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Bobbie Gilmore works
with her dog to recover a live human volunteer at a 2004 rescue
training on Big Mountain. Later this month, dog handlers from
around the nation will take part in a national certification for
avalanche rescue dogs at Big Mountain. Dave Reese photos/Special
to the Inter Lake
Canine help for searches
Posted: Wednesday, Jan 04, 2006 -
11:45:55 pm PST
By DAVE REESE
Special to
the Inter Lake
Dogs play critical rescue role. Libby team helped in hurricane aftermath
The piles of rubble left in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina were a
long way from the mountains of Northwest Montana.
But for Terry Crooks and his search dogs, the task at hand was no
different: finding people.
Crooks, from Libby, and his black Labrador search dog spent two weeks in
Louisiana, trying to find and recover people buried under the mountains
of debris.
Starting this weekend, Crooks and dog handlers from around North America
will focus their skills on something different: mountains of snow.
Saturday and Sunday at Blacktail Mountain, Flathead County Search and
Rescue will have a Snowdog Rally where canines and their handlers will
take avalanche-rescue certification tests.
Dogs and their handlers will have 20 minutes to locate two people buried
in a mock avalanche covering about half an acre. Approximately 23 teams
are expected.
In addition to the avalanche-rescue certification test, the dog teams
will work on fundamentals of avalanche rescue.
Then, on Jan. 26-28, a national test will be given on Big Mountain
through the National Search and Rescue Association.
The test will be a model for other tests to follow around the nation
this winter.
In addition, the national gathering will give the National Association
of Search and Rescue a chance to develop a database of dogs that have
passed a national standard for deployment in the case of a disaster like
Hurricane Katrina.
Crooks’ years of working in avalanche rescue in Montana gave him and his
dog a huge advantage in finding victims of Hurricane Katrina.
“It was a lot like avalanche work,” Crooks said. “We were just dealing
with mountains of debris. Mountain dogs are used to tough terrain. For
our dogs down there it was no different that it was piles of houses. To
them it was just another mountain.”
It’s not just the dog that finds a body; the handler has to know how
wind and terrain are affecting what the dog is smelling, and where the
scent is actually coming from. That’s the same in avalanche rescue work,
Crooks said.
“In Katrina, it was really helpful understanding what was happening in
all that debris,” he said. “The dog is the expert with the nose, but the
handler has to use his mind and put the dog in a position where the
dog’s nose can be used.”
Crooks was among dozens of canine rescue teams at Katrina that were
brought in from around the world. The dogs’ work was invaluable to the
rescue and recovery effort, he said.
“Search dogs are such a tremendous resource for search and rescue,”
Crooks said. “One dog can do in 30 minutes what 25 people can do in four
hours. Dogs can do it really fast.”
Since Hurricane Katrina, search-and-rescue leaders have been rethinking
the way dogs are used in rescue operations, Crooks said. Many dogs are
trained only to find live humans, but he’s now emphasizing the fact that
dogs must be cross-trained to find dead bodies. “That was really brought
to light in Katrina,” Crooks said.
“Dogs have got to be trained specifically for what they’re looking for.
If it’s not cross-trained to find deceased folks, it’s not going to do
the job.”
To train a dog to find deceased humans, handlers use aged human blood.
Temperature was one thing that was dramatically different between doing
rescues in Montana and working on Hurricane Katrina. In Louisiana,
veterinarians took the search dogs’ temperatures at least 10 times a day
and the dogs received intravenous fluids twice a day to battle
dehydration and contamination.
Keeping the dogs out of contaminated water was difficult. Many times the
handlers had to work
without a leash so the dog didn’t get hung up in debris, Crooks
explained. Without a leash, “it was very difficult to keep them out of
from contaminated water,” he said. “Contamination was just everywhere.”
The disaster that Crooks witnessed in Louisiana was more than he’d ever
seen.
“It was just devastation everywhere,” he said. “I don’t think you could
ever prepare for something of that magnitude. The ocean just came in and
basically swallowed up the Gulf Coast. The devastation was just
phenomenal.”
Crooks also was part the rescue effort in the December 1993 avalanche
that killed several snowmobilers in the Peters Ridge area near Bigfork.
While that was hectic, it paled in comparison to the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina. “It was pretty emotional at times,” he said. “You’re
just always in shock. It proved to me that we live on a fine edge and
when things go out of balance, things change very quickly.”
Crooks works with the Glacier Avalanche Center to help people determine
just where that edge is.
Although Northwest Montana is well-equipped with canine handlers in the
event of an avalanche, Crooks said he would prefer not having to use his
dogs to find a body. “It’s always better that the rescue doesn’t
happen,” he said. “People need to just pay attention to the environment.
If it’s not safe today, try another day.”
For Crooks, whether it’s in an avalanche or a hurricane, working with
rescue dogs is his way of giving back to the community. “Dogs are a joy
to work with,” he said. “There are a lot of benefits to that.”
What he saw in Louisiana was another example of human resilience; of
how, in the face of disaster, humans are able to see through the pain.
“People who had lost everything that they owned were just thankful they
had survived with their lives or their loved ones,” Crooks said. “Even
the ones who lost their loved ones had a much greater appreciation of
what really is important in life.”
MANY OF the people who enter canine rescue work already have some sort
of rescue experience. “It’s easier to train dogs than people,” said
Crooks, who works with the David Thompson Search and Rescue organization
in Lincoln County.
But Kim Gilmore took a different tack: As a student at the University of
Montana in the 1980s, she became interested in training her own search
dog.
“I just kind of fell in love with it,” she said.
Eventually she entered the search-and-rescue side and now is the
president of Flathead County Search and Rescue. She helps train dogs for
water, snow and wildland rescues.
She uses Belgian shepherds, a working breed of dog that is well-suited
to rescue work. Other breeds popular for rescue work are those from the
working and retrieving lines, including Australian shepherds, Border
collies, Labradors and other retrievers, according to Crooks. Yellow
labs performed especially well in Hurricane Katrina work because of
their ability to handle hot weather, Crooks said.
Not all canine work is a matter of life and death.
Last Saturday on Big Mountain, a children’s program titled “Doggie
Detectives” showed children how search dogs operate. Children buried
toys and even a live human volunteer in the snow. Once released from
their handlers, the dogs scurried about the snow before digging up their
toys and bringing them back to their owners, tails wagging.
And this is what Gilmore says training search dogs is all about. “It’s
essentially a game of hide and seek,” she said. “They learn that finding
people is a good thing.”
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