From the category archives:

Maya

21 hour old trail, 1 mile, French Woods, NY

21 hour old trail, 1 mile, French Woods, NY. Subject = blue and Maya = red

This trail was 21 hours old just under a mile in length.  Maya and I traveled 1.58 miles in 40 minutes to complete.  At our most distant point we were 195 yards off the actual track. The winds were variable up to 8 mph during the time this trail was aging.  The start was contaminated by a handful of people, as it started at a daycare building.

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This week Eagle Valley Search Dogs hired Deb Palman, a retired Maine Warden, who has been involved for 30 years in K-9 Search and Rescue.  She is a master trainer for the International Police Working Dog Association (IPWDA).  Today Maya passed the IPWDA Search and Rescue trailing test.  The testing standards can be viewed by clicking on this link. IPWDA.
Maya did a nice job.  At her most distant point she was 228 feet from the actual track.  The wind was mostly from the South 3-7 mph but as you can see from the chart below it became more variable throughout the day.  This trail was laid at 9:30am and ran at 2:30pm.  You can see where the scent traveled up hill and where the Coxing Kill Creek sucked the scent towards the water. It took us 64 minutes to complete from start to finish.
IPWDA Test 5hr. old trail, 1.2 miles, Subject = blue, Maya = red

IPWDA Test, 1.2 miles, Subject = blue, Maya = red

ipwdaforecast

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Maya's track on the Copake, NY Search

Maya's track on the Copake, NY Search

It was Sunday morning and Rita called me at 7:30am to inform me that the Forest Rangers requested us for a search in Copake, NY for an 32 year old male with autism.  I cancelled my dogs for the morning slots and arrived at the command post at 9:00am.

My plan was to start at the PLS and cast Maya around the perimeter of the entire facility which is approximately 100 acres.  If Maya did not pick up any outlets of the subject’s scent away from the facility then we could have the area search dogs clear all the buildings that were possibilities within the facility.

At 9:00am the trail was 15.5 hours old. It took Maya and me, 64 minutes to cast around the entire perimeter of the facility. On the south side of our perimeter she had picked up scent and followed it about 300 yards, made a big loop (traveling in the direction of the arrows) as we came back around towards the road she got very animated and more intense, rushed down towards the swamp and gave me a negative (where the boxed X is on the map).  I made the decision to continue to cast around the perimeter at point.  Perhaps in hindsight this was not a wise decision.  She had zero interest in the rest of the perimeter.  After having did the entire property once I returned to base and reported my findings to the Incident Commander: only had trail interest to the south and that I’d like to rest her for 30 minutes then take her down the road a quarter mile and cast her for scent down there.  If nothing turns up then either do the perimeter one more time or break out my area search dog and get an assignment to assist in building searches.  About 15 minutes after talking to the Incident Commander the subject was located by police about 1.3 miles away, south near Upper Rhoda Pond.  The subject’s location was southeast of where Maya and me had scent labeled as a large black dot in the bottom right hand corner of the map.  If this search had continued any longer Command could have used this information as a direction of travel and started some area search dogs in that direction at the same time as doing building searches.  The subject was alive and in good health.

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Maya's first track is in blue and second is in red.

Maya's first track is in blue and second is in red.

I received a call-out from Rita Argiros, K-9 Coordinator for NYSFEDSAR and my team president, at 8:38am requesting a trailing dog for a subject in Marcellus, NY. I called Roger Fox, the chairman of NYSFEDSAR, on his cell phone to confirm that I was leaving for the command post immediately.

I arrived at the command post at 12:15pm. Signed in with Brian Buff, CCHSAR senior K9 Handler. Roger explained the scenario to me with Brian. There were two guys in their twenties that were intoxicated and they crashed the car in the ditch then ran off. One of them was picked up quickly. We were concerned that the other was in the woods injured.

I was introduced to some family members where there was a jacket that many people had touched. I felt that this scent article was too contaminated and asked to go to the subject’s residence.

A sheriff deputy led me to the house where I acquired a shoe sole and a pair of boxers that the mother and another female (sister or girlfriend?) had touched —those were the best articles available.

When I returned to base they told me I had to share my article with a sheriff’s trailing dog. I led the sheriff deputy to the PLS, where I created an additional scent article using a gauze pad for the sheriff deputy to take with him and I held my scent bag for the dog to take scent from, which the dog clearly did by sticking his entire head in the bag. At that point, I left with my flanker to go to my first starting point.

My first starting point was a set of tracks that Amir Findling, a fellow teammate of mine who happens to live just 2 minutes from the search area had been on for some time. It was approximately 1:30pm. I had to walk in 350 yards with K-9 Maya on lead to get to where I scented her. Prior to scenting her I have a standard procedure that I like to do when I am given an area to cast the dog but it’s not really known if the subject was there or not. I take a person (in this case my flanker) and have them cut a hot track across the potential subject’s trail. Then I have the cross tracker hang back about 100 yards while I cast my dog for scent. This is done to visually test my dog that if she were to jump trail (which she has never done thus far in her career) she would likely do it on a hotter trail. If the trail of a subject she has been scented on, is in the area, seldom in a forest environment does it take longer than 3-5 minutes at most for her to commit to trail. I casted her for 15 minutes and there were times when she seemed like she was going to commit but never followed through… and this is a dog that will tow a car out of a ditch, if solid on trail. After 15 minutes I praised her off that scent, put her back on her collar and heeled her back to the truck with my flanker and Amir.

