She thought she had gone a few days.So if Mildred Thornton realized she had forgotten her dog, Buster, having already pushed away from their East New Orleans at home, not to panic.
“My house is on blocks, so that water does not come,” said Thornton, 39, a social worker. “I started with two days after clothing, I think would be back in a few days. I had food and water for him.”
Thornton, it was never coming home. Instead, it ended in Council Bluffs, Iowa, USA.
She thought she would never see her poodle for 3 years.
But Buster survived Hurricane Katrina the worst natural disasters ever taken the USA. He was rescued by a woman Tarpon Springs and in a few days, thanks to the adoption of a pet website, it is reunified and Thornton.
“It’s a miracle,” said Thornton, a married mother of two children. “I did not know if he is dead or alive. I had heard in the news, they were saving animals. I pray that if someone comes to him …”
Someone.
Nancy Dively, lives in Tarpon Springs, Buster inscription found in a shelter in New Orleans. It was on a rescue mission with the Humane Society was in LA and a convoy of Tyler Town, Melle, in New Orleans to rescue animals.
He had a day around the neck: Buster Thornton, with an address.
“Buster was well maintained,” said Dively. “You could say it was someone animal. He lives alone, and only if fear. He was so small. ”
Dively, 53, a broker, Tarpon Springs, on 17 September with Buster and two other small dogs.
She gave her name, address and www.petfinder.com image on an animal acceptance of the site.
A week later, and several phone calls, it was a conversation with Thornton.
“It was like learning another member of my family was correct,” said Thornton. “I started to cry literally. Words I can not describe. I was simply overwhelmed.
Connie Brooks, Director of Operations of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals of Pinellas County, said that these meetings are more and more frequently, particularly because the animal adoption Web sites.
The site, in collaboration with word of mouth has contributed to more than 100 farmers in Hattiesburg, Miss, their animals, “said Brooks.
On Wednesday, 54 animals they have the r shelte Pinellas County. They had all been registered on the website and microchipped.
“Our first task is more important and reunite pets with their owners,” she says.
Many farmers were generally marked by Katrina can not afford for their animals, “said Betty Hughes, is the animal Refuge Center in Fort Myers.
She led a mission in the Gulf Coast and still has 31 dogs and 18 cats.
“Unfortunately, thousands of animals are gone, because people have nothing to come back,” she says. “You have little financial means, and they are giving up their animals.”
Hughes said, “Katrina” had a devastating effect on animals.
She said that the animals healthy families indicate that the animals afraid of loud noises and swimming pools and suffer from separation anxiety.
“They are not sleep at night,” she says. “You want a bed with parents. Herzzerreißenden It is really little, what are boys and how to act. ”
Buster has yet returned, Dively said.
She said she wants to travel with him to Omaha, Neb., where he is still with Thornton.
Thornton has no money to fly to Tampa. And he was not sure if they go back to New Orleans.
“I try to explore avenues, as if someone would give a ticket,” said Dively. “At least they know he is safe.”
Thornton said lost everything in Katrina. It was on the local market messages in Iowa asking for clothes. She was also in the local newspaper, where she begged to find someone, Buster the initial contact with it.
Thornton, Buster purchased nearly three years after see an ad in a newspaper, said the dog was almost everywhere with her, Bellen to their feet when they get out.
But the day she left New Orleans, he was motionless - lying in her bed, a ball of calm before the storm.
She still can not believe they have forgotten in a hurry to leave.
“Whenever I think it is Buster, my heart beats faster,” said Thornton. “I just want to see him and him in my arms.”