It was the dogs. The dogs are what got me.
A few years ago we visited the 9/11 Memorial Museum, and we saw a lot. Twisted steel girders. Baby-faced portraits of the deceased. Mutilated emergency vehicles.
But it was the dogs that wrecked me.
The dog exhibit is pretty small. Located in the far corner of the museum, with photographs of search and rescue dogs.
You see dogs nosing through rubble, wearing safety harnesses. You see them in their prime. They’re all deceased now. But they were spectacular.
There was Riley. Golden retriever. He was trained to find living people. But, he didn’t find any. Instead, he recovered the remains of firefighters. Riley kept searching for a live survivor, but found none. Riley’s morale tanked.
“I tried my best to tell Riley he was doing his job,” said his handler. “He had no way to know that when firefighters and police officers came over to hug him, and for a split second you can see them crack a smile—that Riley was succeeding at doing an altogether different job. He provided comfort. Or maybe he did know.”
There was Coby and Guiness. Black and yellow Labs. From California. Surfer dogs. They found dozens of human remains.
And Abigail. Golden Lab. Happy. Energetic. Committed. Big fan of bacon.
Sage. A border collie. Cheerful. Endless energy. Her first mission was searching the Pentagon wreckage after the attacks. She recovered the body of the terrorist who piloted American Airlines Flight 77.
Jenner. Black Lab. At age 9, he was one of the oldest dogs on the scene. Jenner’s handler, Ann Wichmann, remembers:
“It was 12 to 15 stories high of rubble and twisted steel. My first thought was, ‘I can't send Jenner into that…’ At one point, [Jenner] disappeared down a hole under the rubble and I was like, ‘Ugggggh!' Such a heart-stopping moment..."
Trakr. German Shepherd. Tireless worker. Worked until he couldn’t stand up anymore. Trakr found Genelle Guzman-McMillan, who was trapped for 27 hours among the debris. Genelle was as good as dead, until the cold nose poked through the mangled steel.
Apollo. German shepherd. An NYPD police dog. Coal-black muzzle. Liquid eyes. The first dog on the scene, only 15 minutes after the attacks. Apollo worked 18-hour days. Once, he was nearly killed in a fire during his search. But Apollo had been drenched in water and he was quick on his feet. No injuries.
Jake. Labrador. As a puppy, Jake was found on the side of the road in Dallas. Abandoned. Left for dead. Like trash. He had a dislocated hip and a broken leg. They made him a rescue dog.
Jake worked until his body threatened to collapse from exhaustion. After his shifts, local New York merchants saw his rescue-dog vest and treated him to free steak dinners in upscale Manhattan restaurants.
And, of course, there was Bretagne. Golden Retriever. Easygoing. Dutiful. Obsessed with food. Her owner and trainer, Denise Corliss, a firefighter from Harris County, Texas, brought Bretagne to Ground Zero while the rubble was still hot.
Bretagne went straight to work. She worked for 10 days solid. Ten agonizing days. Bretagne never quit. She napped onsite.
Denise recalls: “...There are images of Bretagne going to where she was directed to search, into the unknown, the chaotic environment. But even then, she knew who needed the comfort of a dog, and which firefighter needed to hold her close and stroke her fur.”
After 9/11, Bretagne also helped recovery efforts during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and Ivan. She retired at age 9.
Old age finally overtook her, she had a hard time using stairs, so Denise installed an above-ground pool to keep Bretagne’s joints limber.
In retirement, Bretagne became a reading dog at a local elementary school. First graders, too shy to read aloud, would read to a white-faced, elderly retriever who looked them in the eyes and smiled.
Bretagne visited students with special needs. She visited students with autism. She visited everyone.
She suffered kidney failure at age 16. She was put to sleep on June 7, 2016, and became the last of the 9/11 rescue dogs to end her earthly career.
Bretagne hobbled into the Cypress, Texas, animal hospital, one sunny Monday, only to discover the sidewalks and hallways were lined with firefighters, first responders, and rescue workers who saluted her.
Her remains were later escorted from the hospital, draped in an American flag.
We do not deserve dogs.
- My dear friend posted this, and I share it with you.
That moved me to tears. Beautiful and well done.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kenny.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anne.
DeleteME TOO❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️ The dogs. 😔😢😢 Thanks for the whole letter❣️❣️❣️
DeleteA might dusty in here, thanks for posting that Kenny
ReplyDeleteExcellent post! Thanks for posting it.
ReplyDeletejuvat
That was just beautiful.....
