Tell us Your STORY!

January 10th, 2011 by bobbi blogger

We are looking for YOU to tell YOUR story on our blog!  So please share your story! 

 We are looking for stories that incorporate Bobbi and the Strays as well as tell your own story.  Here are just a handful of ideas to get you started:

*  a “happy tail” – the adoption of your dog or cat from BATS 

*  your experience as a volunteer with us

*  how we helped reunite you with your lost dog or cat

*  your experience as a foster parent for one of our animals

*  a funny story about Bobbi : – )

*  your experience at one of our events

*  a rescue you were involved with 

 

Now that you have the idea of what types of stories we are looking for – why not submit your story for consideration?  

Please email it to shelter@bobbicares.org.

 

And if you have some great pictures or even a video to go along with your blog entry – we may be able to post them as well.  Please email us for instructions on how to submit video or pictures prior to sending them to us. 

 

Here are just a few stories that were submitted in the past:

A Ruffy Story   

Milo’s Legacy

Why I Volunteer

Meeting Crookshanks 

 

Thank you for your support!

The Search For Frances Part 4

January 4th, 2011 by laura

The next morning was Saturday, exactly one week after Frances had gotten loose in Prospect Park.  One of our wonderful volunteers, Bonnie Folz, had organized a search party for Frances. We were to meet at the park on Shore Parkway East (the one we drove in last night) at 8am. I showed up on time somehow (considering I got three hours sleep) with a huge cup of coffee. Bonnie and another volunteer, Kristie were already at the meeting spot. Christine was already driving around the park looking for Frances. Soon other volunteers showed up and Bonnie divided us into groups and gave us a section of the neighborhood to search and cover with fliers.

Kristie and I went together in my car. We were going to finish some of the areas on Cropsey that we may have missed. As we crossed over the Belt Parkway I got a call from the woman who called me yesterday saying the dog was in front of her house on Shore Parkway West. I raced over and Kristie called the sighting in to Bonnie who relayed the message to the other searchers.

We still had no idea if the dog was Frances but if it wasn’t at least we would know.  We met the woman and her daughter out front of the house. They told us the dog was on the other side of the fence, on the grassy area along Belt Parkway. I didn’t like that she was so close to the highway but I wasn’t really nervous yet. Denise, another volunteer joined us, and we found an opening in the fence where the dog must have slipped though and started walking west, the direction they saw the dog run in. We walked all the way down till we couldn’t anymore. There were no more holes in the fence she could have went though. We met two more volunteers, Sandy and Midge, down at the end. No one had seen the dog. The woman said she had gone inside to get food for the dog and then when she came out she didn’t see the dog anymore. Its possible the dog changed direction and ran the other way. There was some wooded area the other way where the dog could be hiding.

Christine called me to ask me what was going on. I told her about the sighting and told her to drive slowly down the Belt Parkway East and look for the dog.  Denise, Kristie and I entered the woods. Midge and Sandy stayed on the street in case the dog showed up there.The three of us were quiet, moving slowly. If we saw the dog, we weren’t to make eye contact. We were to ignore  her. We didn’t want to send her running into traffic. Once we found the position of the dog we would try to either corner the dog against the fence or flush the dog out away from the Belt Parkway.

Then suddenly I saw something move in the weeds and I knew, though I could barely see the animal, that it was Frances. I don’t know how I knew, but I was suddenly one hundred percent sure. It was her. My heart was racing.  Kristie and Denise didn’t see her. We moved a little bit more and I could see Frances clearly. She was just sitting there up on the hill near the highway. Denise and Kristie went up the hill and walked along the side of the highway in case Frances tried to run that way.

Frances saw us and ran parallel to the highway. I lost sight of Kristie, Denise and Frances.  I walked slowly. The branches were covered in thorns. Every step made a crunch sound. I was holding my breath. Then I saw her again. She was sitting at the top of the hill again. Very still. I called Kristie and Denise to tell them to walk back and try to get Frances to run down the hill, away from the traffic. Frances didn’t see me yet.

I saw Christine’s yellow jeep pull over on the side of the Belt Parkway about 50 feet away from the start of the woods. She got out of the car and was looking around. Her friend, Ramone was with her. Ramone helps feed the ferals in Rockaway where Frances used to live before Christine rescued her.

Then suddenly Frances took off running straight towards Christine.  Christine didn’t see her till the last second and was surprised.

“Frances!” she yelled. Frances made a turn and ran through the hole in the fence onto Shore Parkway. Christine ran after her. I ran after Christine.  Frances bolted across Cropsey Ave. Christine and I followed, all three of us managing not to get hit by a car somehow. I didn’t want to lose sight of Frances. If she ran into someone’s yard it would be the perfect opportunity to get her. Cornering her was the only way we would get a high flight dog like her.

A car stopped ahead and picked up Christine. I recognized it as Carla’s car.  Carla is another volunteer. By the time I crossed the west bound side of Cropsey I had lost sight of Frances. She had to go in one of these yards. I continued on foot searching yards while Carla and Christine drove ahead. Then Bonnie called me on the phone to say Frances was spotted two blocks over. How did she get there so fast??? I ran as fast as I could which wasn’t very fast. I have short legs and often compare myself to a corgi =)  By the time I got to where Bonnie said she was, I got another call saying she was four more blocks in a different direction. Then Bonnie called again. She was trailing her on 28th Avenue when Frances suddenly made a u-turn and bolted. By the time Bonnie turned around in her car she was gone. My phone was ringing like crazy.  People in the neighborhood were spotting her. She was all over Bath Beach in about ten minutes.

