Deaf blind dog search continues

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BBC NEWS | UK | Wales | Deaf blind dog search continues

The search for a deaf and blind dog of 18, which has fallen down a hole on a south Wales' hillside is continuing sporadically into the night.

Rescuers are using their hands, pick axes and shovels to try to reach Jack Russell cross Sprogget, who vanished under old mine workings in Torfaen.

Rescuers have heard him whimpering under the ground on British Hill between Pantygasseg and Varteg.

An excavator and robot cameras were also used in the search on Thursday.

The rescuers were lighting the scene using a generator and their helmet lamps.

It is thought the hole, which Sprogget has fallen into, opened up on top of the old workings from the former Six Bells colliery nearby.

A team of around 15 rescuers spent much of Thursday trying to reach the dog in an operation which has estimated to have cost £1,000.

They used an excavator to dig between two and three metres below the surface but after a time could no longer use the machine because they are near Sprogget. Robot cameras were also employed in the search.

Mick Doyle from the Coal Authority said the rescue team had already heard the dog beneath the surface.

"We've got a couple of holes where we can hear Sprogget. The one we're digging in now is where we've had the loudest sound from him.

"The fissure's quite open below ground, so we're just trying to dig the top surface away.

"We're trying to get into a position where we can either get deeper into the fissure or possibly one of the guys can go down and try to locate him."

On Wednesday, the RSPCA and the fire service searched for the dog.

On Thursday, mine rescue experts were brought in to assist, along with an excavator.

Sprogget's owner, New Zealander David Sandford, who moved to the area in April, said he believed the hole on the hillside had opened up after recent rain.

Initially he had feared Sprogget might not have survived the first night.

He said: "This is the biggest event of his life so far so I just hope he comes out of it."
 
Search for deaf-blind dog called off

Search for deaf-blind dog called off - Wales News - News - icWales

THE search for a missing deaf and blind dog which fell down a hole was called off today.

Sprogget, an 18-year-old Jack Russell cross, slipped down a fissure at old mine workings in Torfaen, south Wales, on Wednesday, sparking a massive rescue operation.

But despite efforts from the rescue team, which involved excavating land and using a CCTV camera, there are no signs that Sprogget is still alive.

His owner, New Zealander David Sampford, said he was upset but praised the efforts to find Sprogget.

Rescuers had used shovels, pick axes and even their bare hands to try to reach Sprogget.

He was heard whimpering from the hole yesterday, but no sound was heard when rescuers resumed their mission this morning.

Mr Sampford, 30, from the nearby village of Abersychan, said his pet was fit and active, and that on Wednesday he had decided to take him on a different walk from his normal route over the mountainside.

“We were walking up the hill and he just suddenly fell down a hole,” said Mr Sampford.

“He scrabbled deeper into the hole and got himself trapped. He just stumbled on into it and I saw him go down. I normally walk him to the forest but decided to take him up here and it was a pretty big mistake.”

He now hopes gas can be piped into the hole at British Hill, between Pantygasseg and Varteg, to make sure Sprogget has passed away before it is filled in.

Mr Sampford, who has had Sprogget since he was 12, said: “We are going to get the RSPCA to make sure, because there’s still a little doubt in my mind but it looks as if he is dead.

“I just want to make sure before they fill the hole in. I will have to tell my family soon and we’ll have to move on. I am upset.

“The rescue workers wanted him out just as much as we did and I think most people are upset that we can’t get him.

“The effort they’ve put in here is as if they were trying to rescue a human, let alone a dog. They’ve done a really good job.”

Mike Doyle, a regional engineer for the Coal Authority, said: “This morning we came back and we were hoping we would hear him and get some sounds from there but it was not the case.

“The guys put CCTV cameras down there and we haven’t been able to see him, so with not knowing if he was alive or not, there was no point continuing.

“Last night we could hear him quite loudly and knew that he was in there somewhere but the reality of it is that the stone was quite dense and it was taking an hour to excavate a metre. In the worst case, he could have been six metres and it could have taken eight hours to get that distance.

“I think everybody involved is disappointed but we’ve taken a common sense approach and considered people’s welfare.”

He added: “We just wish we could have got the dog out.”
 
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