logo
Tears of joy as Valerie the runaway dachshund finally reunited with owners

Tears of joy as Valerie the runaway dachshund finally reunited with owners

CNN07-05-2025

CNN —
Valerie the dachshund has finally been reunited with her owners after surviving 540 days alone on Kangaroo Island in South Australia.
Owners Georgia Gardner and Josh Fishlock described the moment they got to hold the tiny pup in their arms in a statement published Wednesday.
Gardner said she 'burst into tears' when Valerie ran up to her as they saw each other again for the first time on Tuesday.
'She was wagging her tail, making her little happy sounds, and wiggling around with joy. I held her and cried and cried,' she said in the statement.
'She's stockier now, strong and healthy… healthier than we are, honestly!' added Gardner.
Fishlock said the pair hadn't expected to see Valerie again.
'It still doesn't feel real,' he said in the statement.
Valerie, who will soon celebrate her third birthday, went missing on a camping trip to the island in November 2023.
When strangers tried to help, she fled into the undergrowth, and her owners eventually gave up and returned home to the mainland.
With no sightings it was assumed Valerie had met her match with a snake or perhaps one of the giant Rosenberg's goannas — reptiles up to 1.5 meters (5 feet) long — that occupy the island.
However, reports of sightings started to emerge, sparking a massive search operation led by volunteers from the Kangala Wildlife Rescue, a non-profit group set up in 2020 following the devastating Australian bushfires.
Valerie was eventually found on April 25, and has been looked after by the charity since.
Director Jared Karran described Valerie as 'truly something special.'
'She was just so much smaller than we imagined. If it was a miracle before that she'd survived — seeing her size — it's just unbelievable that she was able to survive and thrive out there!' he said in the statement.
Home to around 5,000 people, Kangaroo Island is about 45 minutes from the mainland by ferry. Tourists go there to see Australian native wildlife, but officials have long had a problem controlling introduced species including feral cats. The island is thick with bush, and there are many places for a small dog to hide.
Another difficulty is the island's vibrant ecosystem, according to the charity.
'One of the reasons this is such a difficult rescue and not as easy as just baiting and setting traps, is due to the fact we are constantly competing with hundreds of wildlife like possums, wallabies, kangaroos, goannas and feral cats. All which are all just after a feed also,' the group said in a post on Facebook before the little dog was found.
Now Valerie is preparing to return home to Albury, New South Wales, where she will be reunited with Gardner and Fishlock's other pets, Lucy the rescue cat, Mason the red heeler and their latest addition, Dorothy, a fellow dachshund.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The moment I knew: she was giving birth to another man's child – I was in absolute awe
The moment I knew: she was giving birth to another man's child – I was in absolute awe

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The moment I knew: she was giving birth to another man's child – I was in absolute awe