Finally we all somehow managed to meet up. She wasn’t running into anyone’s yard. She was running across busy streets and she was going to get hit by a car.  We needed to set a trap. Christine had her trap at her house in Astoria. Bonnie and another volunteer, Bill, drove back to Christine’s house to get the trap.

By this time, more volunteers showed up.  I was in the car with Carla and Kristie. Carla was driving. People were calling me still reporting sightings. I had to tell everyone NOT to chase her. You won’t get her. She will run into traffic. I cringed as I heard people chase her. “Oh god, she almost got hit by a bus,” one of the callers said. I couldn’t take it anymore. I handed my phone to a calmer Kristie to field the calls.

Then we saw Frances run down 27th Ave and under the overpass to the other side of Shore Parkway.

“Follow her in the car,” I told Carla. Frances was running right down the street. I wanted to see where she was going and also try to herd her off the main road and down a safer, side street.

“What do I do? Should I throw food out?” Carla said.

“No, you will just scare her more. Just drive along side her and slowly inch over so she’ll turn down a side street. We have to try and get her in an enclosed space.”

And it worked. Frances turned down Bay 44 which was a  dead end street with a school and two other buildings and a couple of fenced in yards. Perfect. At the end of the street she made a sharp right. There was a huge open gate that led to an abandoned field.

I told Carla to stay at the gate in the car to watch to see  if Frances came back this way. I didn’t know what was in the field yet. Kristie and I jumped out of the car. We turned the corner and saw the field was huge. It went on and on and was covered in tall grass. If she ran into the grass we would lose her. There was a dirt path that Frances was running down. I took off as fast as my corgi legs could carry me so I wouldn’t lose sight of her.  It wasn’t fast enough. There was a split in the road and one went up a hill and one curved away. I couldn’t tell which way she went. Kristie stayed at the split in case Frances came back out and I took the road that went up the hill. There was an abandoned foundation of a building, dumped construction materials and garbage, lots of tall grass, but no Frances.

At the top of the hill I could see there was a sharp drop, then more of the lot and then a dilapidated dock that went out into the water.  Carla had called the rest of the crew with the location. It didn’t seem like Frances could get out of this lot. There was a wooded area and then a fence to the park we had met at earlier. That part of the park that the field bordered was closed off to the public for renovations. Then there was the water ahead of me and to the right of me. The part that bordered Shore Parkway appeared to be fenced in too.

I got a call that she was spotted and being trailed by Ramone and Eddie, another volunteer (the volunteer who helped us rescue Baisley and Sonny, two other skittish dogs) somewhere in the field. I walked over towards the park, past a small beach and into the wooded area. There were tarps set up. Homeless people were living here. It was freezing. I felt horrible.

Then I heard something on a hill above me. I saw Eddie and Ramone. They told me she had come this way. I went up the hill. It led right into a part of the park that I thought was closed off. They told me she saw her running around in here. It was a big football field but bordered by woods and bushes.They lost her somewhere in the field. Eddie went back to the car to get his phone and Ramone and I kept walking.  That is when I saw her run across the field. She was so far away. It didn’t seem like there was anyway out except back into the abandoned lot. We saw her run into the bushes. Then out again. When she saw me from across the field she stopped and bolted the other way. She was so skittish. It would be impossible to get near her unless we had her trapped.

I called Eddie to tell him to come back because she was here. Kathy, another volunteer, still had his phone and Eddie hadn’t gotten back there yet. Then I got a call that Frances was running down Bay 44th Street! She had gotten out of the park somehow! We ran back to the field and Christine picked me and Ramone up in her jeep and we raced out. We didn’t want to lose sight of her.

I learned later that Carla had gone about 90 miles an hour in reverse going against traffic on Shore Parkway trying not to lose sight of  Frances. This was after Eddie’s foot got caught in the backseat of the car when he was trying to get out as Frances was running head on towards them. Eddie has a knack for tackling dogs.  Kristie and Carla were screaming, “Go! Go! Hurry!” and Eddie was saying, “I can’t!!!” because his foot was stuck.  He was just about to take his shoe off when he freed himself. He had missed Frances by a couple of seconds.

Carla did lose sight of Frances and we all reconvened back by the woods where we first saw Frances on Shore Parkway West. This was the area that she was sighted in the most. This was where we would set the trap. Bonnie and Bill came back and we worked on setting the trap up. Meanwhile I was still getting sighting phone calls. She was up on 86th Street. She was over by Caesars Bay Shopping Center. She was on Cropsey. She was on Bath. She was everywhere. We had to let her be.  They set the trap up. Put in the blanket from Vicki’s house and lots of tasty food. We trailed garlic out.  It was late afternoon.  Some of the volunteers left. Some of us took a break for lunch while others waiting in their cars out of sight watching the trap.

At five I drove home to let my own dogs out and feed them. Then I came back at seven and met Christine. We sat in my car by the trap waiting. Frances had to come back. This seemed to be her home base. Kristie had left a box of Dunkin Donut munchkins in my car. I felt like a cop on a stake out in the movies as I sat there for hours eating donuts and waiting.  It was dark out. Around 11 I started to fall asleep. Christine stayed awake. I would dream about Frances. I would drift in and out of sleep, weaving dreams.

