Search and Rescue Dogs of...
Illustration
Search and Rescue Dogs of Colorado (SARDOC) train hundreds of hours a year. They never quit practicing in order to help find victims of tragedy. They might find someone like the twelve-year-
old little girl who wandered off near Aspen and spent the night in the wild. Or someone like the 88-year-old woman who wandered off from a nursing home on New Year's Day, 1997, in Washington, and was found eighteen hours later. The dogs are able to find victims buried under the snow in avalanches or under the debris of earthquakes. Humans would find these rescues difficult if not impossible. Only 73 dogs have been certified as basic or advanced "disaster dogs" by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). In this text Jesus tells a Gentile woman that he has come to do what no one else could accomplish -- to rescue those who otherwise would be lost, first the people of Israel, and then the rest of the world.
-- Guettler
old little girl who wandered off near Aspen and spent the night in the wild. Or someone like the 88-year-old woman who wandered off from a nursing home on New Year's Day, 1997, in Washington, and was found eighteen hours later. The dogs are able to find victims buried under the snow in avalanches or under the debris of earthquakes. Humans would find these rescues difficult if not impossible. Only 73 dogs have been certified as basic or advanced "disaster dogs" by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). In this text Jesus tells a Gentile woman that he has come to do what no one else could accomplish -- to rescue those who otherwise would be lost, first the people of Israel, and then the rest of the world.
-- Guettler
