Desperate dog makes 2-mile trek to find owner
A New York dog whose owner was hospitalized became so forlorn without his human companion that he ran away from home to find his friend, CBS New York reported.
Zander, a white husky, became depressed after John Dolan, of Bay Shore, Long Island, was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital with skin ulcers.
"My wife had told me the dog is moping around," Dolan told CBS Radio WCBS 880. He said his wife noticed Zander curling up on his bed and howling.
Zander's loneliness was apparently too much to bear. After sneaking out of the house, he took off on a two-mile journey to Dolan's hospital in West Islip.
"It's not just houses. We're in an area where there's a nature reserve there," Dolan said, noting Zander had to cross a highway and a stream to get to the hospital.
A hospital employee found the dog and called the number on his collar; Dolan, lying in a hospital bed, picked up.
Animal behaviorists said Zander's olfactory receptors may have helped him make the two-mile trek. Dogs like Zander have 200 million to 300 million scent glands, while humans have just five million.
"Some of them seem to have a special human-animal bond that leads them that way, whether it's a sixth sense," said veterinarian Dr. John Charos.
Experts also said research indicates dogs can act on their depression - a theory Dolan agrees with.
"I think he missed me and he decided, 'This is it, I'm going to get him,'" Dolan said.
Dolan's wife retrieved Zander, and when Dolan was released from the hospital, he played with his four-legged friend for hours.
Popular on CBSNews.com
- Children rescued from two elementary schools in Oklahoma 19 Photos
- Oklahoma tornado victim search efforts winding down
- Tornado's destructive path 17 Photos
- Deadliest U.S. tornadoes 10 Photos
- Oklahoma tornado recovery grinds on amid grim scenes 178 Comments
- Up-close video of Moore, Okla., tornado Play Video
- Oklahoma tornado as seen by storm chasers Play Video
- Twisters touch down in the Midwest 13 Photos
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Dogs are much better people than we are. In many ways they're smarter than us, too.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Good boy!
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- I wish I was the person my dog thinks I am.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- That's a great story. What the dog did says it all.
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- A wonderful story....There is nothing like the faithfulness and love of a dog!
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- ....good dog
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Scent glands? Does the reporter mean olfactory receptors?
- reply
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Zander is a good and faithful dog!
- reply