Every time I woke up I immediately looked at the trap. Everytime it was empty. I drifted back to sleep. The last dream I remember me, Eddie and Christine were walking down the Belt Parkway and there was Frances just sitting there on the side of the road, perfectly still, threatening to bolt out into traffic at any second.

I woke up terrified.  It was two thirty am. Neither Christine or I wanted to leave but we had to. We need to get rest so we could be ready for tomorrow. We would come back early… perhaps Frances would come back when the sun came up to look for food and she would go into the trap then… What an amazing feeling… though we didn’t catch her today, we knew where she was. It made a huge difference. Last night standing in Coney Island it felt hopeless. Now it seemed certain we would have her by tomorrow night at the latest. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Beware of Winter Dangers

December 31st, 2010 by bobbi blogger

 

Happy New Year!!!  

We at Bobbi and the Strays are wishing you and your furry family all the best for this New Year. 

Thank you for your continued support.

 

Please review these important Winter Pet Care Tips so that your pets can be safe during this cold season.  Please also pass along this information to other pet owners that you may know – so that we can help them keep their pets safe too!  

 

Chase Animals Out of your Car’s EngineWarm engines in parked cars attract cats and small wildlife, who may crawl up under the hood. To avoid injuring any hidden animals, bang on your car’s hood to scare them away each time before starting your engine. 

 

Rock Salt - Rock salt and other chemicals used to melt snow and ice can irritate the pads of your pet’s feet. Wipe their feet with a damp towel when they come in from outside before the salt irritates their feet and before your pet licks them and irritates his/her mouth.

 

Antifreeze DangersAntifreeze is a deadly poison, but it has a sweet taste that can attract animals and even children. Wipe up spills and store antifreeze (and all household chemicals) out of reach. Better yet, use antifreeze-coolant made with propylene glycol; if swallowed in small amounts, it will not hurt animals.

 

Limit Excercise in the ColdDon’t leave pets outdoors when the temperature drops. Dogs and cats are safer indoors anyway. Only take dogs out for exercise and special care should be taken with shorthaired, very young, or older dogs – these dogs may feel more comfortable wearing a sweater during walks. Pet booties may also help keep your pet warmer – as well as guard against rock salt and other winter chemicals.

 

Food & Water All cats and dogs should not be left outside without supervision. Pets who spend a lot of time exercising outdoors need more food in the winter because keeping warm depletes energy. If you keep a water dish outside for your pet, routinely check to make certain the water is not frozen. Use plastic food and water bowls rather than metal; when the temperature is low, your pet’s tongue can stick and freeze to metal. 

The Search for Frances Part 3

December 23rd, 2010 by laura

Its been 15 days since Frances went missing in Prospect Park and so much has happened since “Part 2″. But let me pick up where I left off…

Its the Thursday after Frances ran off into Prospect Park. We woke up that morning still thinking that Frances was hiding somewhere within the park.  Then my phone started ringing off the hook.

“There has been a possible sighting on Bay 41 and Shore Parkway!”  Someone had seen a dog that looked like Frances a couple of minutes ago walking in between the parked cars and the fence of Shore Parkway West.

WHERE was THAT??? I quickly googled it. It was almost 6 miles from Prospect Park.

“Its been five days since she went missing,” Bonnie, who was coordinating our efforts, said. “She could have traveled that far.”  Its true. I have heard and been involved with rescues of dogs that have traveled many miles from where they went missing. I still had my doubts though because Frances was so terrified. She would have had to cross many busy streets in bustling neighborhoods. I was sure that Frances would be hiding in a hollowed out tree or under a rock in Prospect Park. Still we have to thoroughly check every reported sighting.

I was on the road in five minutes to the area that I would later find out was called Bath Beach.  Christine was stuck at work but called Sean Casey, another rescuer based in Brooklyn, to go over as well to help out. Sean called before I got there and said he drove up and down the street and around the area but did not see the dog. He told me to call if I spotted her and he would come right back to help.

When I got there I parked my car. I wanted to check in every yard, under every bush and car. The dog may be hiding. I still wasn’t convinced this dog was Frances but I wanted to rule it out. I put on gloves, scarf, hood. The wind was bitter but I sucked it up. I walked from Bay 50th all the way down to the end of this stretch of Shore Parkway.

It ended in a dead end street. There was an abandoned building. It was abandoned it mid construction years ago and even in broad daylight it gave me the chills. Weeds took over the fenced in grounds on one side. There was a huge opening to the building but there were no holes in the fence where anyone, including a dog could get through. I walked the whole perimeter twice just to make sure.  I did find a cat colony in the back by the dumpsters. I checked under the dumpsters. Frances was originally found hiding under a similar container in Far Rockaway.  Then I checked the other side of the building that did not have a fence around it. There was a dark alley way piled high with trash and abandoned construction materials. I had to crawl under boards with my flashlight. There was so many places where a 30 lb dog could hide. When a cat jumped out of a hiding place I nearly had a heart attack. I tried to laugh but I was a little shaken. I hurried through the rest of that side of the building.  There was a mattress and blanket like a homeless person was living there. I felt sad and like I was being intrusive. I quickly finished the search there and returned sadly to Shore Parkway.

