deployed
by the Metropolitan
Fire Brigade
to locate any remains in
the houses that were left.
Some places that had
already been searched
and they couldn’t find them,
and the boy here
found them.
So, it gave closure
to the family.
All the houses
had collapsed,
some of them were just ash.
So it was a very
heart-wrenching area to do.
It’s important
for teammates
to look out for each other
at high risk disaster scenes,
such as an area
that has been devastated
by a blaze.
In that situation,
we had to be very mindful
of their feet,
because there was
lots of hot stones still,
and their eyes had to be
constantly flushed
because of all the smoke
and ash.
So, the wellbeing
of the dog is the most
important thing,
so you’ve got to be careful
that you don’t put the dog
into a situation where
he’s going to hurt himself.
You check their paws,
that they’ve got no
foreign material in them,
glass or splinters
or what have you,
that can cause problems
down the track.
Currently,
the all-volunteer SARDA
has 28 members,
20 active dog teams
and 8 support members.
The people involved
come from
diverse backgrounds,
professions and skill areas,
an advantage
that greatly contributes
to the success
of the group’s activities.
The selfless,
life-saving deeds of the
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia team
have inspired many
to join them
in their noble missions.
We got wiped out
in the Black Saturday
bushfires up in Kinglake,
and the weeks following
or the days following
when we actually
returned to our property,
I saw a lot of people
walking around
with orange jackets on,
and I read the back of
the jacket, and they said
SARDA (S-A-R-D-A).
I looked up SARDA on
the computer, and up came
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia.
And it was obviously
Julie (Cowan) and Gus
that I’d seen
that were searching
for victims of the fires.
And so I made
a phone call to Julie.
And at that time
I didn’t have a dog,
and so the very next day
I went out and bought
a German Shepherd and
you are looking at her!
And she’s just
been fantastic.
She has been
the whole family’s
big, fluffy Band-aid,
which has been great,
and she is a terrific dog,
and it has been fantastic
and the people here
have just been great.
When we return,
we’ll meet more
of the altruistic canines
and humans of
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia
who work continuously
to aid their fellow citizens.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
featuring
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia (SARDA),
a non-profit organization
that provides certified
search-and-rescue,
dog-and-human teams
to help law enforcement
agencies in various
Australian states find
lost and missing persons.
Now let’s meet
the elegant canine Kruze
and his devoted
human companion,
a passionate former navy
police dog trainer.
This is Kruze.
We’ve had him
for about 15 months now,
and he is a Red Merle
Australian Shepherd.
He has been here
at Search and Rescue
just about all his life,
since he was
eight weeks old.
I’ve got a three year plan
for him.
So we’re, going to take
the three years to get him
so he’s strong in body,
physically ready to go,
and he’s had
plenty of training.
So he’s got about 15 more,
16 more months to go
before we really want to
get him out there working.
This was sort of a natural
progression for me.
And plus I love
watching them work,
when dogs work naturally,
they are amazing,
so I really enjoy
watching them do
what they do naturally.
He enjoys
a tug-of-war game, and
he’s only a puppy, really,
so it’s all just good fun
for him.
This is Scout.
Scout is about
15 months old;
she is a Golden Retriever.
The potential
of training a dog
that can save lives
was very appealing for me,
and we haven’t
looked back from there,
it’s been fantastic.
So how long did it take you
to train her?
She is still
in training now.
It was probably about
three to four months
before we were on
the right track anyway.
Up until then
it was a lot of, I mean
it’s still play fun now,
but in the early stages
it was really more about
confidence building.
You’ve seen the dogs over
the agility course today,
for a very young pup
it’s very important just
to make it fun for them.
She is very,
very soft natured,
and a lot of the obstacles
she may have fallen off
early and took
six months to get over
that sort of thing.
The early days
were probably the most,
most precious, especially
with a dog like Scout.
We’re heading down
the right track,
and probably in the last
three to four months,
she has really been getting
into the search work
really well.
And so you give her a treat
when she works
around the agility track?
Around the agility track,
yes.
She gets the treat,
not so much
after each obstacle,
we like to keep her
focused on each obstacle,
but every so often
she gets a treat.
With the search work,
the treat if you like,
is the find,
they get their toys,
and then once they’re
back in the work truck,
then they get a treat.
So, it’s a bit of a process,
but it works really well.
Thanks to
these benevolent,
intelligent canines,
search-and-rescue work
is much more effective
and efficient.
In an area search,
if you’ve got
one search dog, it’s equal
to 40 human searchers.
So if you could imagine
a line search in a bush area,
well you can have a look
at the bush behind us.
You couldn’t get
a lot of people,
two, three people at once
going through the bush
as quick as a dog can
drive through that bush,
it would be impossible.
But one dog can
easily and comfortably
go through that bush and
it’s a quarter of the time
for a fully operational
search dog who is
looking for that person
that’s lost and injured.
For all the wonderful
rescue work of the
SARDA team members,
and for their
deep commitment
to helping society,
particularly
their unwavering efforts
following the
Black Saturday bushfires,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has contributed
US$1000 to help further
the group’s noble work
and to care for
the much deserving
canine heroes and heroines.
Along with the donation,
Master lovingly provided
bags of vegan dog food
for the beautiful,
hardworking canine
team members as well as
a lovely selection of her
books, DVDs and CDs
to share and enjoy!
Thank you very much.
For once in my life,
I am stuck for words.
This has been so generous
of Master Ching Hai
for actually
coming down here
and filming our work.
We are all volunteers
and we’re just out there
trying to help;
if someone’s lost
or trapped, we just
want to help them.
And training the dogs
to do that work
is just a joy for us
and to see the dogs
actually find somebody,
and be able to locate
is just amazing.
So, thank you so much.
On behalf of SARDA,
I’d like to thank
Master Ching Hai for
the generous contribution
of the check,
and for the books
and the DVDs.
We are just
overwhelmed, because
we are all volunteers,
and we all use
our own money to supply
the accredited dogs for
the emergency services.
And this will go a long way
to helping out
with everything
that we try to do.
The dog food especially
and the books,
and the money,
I can’t thank you enough.
In further recognition
of their life-saving deeds,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
is providing
an additional US$1,000
to Search and
Rescue Dogs Australia
for dog shoes and
other protective gear.
She is also gifting them
with extra bags of
vegan dog food and
delicious vegan cakes
and cookies.
She has a special
message for the group:
“I love your
dedicated work.
This is just a token
of thanks.
Words are not enough.
Heaven bless you
& your Hero dogs.”
Our deepest thanks,
Search and Rescue Dog
Australia
for your devotion
to serving the people
of Australia and
rescuing those in need.
Your gallantry
and steadfastness
are an example to us all.
For more details on
Search and Rescue Dogs
Australia,
please visit
Thank you for joining us
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May we always have
the protection
of the Providence.