A dog that plunged 23 feet into water in a 37-foot-deep well had to swim in a tiny circle for almost two hours before rescuers were able to bring him back to the surface. Arch and Judy Hopkins had been
having water problems at their house in Granville, Putnam County, Illinois, and had hired someone to look at their well.
They had opened the top of the well when Doogie, an 8-year-old goldendoodle, came
running up to greet the well man and landed right in the open well, Arch
said. “It was horrifying,” he said. The men got a light to look into the
well.
“He was hanging on the brick edge of the well or dog paddling,” Arch
said. “We knew he was at least alive.” They immediately called 911. Fire
chief Mike Skowera said firefighters arrived, lowered a gas monitor into the
well and determined the oxygen level was okay, though slightly lower than normal.
He said the dog could be seen down in the well, treading water and occasionally
putting out its legs to wedge itself from wall to wall to rest a bit. The
department set up a sturdy tripod above the well, and firefighter Kyle Camatti
rappelled down.
He could not immediately determine a way to safely raise the dog
back up the well, however. The problem was, everything the department
normally has for extraction work or harnesses is made for people. “The major
delay was trying to figure out what to get around this dog,” Skowera said. They
didn’t want to try one of the harnesses for humans and then possibly drop the
dog. They brought the firefighter back up and decided to use a sturdy, nylon
mesh body bag that they might otherwise have to use for recovery of bodies after
drowning. Air and water could pass through, so the bag wouldn’t fill up with
water and weigh 1,000 pounds and the dog would be able to breathe.
“Kyle
went back down and somehow got Doogie into the body bag. Then they hauled Doogie
up first. It was very impressive,” Arch said. Doogie appeared to be okay after
the two-hour ordeal. “He just jumped up and started kissing everybody,”
Hopkins said. Veterinarian Allison Spayer immediately came to the scene when
she was called by Judy Hopkins. Once Doogie was rescued, she examined him,
finding no injuries other than a bruised lip and a scratch on his eye, Hopkins
said. “He’s amazingly resilient,” Arch said. “His body temperature even was
good.” Arch and Judy Hopkins were very impressed with how the crew
handled the situation. Arch said they were very professional and concerned for
Doogie’s well-being. “It was a happy ending,” Arch said.
There's a news video here.
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