I walked back to my car and got fliers. I posted them on every pole down that stretch of Shore Parkway. I stopped a couple of people to ask if they saw the dog.  One man said he saw a dog this morning around the time of the sighting but he didn’t speak English well. When I showed him the picture and asked if it was the same dog, he didn’t know what I was asking.

After posting on Shore Parkway I drove around the blocks a couple of times.  Could this dog really have traveled this far? Or was this a different lost dog that looked similar to Frances?

As I headed home on the Belt Parkway I had a nagging feeling. I got off at the next exit, turned around and headed back to Bath Beach.  I drove down Shore Parkway again. I circled around the blocks. I just couldn’t shake the feeling that I was missing something. After an hour with no sightings I headed home.

As I was driving home I got a phone call from a young woman who had seen our flier in Prospect Park.

“I saw your dog on Sunday,” she said. “She was running out of the southwest side of the park near the Parade Grounds. I guess it was Parade Place towards Caton Ave? She was running like something scared her. We tried to get her attention but she wouldn’t even look at us. She was wearing a pink and purple collar with tags… I thought someone would have found her and returned her by now…”

My heart sank.  Frances left the park for sure. I thanked the woman and saved her phone number just in case. I drove straight to the area she had said she seen Frances. It was a busy area. Lots of foot traffic and cars. Loud and bustling.  Frances seemed like she would want to avoid all of this, but if she was in flight drive and scared she would just be running…

Later that day I was going to meet Christine in Prospect Park.  I told her about the phone call and how the woman described Frances. She described the collar she was wearing (which was info that was not on our posters). I was sure this sighting was valid. Furthermore if she ran out of the park on Sunday and kept going in that direction, its not unlikely that she would have ended up in Bath Beach.

We had to check the trap before going out to Bath Beach. We decided to take the trap out of the park first if we didn’t catch a dog and then head towards Bath Beach. Going back up to Quaker Hill in the dark on this freezing cold night with only one other person didn’t really excite me but it made no sense to leave the trap there… all sightings indicate that Frances left the park. So we walked through the darkness of the park, through the woods, past the waterfall and around to the hole in the fence to Quaker Hill.

My heart was pounding. I was expecting the Cane Corso or a rabid raccoon to greet us at any second. The trap seemed further up the hill then I remembered it. About halfway up I shone my flashlight on two gleaming eyes, right by the trap.

“Christine!” I whispered. “Look!”

“Is that in the trap?” She asked.

“No, remember the tree is in front of the trap. We cant see it from here.”

“Its just a raccoon,”She said.

The story about the rabid raccoon attacking the woman in the park was racing through my mind.

“Um, do you think we should wait to get the trap?” I said.

“No, they won’t bother us,” Christine said.

“What is they have rabies?”

She stopped in her tracks. We started at the gleaming eyes.

“I dont’ think their eyes. I think they are lights from the other side of the hill,” Christine said.

“Are you sure?” I was frozen.

“Yes, see? That is the top of the hill and then those lights are from the other side.” She started to walk again.

I breathed a sight of relief. She was right. I started to walk but I kept my flashlight on the lights.

I stopped short. “Umm, Christine, they are moving.”  They were definitely eyes. “I’m scared.”  My feet were firmly planted on the ground.

“You’re with me,” she said. “Nothing is going to happen. Just follow me. I will go first and just shine your light so I can see.”

Not wanting to feel like a total sissy I sucked it up and followed her.  When we got to the trap, the eyes were gone. I was still on edge. Christine was completely relaxed. I hurried and gathered up the tarp trying not to drop my flashlight and the snag pole I was carrying. Christine dragged the trap down the hill. We put it on the hand truck she brought with her and we got out of there, not as fast I would have liked, but as fast as I could move the relaxed Christine along.

We went to the car and loaded the trap in. Christine borrowed her neighbors car to transport the five foot trap. Then a volunteer named April met us. She had made more fliers for us to post. I thanked her and then we were off.

We drove down to Bath Beach from Prospect Park taking local roads that Frances may have taken. It was long. Lots of streets to cross.  Lots of crowded areas.  It seemed unlikely that she would make it this far… she was once a feral dog but the area she lived in was not populated like this. I had a sinking feeling but refused to give up home. You hear stories about dogs traveling through different states to go home… We thought maybe Frances was trying to get back to Far Rockaway and was following the scent of the beach and ocean.

Once in Bath Beach I showed Christine the area where she was sighted. We got out of the car and walked around. “This is so far…” Christine said sadly looking around.

We posted more fliers anyway. We covered the area the best we could. We did the other side of Shore Parkway, the Eastbound side and then further down Cropsey going South towards Coney Island.  She drove and I jumped out of the car. Areas where it wasn’t so busy we both jumped out. We left fliers with Sanitation. We stopped everyone, especially people walking a dog, to see if they had seen Frances. No one had.

It was after midnight when we headed back towards Prospect Park. We posted more there, just in case. We posted heavily in the area where she was seen leaving the park.  “She could have ran back in. Maybe someone saw her change direction,” Christine said.

We went into the police station near the park. The officers were extremely nice and helpful. They asked us if we had seen the Cane Corso in Prospect Park that no one has been able to catch.  “Yes,” Christine said. “He will be our next project after we find Frances.”

Around two in the morning we called it a night.

The next day, Friday, I went over to Prospect Park early to finish posting on some side streets that Frances could have taken when she ran out of the park. Then I went to Staples and picked up three hundred more fliers and posted some more.  Sometimes people don’t stop to look at one flier here and there. But if they see it constantly they pay attention and that is what we needed.