ReplyDeleteMy heart aches for the lost K9's in my life. They are such special friends. This is a wonderful post...brings tears to my eyes as well....warms my broken heart
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ken. I agree, we don't deserve dogs. I like to think of them a a gift from the One who truly loves us.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely
DeleteI would dearly love to post this link for my monthly blog entry.
DeleteDogs are the finest people we will ever know.
Btillman.com
Great post.
ReplyDeleteThank you
ReplyDeleteI could not finish reading this, the tears were thick. My heart hurt. I will come back later, and try to finish reading this, maybe. I don't know if I can. I can't even read the comments. excuse me, I need more kleenex
ReplyDeleteThank you for this. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteYes...humans do not deserve dogs. Fortunately for us the dogs are unaware of this fact.
ReplyDeleteBecause they're sweet and too stupid to realize we don't deserve them.
Deletewell now I'm crying,
ReplyDeleteIf you can read this without tearing up I don't want to know you. Thanks for the posting.
ReplyDeleteThe burn holes in the front of my face flared up and got all wet again. I need a hanky.
ReplyDeleteWell...apparently, I needed to cry a lot.
ReplyDeleteEvery time one of my dogs has passed away, I swear I’ll never get another one because it’s just so painful to bear and there will “never be another one like her”. But after a couple of months of missing that unconditional love, I always do get another one, knowing that I will have to face that heartache all over again one day.
ReplyDelete"There never will be another one like her". You are right. And when you lose a dog and decide to get another one you are not replacing the dog you love; you're expanding your heart to let another dog in to love you and be loved by you. They are all there in your heart.
DeleteYou're killing me here, I've loved and lost so many... Their eyes... searching for approval, recognition, anything. Love.
DeleteThat's what they are.
And all they ask for.
Ph-you and thank you, for helping me to cry about "my pups"
Sure you understand...
My dogs are truly the purity in my life. They only want our love, support and sofas.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to know the story about the dog in the pic.
ReplyDeleteAirline pilot. Since '93. Flew over the smoldering remains about 10 days later.
Each passing year since 2001 in recurrent ground schools the question is asked, were you flying/with the airlines on 09/11? Fewer hands go up.
Newhire airline pilot min age is 23 this year.
Thanks for letting me share.
That is Riley.
Deletehttps://landofpuregold.wordpress.com/2010/09/11/golden-retriever-riley-the-real-iconic-hero-of-911/
The one thing wrong with dogs is they don't live long enough.
ReplyDeleteWhere did all this damned dust come from all of a sudden?
ReplyDelete"Just this side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge.
ReplyDeleteWhen an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here, that pet goes to Rainbow Bridge. There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and play together. There is plenty of food, water and sunshine, and our friends are warm and comfortable.
All the animals who had been ill and old are restored to health and vigor. Those who were hurt or maimed are made whole and strong again, just as we remember them in our dreams of days and times gone by. The animals are happy and content, except for one small thing; they each miss someone very special to them, who had to be left behind.
They all run and play together, but the day comes when one suddenly stops and looks into the distance. His bright eyes are intent. His eager body quivers. Suddenly he begins to run from the group, flying over the green grass, his legs carrying him faster and faster.
You have been spotted, and when you and your special friend finally meet, you cling together in joyous reunion, never to be parted again. The happy kisses rain upon your face; your hands again caress the beloved head, and you look once more into the trusting eyes of your pet, so long gone from your life but never absent from your heart.
Then you cross Rainbow Bridge together...."
Author unknown...
I guess somebody thought I needed to cry today.
ReplyDeleteNothing like some tears before bed after a crappy day. I had no idea of the individual histories of these fine animals and it appears they are still helping after all these years.
ReplyDeleteOriginal source: https://seandietrich.com/good-dogs/
ReplyDeleteDogs are God's gift to man.
You all know it was an INSIDE JOB, rigtht? Building 7? The obvious controled demo of the towers? All The misterious workers in the towers for weeks doing work, unknown work? The scores of structural engineers that all state there was not enough fuel in the planes to DROP, YES CONTROL DROP the towers? Shit I was in Tuzla, when they did the job. What do you think happened to that mission? Aaahhh renditions to foregion lands.
ReplyDeleteThe dogs? Hell we are dogs to the ones that pulled this off. Just like the NORDSTREAM pipe line. Ahhhhh the bastards in DC cooked that one up TOO.
Ken I do appoligize for the caps I know you dont like them. But this is a topic, one of many that we have been lied too about from our alustrious leaders.
Thank you, Mr. Lane. Duty. So profound, dogs can show us how.
ReplyDeletedammit man, i love me some dogs...even more now
ReplyDeletethanks brother...
ReplyDelete