The Marcellus Fire Chief brought the three of us to the place where the first victim was picked up. It was approximately 2:30pm. I brought Maya to where the car went off the road to scent her there and started casting. Within seconds it was clear that she had scent of the subject and within 3 or 4 minutes we were advancing north into a corn field on the west side.

Maya stayed committed to the trail throughout. I rested her 4 times to give her water and to let my flanker catch up and take a break as well. It was fairly windy and the scent certainly seemed to behaving the way it should on a day like this — moving far and wide (possibly hundreds of yards given the fairly flat open terrain). Side note to our dog handlers reading this: I always say that wind is an air scent dog’s best friend and a trailing dog’s worst nightmare. So — we continued on as we gradually moved farther west until we came out onto Dublin Road. Very open area with the wind at that time blowing down the hill across the street from the east. So that’s the direction that the dog initially wanted to go.

As we came out onto the intersection Maya’s first desire was to go across the road and a bit south then she looped west and north. On the west side of Dublin Rd. prior to crossing the road there were three houses that she went by with zero interest. We crossed onto Scotch Hill Rd. and the first house on the left she checked the garage doors with great intensity. I circled the house a few times and she went back to the door every time. I brought her to the other side of Scotch Hill Rd., where I casted her for scent and I brought her in front of two houses across the street she had zero interest. I brought her up to the intersection to re-scent her for my own insecurities. When I offered her the scent article — she barked at me — turned around 180 degrees and went back to the white house and jumped up on the garage door. She has never done that before and clearly was getting frustrated that I was not believing her. At that point I felt that I had to call base and inform them that I felt the subject was here or had been here at some point.

Police officers arrived at the house around 3:40pm, where Maya, myself and my flanker. This appeared to be a really good lead because the couple that live in this house were the same age as our subject and known to be big time party people. They checked the house and found nobody.

I have done over 500 trails with this dog and anytime she has lingered at a bench a door or door way, building, etc. it has been because we had the subject stop there for at least 5 minutes or more. You have to realize that to a trailing dog, whom is following a few skin cells here and there and then to run into an area where the subject even just hung out for a few minutes…. The dog will notice that and the handler should be able to read that visually. This was an ideal area for scent to collect because it was on the east side of the house under a car port, attached to the house with tons of junk under there— all shielding scent movement near that door.

Since we were in a suburban area and based on what my dog was telling me it was the assumption that the subject was being evasive and I felt based on my experience at this incident that it made sense for me to stop our search effort here and not push farther north or south. I have attached a map with this report and the black arrows show the areas that were not checked for scent. My search was concluded at 3:45pm. Headed back to based to sign out with Brian.

The subject was located roughly a half mile south of where I ended my trail. Nobody knows the route the subject had walked nor will we likely ever know. But the subject was not in the woods and was found wearing clean clothes and denying anything pertaining to the car accident upon being discovered.

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I was in route to training with teammates Buddy and Jana when I got the call to assist in a runaway search out towards western New York.  By the time I had arrived,  at 3:30pm, the two kids had been on the move since 9:00am that morning. They’d traveled through the woods in a foot of snow in a temperature of 10 degrees — with a wind chill of zero.

Rita and Ripley had trailed them to the railroad tracks heading towards town.  I was near town with the plan to work Quax, my area search dog, back up towards where Rita and Rip had their tracks.  The plan then got changed to move back up the railroad by driving a distance up and cutting for tracks, until we found them to start Maya on the trail.  While doing that we received intel that the kids had made it into the village and were last seen at the gas station talking to a guy in a pick-up truck.  The individual who spotted them went inside the station to notify base.  When he came out he didn’t see the kids and the truck was driving away…. where the kids in the back of the truck?

There were several people driving patrol looking for the kids on the streets.  Sarah and I decided to take Maya back to the PLS, the gas station, and scent Maya there to see what happens.  I was concerned that if the kids were lying down in the back of the truck that drove away that she would vehicle trail them, especially since it was probably only 15-20 minutes old.  So I scented Maya near the pumps and it took only 15 seconds for her to take trail in the direction that the truck had gone.

Still questioning if they traveled by foot or truck…. Maya was pulling like a bull.  We were one hundred yards into the trail when Sarah gets called on the radio…. “They are in the hotel in the village!”

Where were we? Directly across the street!

Maya was hot on it and she jumped across the street did the roadside perimeter of the building and went through the lobby doors to her subjects.  She jumped right up on the one kids lap where he sat in a chair.  Both kids were in good health.  Maya nearly had an official find but thankfully one of our searchers that was driving around checked the hotel.  It was her shortest trail in a long time.  It was a quarter mile in 4 minutes.

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