Dog Is Found Alive Month After Boat Sinks
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - A Labrador retriever has been found alive on an isolated cove
of a Southeast Alaska island more than a month after its owner was given up for
dead when his boat sank in rough seas.
Two local fishermen found the dog named Brick on Heceta Island several miles from
the accident. The men had known the dog's owner, Greg Clark, who went down with
his boat in late January.
Brick swam to the men's boat and was hauled aboard - underweight, with an injured
leg, fur matted with tree sap, but wiggling with joy, according to friends of
the fishermen.
The discovery of the 8-year-old dog last week sent a shock through the close-knit
rain-forest community of mariners and loggers, who had given up hope of finding
Clark, 48.
"I was blown away," said John Pugh, a friend of Clark who has custody
of the animal.
The dog was starting to rebound, Pugh told the Anchorage Daily News. "He's
hungry as hell and a little skinny, but he's doing all right."
Clark was lost after his 32-foot boat Katrina broke apart Jan. 22 on rocks near
Cape Lynch on the west side of the island, among a cluster of islands within the
17 million-acre Tongass National Forest. Clark, a longtime beach logger who lived
alone with half a dozen Labs and their pups, had been making a supply run into
Craig from his home on Kosciusko Island when he radioed his boat had lost power.
With him was Brick, his constant companion, and a 2-month-old puppy Clark had
planned to deliver to new owners in town.
A three-day search by local residents and Coast Guard crews found a rolled-up
survival suit, part of the boat's stern and other debris, but no sign of Clark
or his dogs.
Over the past month, people had resigned themselves that Clark and his dogs were
gone, Pugh said. The animals left at home were adopted by Clark's brother in Oregon
and friends in Alaska.
Then last Thursday, Kevin Dau - Pugh's partner in an oyster operation - was fishing
for winter king salmon with his father off the northwestern coast of Heceta near
the accident site. When the two men motored into Port Alice to anchor for the
night, Dau saw a black animal on the beach.
"His father said, 'That's a wolf.' But Kevin said, 'No, that's Brick,' "
Pugh said. "And he got out on the bow and started calling, 'Brick! Brick!'
Brick's survival alone on the thick, jungly island during harsh winter weather
has amazed and moved local people, Pugh said.
"It's such a rural area, your friends are really your family out here, and
Greg was family to all of us," he said. "Losing him, it's hard to explain
to people how we really felt. He was such a unique person. It's hard to explain
when you're having to search for him and you don't know what you're going to find.
Then, after a month, to find Brick - it brings back a whole slew of feelings."
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