In 2018 I had just started lecturing in nursing at a university in South Australia. It was the start of the academic year and I was new to town, so a colleague and I decided to check out the open-day stalls. I'd been vegan for a few years and was hoping to meet some like-minded folk. A person in a Sea Shepherd hoodie pointed me in the right direction and I was immediately struck by this woman sitting in the middle of the stall. It's a moment captured in resin in my mind – there was a crowd of people and cupcakes on the table. I would say I was 13 paces away from Laura when I first clapped eyes on her. She was just breathtaking; smiling, happily chatting to people. She seemed to have this immense gravity to her and I could feel myself getting pulled into her orbit. I chatted to her and a few others and left the encounter absolutely stunned. No work got done for the rest of the afternoon. I didn't know what to make of it. It was a struggle to even accept she existed. I was in shock but I did my best to brush it aside. I was married at the time, but things weren't going well. I definitely wasn't looking for love, but I joined the Vegan and Vegetarian Club and we saw each other in passing over the next few months. During that time I discovered Laura was in a relationship too. Six months later I was going through a divorce and I learned Laura had also separated from her partner. But her situation was a lot more complicated; not only was she still living with her ex to care for their three-year-old, she was also five months pregnant. It sounds absurd to say, but these details felt peripheral to me. Such was the chemistry between us that we managed to turn the famously unsexy annual general meeting of the Vegan and Vegetarian Club into our first romantic encounter. We kissed by the campus lake and I was a goner. We agreed that whatever we were getting into was temporary. With a preschooler and baby on the way, and life as a single parent to get used to, a new partner was a convolution she didn't feel she needed. I knew I very much fell into the nice-to-have, not need-to-have category. I thought I was OK with that. I even tried to date other people. But being with Laura was like having the colours of the world turned up to 11. Every other encounter paled in comparison; I only had eyes for her. As her pregnancy progressed, I found myself helping her more and more. Each day we felt ourselves slipping into a relationship and each day she reminded me that we weren't serious. When her waters broke six weeks early, I was the one who took her to the hospital and helped advocate for her. The midwives weren't taking the situation seriously and from a professional perspective I knew they were dropping the ball. Eventually they conceded Laura was likely going to experience a preterm birth. The following days were intense, but I never left her side. In a gesture of what I'd like to think of as 'radical acceptance' – and much to Laura's chagrin – I installed a baby capsule in my car. Despite her protestations, I knew deep down I'd be the one to drive her and the baby home from hospital when the time came. Not long after that, she went into labour. If I thought I found Laura impressive before, watching her give birth sent my opinion of her stratospheric. By the time the staff agreed to check how she was progressing, she was 10cm dilated and ready to push. By that point her confidence with the staff was at such a low ebb she rejected their offer of a wheelchair and instead elected to walk herself up a flight of stairs to get to the birthing suite. I was in absolute awe. Our daughter was born shortly after. Related: The moment I knew: I was complaining about my mum, and his tender response changed my life Once the pressures of having a baby in the neonatal intensive care unit had passed, I asked Laura when she wanted me out of the way. 'If I wanted you gone, you wouldn't be here,' she told me. 'I don't want you to go.' She was showing such vulnerability, and it wasn't easy for her. But in that moment I could see her own radical acceptance had hit home. I knew all too well I was madly in love; it turned out I wasn't the only one. Seven years later our blended family has grown to include two more children. In 2023 I proposed to Laura on national television. She said yes.

10 years after the Mount Kinabalu earthquake, survivors return to climb again
10 years after the Mount Kinabalu earthquake, survivors return to climb again