Sometime in the day I got a phone call from a man who said he saw Frances last Sunday, the day after she went missing. She was still in Prospect Park by the lull water just sitting there quietly. He was with his dog who approached her and Frances and the dog sniffed each other. He noted the pink and purple collar. Then suddenly something seemed to spook Frances and she took off like the wind towards the Southwest side of Prospect Park.  Another piece to the puzzle…. But we were still trailing Frances. We wanted to get ahead of her.

Then I got a call from a kind lady in Bath Beach who lived right on Shore Parkway. She said she had seen Frances or a dog that looked like Frances out front of her house on Bay 41 and Shore Parkway. The dog was skittish.  She was not wearing a collar. She got a pretty good look at her. But she couldn’t tell if the dog was male or female.  She said the dog ran away when she approached. She ran inside and got some food. She just set the food down on the street and walked away. The dog came to eat but if the lady took a step towards the dog, the dog would run again so she let her eat.

The not having a collar detail didn’t bother me too much. In six days a dog can lose her collar. Vicki, Frances foster mom, said Frances ate her collar off three times in her house. The dogs behavior sounded just like Frances.

Christine and Sloane picked me up from the southwest side of Prospect Park. I filled them in on the new call.

Sloane, Christine and I drove to Bath Beach. It seemed likely that if she was running, in flight mode and not looking back, perhaps she did run straight down to Bath Beach. Its been six days since she has been missing. Its not far to travel six miles in six days. we took a slightly different local route there, posting big, colorful 11×14 posters that Sloane had made for us all along the way.

We passed an enormous cemetery on the way. Sometimes lost dogs hide out in cemeteries. We posted heavily around there. The gates were locked and it was pitch black inside.  I was starting to get an unsettling feeling. Frances could be anywhere in that cemetery. So many places to hide. It would be hard to search every place in the daylight… not only could she be anywhere in the cemetery, she could be anywhere in Brooklyn… or even Queens by now. She may not even be alive. If she ran out in the street, maybe she got hit by a car. It was something I pushed out of my mind. I didn’t have the strength consider it seriously. I decided reasons to lose hope would not be acknowledged from here on in.

And we went on all the way to Bath Beach, jumping out of the car and posting all the way. We looked around the Shore Parkway area. We found a park on the other side of the Belt Parkway behind the Home Depot. Half it was closed off for renovations. We found a path we could drive in. The park was bordered by the water on the south. We shined the flood lights into the woods. We drove as far as we could, branches brushing against the windows, then we turned around. We posted fliers on the posts around the playing fields. In the light tomorrow we would come back and check again.  Then we drove down the Belt Parkway… then we came back around and went down to Coney Island. It makes sense that if this dog was Frances and she kept on her route and was trying to get to the beach, then Coney Island is where she would end up.

We drove down along side the boardwalk. There were many abandoned lots and closed up amusement park lots. There was an overwhelming amount of places for her to hide. The wind was whipping around the buildings, coming in from the beach. We parked the car by the boardwalk ramp and got out to look under the boardwalk… but it went on forever and ever and ever. We went on the boardwalk. It was vacant. Sad. Abandoned. I felt a wave of sadness… of helplessness wash over me. I stared out at the ocean. The beach stretched before it. It was lonely. It was freezing. I had such an empty feeling.

“We’ll never find her,” Christine said. I was feeling the same thing but I was trying to push it away.  There was just too many places for her to hide if she was here. But what if she wasn’t here? She could be anywhere…

“We will find her,” I said. When one of us is feeling down, the others have to be strong even if we aren’t sure, we act like we are. Sometimes you have to take turns being the strong one. “She is around here. In the light we will be able to see better. We are posting fliers everywhere. We will get more sightings tomorrow.”

We had also organized a search party tomorrow morning. Since it as Saturday many people were off from work and wanted to come help. Bonnie had organized the streets and areas into sections where teams of people would go to search and post fliers. We would be able to cover a lot of ground. I reminded Christine about the search party. She nodded with tears coming down her cheeks.

We turned to leave the boardwalk. The wind was whistling through the boards. My hands were numb from the cold. My heart was broken. I turned to look back at the beach one more time… it was just vast emptiness. When I got home, for the first time since Frances went missing, I cried.

The Search For Frances Part 2

December 15th, 2010 by laura

Sadly Wednesday was not the day we would find Frances.  I spent the day searching Prospect Park with another one of my dogs, a pit bull named Lucky Charm. We searched more of the northside of the park. We went by the zoo, to the Vale of Cashmere, all along the bridal paths. There was absolutely no sign of Frances. We posted flyers along the way. The more we post, the better chance we have of a sighting being reported.  The park seemed so big. When I took Lucky home at four o’clock, I felt a little overwhelmed.  After two and half days of searching, there were parts of the park that we hadn’t even touched yet.

I met Christine, Anthony and Sonia (our morning supervisor at the shelter) in the park at seven pm that night. We hadn’t had any sign of Frances. No one had seen her. We were getting a little desperate so we took a shot in the dark and decided to set a humane trap on the hill where the cane corso was seen which is also right next to a water source. It was a likely place where she would be hang out… but there was no real evidence. Christine reasoned that even if we got the cane corso, it would be a good thing. We just prayed we didn’t get any raccoons … especially rabid ones. We had just read that there was raccoons with rabies in the park and someone had gotten bitten recently. This coupled with last nights screams from Lookout Hill,  had me a little on edge.

