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Where Could Your Shy Lost Dog Be? - Part 4 in a Series


Toby has now been missing for three days. The owners are still hopeful that he may return on his own and are very wise to keep the bed, food and familiar scented articles at the point he went missing from.


But they also realize that they can’t control what happens to him while he is lost and he may have been seen and pursued by strangers. But where to start? Where does a shy lost dog want to hang out?


In our experience, lost dogs do not want to live deep in the woods. They prefer to lurk on the edge of civilization, near food sources.  In hot weather, they will need a reliable source of water. (In winter, they will eat snow).


 Toby needs a quiet place to hunker down during the day with an easy path to travel at dusk and dawn, when he is likely to be moving about for food and water.


Concentrate your flyering on places like this:

  • Houses that back onto wooded areas or parks

  • Tall grass or marshy areas

  • Cemeteries

  • Golf courses

  • Campgrounds and Picnic areas

  • Sporting fields

  • Industrial parks and abandoned factories

  • Quiet cul de sacs

  • Decks, old cars, old machinery, boats – especially with overgrown grass

  • Junkyards

  • Untidy yards and farm yards

  • Abandoned barns and sheds

  • Wooded areas behind restaurants, bars,  grocery stores and convenience stores – anywhere  food is sold or served

  • Anywhere that outdoor cats are being fed


Shy lost dogs will often have sore, raw feet from their initial bolt, or from travelling. They will usually avoid roadways and instead travel on railroad tracks, jogging and biking trails, power lines and along the edges of fields and streams. 


Look at satellite imagery using either Google maps , Apple Maps or Mapquest and examine a one to five mile radius of where he went missing from. Look for the sorts of places listed above as well as the possible routes of travel,  and get flyers and signs in these areas. Again, you aren’t looking for your dog – you are looking for the place that your dog may be hiding or may choose to hide tomorrow.  You are going to ALLOW him to have this hiding spot, but you are going to try to make sure he stays in one area. Once you determine where he is, you can implement a strategic plan to catch him.


Stay tuned! With all of your hard work of flyering and signs, you will soon have a sighting and you will need to know how to handle it.  Part 5



 
 
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