CNN

time3 days ago

  • CNN

10 years after the Mount Kinabalu earthquake, survivors return to climb again

Dangling from a tree for nearly seven hours, 11-year-old Prajesh Dhimant Patel was barely conscious — only the faint, slow movement of his feet, clad in bright orange shoes, hinted at a trace of life. Amid the debris of crushed boulders unleashed by a devastating earthquake, a tour guide was descending the mountain when, from the corner of his eye, he caught sight of those bright shoes. It was that flash of orange that led the guide to Patel, and ultimately, saved the schoolboy's life. It's been 10 years since the tragic morning of June 5, 2015, when 29 students and eight teachers from Singapore's Tanjong Katong Primary School set off on what was meant to be a memorable school expedition to climb the 13,435 feet Mount Kinabalu on the island of Borneo, Malaysia. As the group ascended, a 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck, triggering a landslide that buried part of the expedition. Patel was swept away by the thundering cascade of rocks and dirt and hoisted into a tree. Seven students and two teachers from his group never made it back. Eighteen people in total lost their lives. For Patel, now 21, the memories are blurred by trauma and lost to time, much like the friends and teachers he lost that day. But on the 10th anniversary of the tragedy, he felt ready to revisit that chapter of his life. 'I had always wanted to know what had happened, because nobody shared it with me,' he said. Joined by his former classmate and fellow survivor, Emyr Uzayr, Patel began the journey to retrace the very trails that once tested their limits — and to heal. When Patel and Uzayr reunited for the climb on May 20 this year, they were ready — despite lingering anxiety and fear — to honor the friends who never came home. The two had stayed in a vague sort of touch after the 2015 disaster, little more than brief hellos on Instagram and scattered 'how are you' messages. Despite barely speaking over the years, one thing was clear for both of them: returning to Mount Kinabalu was unfinished business. They were both eager to return and shake off the ghosts on the 10th anniversary of the earthquake. On the climb, they reunited with Cornelius Sanan, the 43-year-old Malaysian mountain guide who, 10 years earlier, had saved Patel's life. Sanan told CNN that the first thing he said to Patel was, 'Where are your magic shoes?' 'I wish I still had them,' Patel replied, 'but they held too many painful memories, so my parents didn't want me to keep them.' Though the bright orange shoes were long gone, Patel wore a familiar religious pendant around his neck — his lucky charm, which Sanan recognized. It was the same pendant Patel had worn on the day of the quake. The group hoped to complete the climb in two days. But in the early hours of May 21, heavy rain began to fall, forcing them to spend an extra day on the mountain. What could have been a frustrating delay turned into an opportunity to listen to the stories of the locals who still remembered that tragic day, and to hear from Sanan himself. 'It became more of a shared journey than a personal one,' Uzayr reflected. The next morning, at 3:30 a.m., just as the rain eased, they resumed their climb through the steep, soggy terrain of Mount Kinabalu. 'It was physically very tough,' Uzayr admitted. 'At some point, I wondered — how did we even manage this when we were just kids?' Under clear skies and with fresh mountain air all around, as Uzayr climbed, the old memories surged back. 'Every step we took,' the 21-year-old recalled, 'memories of our friends came flooding back.' Unlike Patel, Uzayr remembers everything from that fateful day which began with laughter, the thrill of a long-awaited school trip finally coming to life. 'We were just kids, telling each other, 'Hurry up! Move faster!'' he recalled with a soft smile. The day had only just begun when the ground began to tremble. 'The whole mountain shook,' he said. 'And then, thousands of rocks — some the size of car tires — came crashing down from above at very fast, fast speed.' Teachers shouted, 'Get down! Get down!' But the rocks fell faster than anyone could react to. 'I remember the colors of my friends' jackets everywhere,' he said quietly, 'and then… the bodies.' Uzayr was left covered in cuts, with a fractured skull. But he made it out alive. For Patel, though; the memories are mostly lost and scattered. It is Sanan, the mountain guide who found him, who now helps fill in the blanks. He shows Patel the exact tree where he had been found, dangling for hours — barely visible. 'We saw a bit of movement and thought, 'maybe someone is still alive',' Sanan told CNN. 'We made the decision to bring Patel up without any proper gear. We just had to try.' 'If I had landed just a few meters to the left or right,' Patel said, 'they wouldn't have been able to see me. The trees would've hidden me completely.' He was severely injured, physically and emotionally. 'I completely couldn't speak, couldn't walk, couldn't write,' he recalled, 'so I had to relearn how to do every basic thing from the start.' And yet, the man who pulled Patel from the trees wasn't trained in rescue at all. Sanan had only been a mountain guide for five years, with no prior experience in a natural disaster. But on that day, instinct took over. Sanan lost someone too — his cousin Robbie Sapinggi, a fellow guide who had been leading a Thai tourist when the earthquake hit. Sapinggi was caught under falling rocks. Knowing he wouldn't make it, he told the tourist to go on without him. Another mountain guide, Joseph Soludin, also lost his life that day. Sanan still guides today. It's his way of honoring Sapinggi's memory. 'I continue guiding,' he said, 'because part of my soul lives here (in Mount Kinabalu).' To Uzayr and Patel, Sanan will always be their hero — the man who saved lives. But Sanan shakes his head. 'We were all there that day — guides, rescuers, everyone. No one did it alone,' he said softly. 'We were all heroes, in our own way.' The trails on Mount Kinabalu have since been rebuilt. A dedicated rescue team now stands ready every day. Safety has changed, but the mountain hasn't. High up in those peaks, the memories of 2015 still live on. 'In everything we do now, we carry their memories,' Uzayr said. 'We honored what our friends never got the chance to finish.' And sometimes, when the weight of memory grows heavy, they think of the little things. Like the bright orange shoes caught in a tree — proof that life clings on, even in the darkest moments. 'We found a renewed sense of purpose,' Uzayr said. 'And realized it was time to accept the past and move on to the future.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store