We met at 7th street and Prospect Park West again. Christine had brought us all face masks because it was freezing outside. So here we are. Four people with face masks on, carrying flashlights, a huge wire trap and two snag poles, walking through the pitch black darkness of Prospect Park. Its a wonder someone didn’t call the police on us.

The trap was extremely heavy and difficult to hold, esp because it was cold out. Anthony had to create a shoulder sling.  Quaker Hill was in the middle of the park and it was no easy trek.  We shone the flashlights over the vast fields along the way. A lot of people let their dogs play off leash when its dark.  There was so much hope every time one ran past us, and then disappointment when it was Frances. As we neared the woods we saw a medium sized dog sitting on a path under a shadow.

And then: “Oh my god, there she is!” Christine exclaimed. She dropped what she was carrying and ran towards the dog, “Frances!” She exclaimed. She ran to the dog… and to the dog’s owners and then realized that the dog was not Frances at all.  She apologized to the people and explained we were looking for a lost dog. We have them a flyer.  “I’m losing my damn mind,” She said as we resumed our trip into the woods with the trap.It was heartbreaking. The dog had looked like Frances from a distance and we had wanted it to be her so badly. The mind plays tricks on you sometimes, especially in the dark. I walked in silence. My heart hurt and I knew others felt the same.

Getting the trap up Quaker Hill was the hardest part. It was a pretty steep hill and we went through some thorny brush and then over two huge fallen tree trunks.  I was on the look out for the Cane Corso and raccoons with abnormal social behavior. Christine and Sonia walked to the top of the hill while Anthony set up the trap.  Sonia and I went to the Chinese restaurant before we came to buy fried chicken as bait for Frances. We also had a blanket with her scent on it given to us by Vicki, the volunteer who fostered Frances before she was adopted. Sonia and Christine had no luck searching the top of the hill and helped us wrap the trap in a tarp which would hide the trap and also keep Frances warm if we caught her.

I can’t say I wasn’t happy when we finished setting everything up so we could leave Quaker Hill.  We left a garlic powder trail down the hill. Its easy for the dogs to smell and follow the scent. Garlic is not good for dogs but since its a powder in the dirt its hard for them to eat it, but easy to smell.

We then walked around the park with the flashlights searching under bushes, in hollowed trees and in any small hiding spot that we could find. It was so cold all I could think about was if Frances had found a warm spot to sleep. A spot out of the wind. She has been outside before, I told myself, she is smart. But still it was so cold my own fingers were numb through the gloves. I couldn’t help worry about her. We searched all the water sources again since it was likely she would be hanging out around there. We went to the boathouse area and then the stream that leads to the boat house from the lower pool. Then we searched by the lull water and the lake. We posted flyer after flyer to make sure no one walking in the park would miss it. Then hours later we went back to check the trap. It was empty.

We kept going though. We walked all around the cemetery looking for holes in the fence where she could get in. We went down any dirt path we could find and fanned out in the woods with our lights. We searched by the lake and over by the ice skating rink. We searched for hours and hours. We check the trap again. Nothing.  Maybe she would go in sometime in the morning, we reasoned. She was probably sleeping now anyway…

I kept thinking about how wonderful it would be when I saw her. Would I find her hiding in some hollowed tree, all curled up? I would shine my flashlight in and there she would be. Just like that. Or maybe she would just be trotting across the field. I kept thinking about this. The moment we would find her… I was trying to will this moment into existence.  But it just wouldn’t happen.

We posted flyers all the way out of the park and to our cars… It was around midnight when we finally left.

Tomorrow, we had said. Tomorrow would be the day…

The Search For Frances Part 1

December 11th, 2010 by laura

Last Sunday two of our volunteers contacted me to tell me some horrible news. Frances, a once feral dog that was rescued from Far Rockaway, a dog that we had put our heart and souls into training and socializing, a dog that we had just adopted out to a seemingly perfect home had gone missing in Prospect Park.  I try not to get emotional and focus on the task at hand. I told them I would go to Prospect Park first thing in the morning and help search for her.  Even though she would be in flight drive and wouldn’t respond to people she even knew, I had helped find and rescued dogs like this before (see the posts on Sonny the beagle and Baisley the shepherd mix) .  I knew that with the help of some very talented and amazing rescuers, we could find and rescue Frances.

However its almost seven days later and still Frances has not been found. The past week has been a roller coaster ride of dramatic ups and downs.  We started the search in the park Monday morning. I met Vicki and Juliette at the park. Frances had entered the park on 7th Street and Prospect Park West. She had jumped out of the owners car after they parked and bolted into the park.  We searched the whole area.  Vicki, the volunteer who fostered Frances, brought her dog that Frances had bonded to.  I stayed in the park till ten pm that night. Bonnie, Paulina, Eddie, Christine and Frankie came at around 7pm.  We posted flyers, I searched the woods on the west side of the park.  The night was freezing cold. The wind chilling. Every sound of leaves rustling in the wind made me jump. I thought that Frances would  be hiding somewhere like she was when Christine had found her in Far Rockaway. I looked in every hollow tree, under the trailers and trucks in the maintenance yard, under every tree and bush. There was no sign of her.I was not yet worried though. I thought that she would stay in the park because she is a scaredy cat. She would find a place to hide and only venture out to look for food. She would stay in the park where its safe….

Tuesday morning I went back to the park with my dog, a pit bull named Rockaway.  We walked all over the south side of the park. We walked to the nethermead, the boat house, the long meadow, around the cemetery and Quaker Hill, all over Lookout Hill (which is creepy in the day time. I had no idea what was coming later that night…), around the Boathouse, along both sides of the lull water. Around the northside of the lake to the park of the park near the rink where they fenced off because of renovations. We ran into a beautiful giant Cane Corso on Quaker Hill who apparently has been living there for years. (More on that later) and finally at five when it was dark, we went home.  I dropped Rockaway off, went to Home Depot to get a powerful flashlight and then headed back to the park to meet Christine and her friends Anthony, Josephine and Sloane. I had my new flashlight, flyers, tape, treats and layers of clothing. It was in the 20′s.  Freezing.

We agreed to stay together on the search because the park was pitch black in some places and not safe to be alone. I was also the only one with some knowledge of the park. I had lived in Park Slope years ago. We headed across the field towards Quaker Hill where I saw the cane corso. We thought that Frances may have hooked up with him and they may be together. Being in the middle of the park at night was a different kind of darkness than being on the woods on the west side near the street. This darkness was thick, heavy, and deep. We walked around the perimeter of Quaker Hill, down a path, past a waterfall and to the other side. I showed them where I saw the Cane Corso. The area was fenced off to the public but Christine and Anthony found an opening near the cemetery and went in to see if Frances was there. Josephine, Sloane and I were at the bottom of the hill waiting and keeping watch. That is when we heard the screaming.

Loud shrill panicked screams coming from Lookout Hill.  We heard growling. It sounded like a monster was eating the girl alive. We called to Anthony and Christine who stumbled down the hill and we ran over to Lookout and called out to the wall of darkness. We heard voices. One? Two? We couldn’t tell. Disoriented screams and pleas for help. “Where are you? Are you hurt?” we called back. We shined our flashlights all over the hill. Beams of light illuminate small circles of bare branches, dead leaves on a canvass of empty blackness. We started to make our way through the brush up the hill sticking close together.

“Is that your dog?!” a girl cried out hysterically.

“What dog? Frances!? Frances!!” Christine ran up the hill calling out and didn’t hear the girl say that it was a big black dog. Frances is a medium sized brown collie mix with tannish fur.

We found the girl  under a lamp. She had a pit bull with her. She was shooken up. So was the dog. She  explained a large black dog ran out and her dog chased it into the dark and there was a confrontation. She couldn’t find her dog. She was screaming and then we came over.

“It was probably the Cane Corso,” Someone said.

“Is that the ghost dog of Prospect Park?” the girl asked.

We explained the Cane Corso was very much alive. I saw him in broad daylight. That was a real, living, breathing dog.  But it was kind of eerie that he was already becoming legend. We explained we were looking for Frances. She hadn’t seen  her. We gave her a flyer and told her to be careful.  Lookout Hill was an extremely dark place at night. Didn’t feel quite right that she was walking alone, even with a pit bull.

So what did we do after she left? Search the dark and foreboding Lookout Hill.  We stayed close together. My heart was pounding.  I thought the Cane Corso may jump out at us at anytime. The path winds up the hill. Tall weeds, bare branches, dead leaves rustling in the wind, the chill in the air.  Clouds covered the moon and stars.  It was beyond dark. It was unsettling to think Frances could be hiding in such a place. We searched the best we could. I was relieved when we came back down.

We left food by Quaker Hill where I saw the Cane Corso earlier in the day. There was a hollowed out tree there, a perfect place for a dog to hide and sleep away from the elements as she could be in the park. We put food around there. Then we started back towards the west side of the park, posting flyers alone the way.

When I got home at 11pm that night, I was still shaking. I went to bed and dreamt about ghosts at Prospect Park. None of them were Frances though. I knew she was very much alive and tomorrow, Wednesday, we would find her.

Shop to Support BATS

December 2nd, 2010 by bobbi blogger

  

 The Holiday Season is upon us – have you started your Holiday Shopping yet?

 

 Give a Gift Donation!

 

 Give a meaningful gift to your family or friends and help an animal in need at the same time!  

We will mail an event appropriate card acknowledging your gift to the recipient of your choice.  This is perfect for those animal lovers’ Birthdays, Anniversaries, Graduations, Mothers’ Day, Father’s Day, Weddings, and Christmas!

 Just follow this link for full details and to download a Gift Donation form.   

 

Use GoodShop.com!

 

 If you shop on-line at your favorite retailers through www.GoodShop.com, those retailers will donate up to 30% of your purchase price to Bobbi and the Strays!  And best yet – THE DONATION WILL NOT COST YOU A THING!

 Just go to www.GoodShop.com, select “Bobbi and the Strays” under “who do you good search for” before you shop, and then SHOP!  (Just make sure you always start at GoodShop.com and have Bobbi and the Strays chosen before clicking through to retailers.)

 

 Shop on eBay!

 

 Shopping on eBay? Just visit our eBay Giving Works page linked from our website.     (Click here for direct link)

 When you buy items from us or our supporters, who have chosen to donate all or a percentage of their item’s sale price to us, our dogs and cats receive that donation.

 

 

We at Bobbi and the Strays want to Thank You for your continued support and wish you and your furry family a Wonderful, Happy, Healthy, and Safe Holiday Season!

Bobbi’s Cat Sanctuary

November 10th, 2010 by bobbi blogger

 

Bobbi and the Strays would like to introduce you to our newest rescue operation, our Long Island City Cat Sanctuary!

 

THE PAST

In 2009, we were approached by ‘I Love Animals’, a small rescue organization in Long Island City. The director was ill and could no longer run the operation.  We were more than happy to help out someone who had spent her whole life helping animals in need. ‘I Love Animals’ housed approximately 200 cats and two Chihuahuas in a three story house. All of the animals were cage free. Many of the cats were so friendly they were leaping into our arms to say hello!  ‘Bobbi and the Strays’ provided medical care for the animals, paid for food, paid staff, recruited volunteers and made many improvements to the building which was in great need of repair.

 

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Saigon

THE PRESENT

This summer ‘I Love Animals’ officially dissolved and ‘Bobbi and the Strays’ officially took over the operation. We now own the building and are the legal guardian to the many animals that live there. We have been transporting the most social kitties to our Atlas location where they have been getting adopted into loving homes. Sadly after testing the cats we found that many had feline AIDS or Leukemia. We built separate rooms in the sanctuary to separate the healthy cats from the sick ones. AIDS and Leukemia cats can live long lives and be wonderful companions. We believe every animal deserves to live and we are providing them with vet care and the comfort and love they deserve.  Presently, we have approximately a hundred cats living in the sanctuary.  We are continuing to transport the healthy cats to our adoption center where they can find loving homes.

Callie

Callie

THE FUTURE

‘Bobbi and the Strays’ will continue to find homes for the social cats in the sanctuary and continue providing a comfortable, loving home for the ones that are feral or sick for the duration of their lives. (Some of the AIDS or Leukemia cats can be adopted as only cats or into homes with other AIDS or Leukemia kitties). Down the road, we have plans to further renovate and update the sanctuary while keeping it cage free.  (Sick animals will be in separate rooms.)  We want it always to be a place for the cats that need help the most.

Sunny

Sunny

WHY WE NEED YOUR HELP

Housing, vet bills, food and repairs to the building has become very costly.  Some months the vet bills are in the thousands.  Your generosity and support enables us to continue our work.

Vicki

Vicki

To Help and/or Donate – please visit the Bobbi and the Strays website.

 

THANK YOU!

Help Us WIN!!

October 19th, 2010 by bobbi blogger

 

Help Bobbi and the Strays win up to $10,000.  It is super easy – and super quick.  We are already in second place in all of New York State – WOW! 

 

The Animal Rescue Site along with petfinder.com is sponsoring a Shelter Challenge Contest. All you have to do is CLICK A BUTTON TO VOTE for Bobbi & the Strays.

 

The site is also giving away weekly $1,000 prizes so please vote once a day for us!!! The shelter with the most votes will get the top prize! The shelter with the most votes in any state also gets a great prize! Plus we will be eligible to win the weekly prize if people are voting for us. 

 

Here is what you need to do to help:

 

It just takes a minute – really!

1) Follow the link listed after these instructions.

2) In the purple box – type in “Bobbi” as the shelter name – you must also choose “NY” from the state list (this is required). Click “Search”.

3) Bobbi & the Strays will come up – in the same purple box. Click the “Vote” button next to our name.

4) It will bring you the vote confirmation page. Simply spell out the animal you see in the picture (all in lower case letters) then hit the “Confirm Vote” button.

Your vote has now been counted for the day.

 

You can even request a daily Animal Rescue Site email reminder to vote – check it out today!!

Here is the link: The Animal Rescue Site

 

 

The contest started September 20th (ends December 19th).

Please VOTE TODAY – and EVERY DAY!

THANK YOU so Much!!!

Tickets to our Halloween Ball

September 29th, 2010 by bobbi blogger

Would you enjoy a FULL white glove Dinner with UNLIMITED beer, wine and soda?  How about being able to dance the night away while professional DJ’s spin for everyone on the dancefloor?  Why not spend the evening in an elegant banquet hall on the water? 

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Sounds like a lot of fun – doesn’t it?  PLUS you get to enjoy yourself for a great cause – all proceeds from this event will benefit the many animals helped and cared for by Bobbi and the Strays.

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So please join us for the Bobbi and the Strays Halloween Masquerade Ball at Russo’s on the Bay on Thursday, October 28th.  The party starts at 7PM.  (Pre-purchase of tickets required.) 

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Costumes are optional – but there will be a costume contest with prizes awarded.  So Dress your Best!!! 

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Raffles will also be available for the chance to win some wonderful items and attendees can bid on fabulous items during our silent and live auctions.

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This link is to our Flickr page – showing pictures from last year’s party. : – )  Please take a look!  www.Flickr.com/photos/BobbiAndTheStrays

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Remember proceeds go to help DOGS and CATS and tickets are only $100 per person – which includes admission, music, dancing, costume contest entry, full dinner and unlimited beer, wine, and soda – and FUN!  Adults as well as children welcome to attend! : – ) (Children 12 years and younger – $50 – accommodations for children are limited.)  Valet Parking also available.

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Contact Bobbi to purchase tickets and reserve tables at 718-845-0779 or 917-213-9840.  Remember pre-purchase of tickets is required.

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Follow this link for full information on the party – www.BobbiAndTheStrays.org.

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