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Website set up to find missing pets


A PET detective has launched a free online tracking service for owners whose animals have been lost or stolen.

In the past month, dog thieves have struck at least three times, taking greyhounds in Harwell, a lurcher in Oxford and a Labrador puppy in Aston Rowant.

Internet entrepreneur Nick Carpenter, 36, set up Oxfordshire Animal Finders from his home in Bicester after he lost Cooper, one of his pet cats.

The initiative has hundreds of volunteers signed up to a Pet Watch scheme – a countywide network of people kept informed of missing and lost pets and animals.

In the six months since it went online there have been more than 200 reports of lost and stolen pets, of which half have been reunited with their owners. The service is free of charge.

Mr Carpenter said: “I had no idea what to expect. I thought we would get a few reports, but not this many.

“I’ve been surprised with the amount of cats that go missing. Eighty per cent of reports involve cats.

“We’ve got people going out looking down their street for us, or even new mums on maternity leave who do a lot of walking will keep an eye out.

“There are people from all walks of life who are just out and about a lot.”

The website lists pets reported missing from all over the county and sends details to the RSPCA, Cats Protection and local veterinary surgeries.

Volunteers receive a text message or email update on any animals that might be missing in their area.

The Pet Watch scheme has recently reunited a pet cat, which had been lost for a week, with its owner and found a tortoise that had strayed a mile from its home.

Mr Carpenter said: “We don’t get too many stolen animal reports, but there has been a spate in south Oxfordshire recently.

“Dogs are stolen for a variety of reasons – for breeding if they are pedigree, for dog fighting or for a sport like hare coursing.

“Sometimes they may be stolen and sold in a pub for £50 to pay for drugs.”

On September 19 a black lurcher was stolen after her owner left the dog tied up at the Sainsbury’s supermarket, in Heyford Hill, Oxford. She was later found in Northampton and returned to her owner.

Thieves stole three greyhounds after breaking into Winaway Kennels in Harwell, near Didcot, on September 23.

Greyhounds Mays Risky and Suki Getz were both found later that day abandoned, but Saving Tyrone is still missing.

On September 25, thieves scaled a garden fence in Aston Rowant and forced open a kennel and stole a black Labrador puppy belonging to Brett Denly and his family.

Pc Pete Hale, of Thames Valley Police, said dog thefts remained a problem in Oxfordshire.

He said: “It’s a constant issue. All types of dogs from a small chihuhua up to greyhounds and lurchers are targeted for many different reasons.”

To report a lost pet, see animalfinders.co.uk or call 0800 999 2343.

LEFT BEREFT A father said his daughters were distraught after thieves stole their pet dog.

Thieves broke into Brett Denley’s garden in Aston Rowant on September 25 and stole five-month-old pedigree black Labrador Boris.

Mr Denly, who has four daughters aged four, nine, 10 and 13, found Boris’s collar in a bush.

He said: “How they didn’t manage to get spotted, I don’t know.

“We have been putting up posters and looking on websites for help, such as Oxford Animal Finders. There have been a couple of sightings, but they haven’t led to anything.

“The girls have been beside themselves. It was our first pet and we had him for two months and he was taken away.

“I think he was stolen to order and someone has him who wanted him.”

Comments(8)

RJ says...
9:02pm Mon 26 Oct 09

Brilliant use of the web by Mr C! (Brilliant website too.)

I hope - one day- the UK creates a tracker dog pet detection service, like lostpetdetection in the USA. It would be a great supplement to this kind of service.

In the meantime, I wish Nick Carpenter the best of luck with this project. I hope it helps more people find their pets.





Filet O Fish says...
7:36am Tue 27 Oct 09

Yes. But It will put up the price of our Chinese takeaways !!

Vestan Pance says...
9:43am Tue 27 Oct 09

yes good work fella........

Filet O Fish, assume you got your nickname because you smell like a tw*t?

Dave80 says...
9:52am Tue 27 Oct 09

well done Nick Carpenter what a brilliant idea and service. I wish you every success. And Vestan, that is quite possibly the funniest comment I've ever read and you're probably right too!

Foxy Lady says...
1:09pm Tue 27 Oct 09

Fantastic, brilliant and wonderful.

Well done indeed.


NickCarpenter says...
3:41pm Tue 27 Oct 09

RJ, Vetsan, Dave80 & Foxy Lady - many thanks for your messages of support. We'll just ignore Mr Golden Arches!

Kat Albrecht says...
7:01pm Tue 27 Oct 09

I'm the founder of Missing Pet Partnership, the nonprofit in the USA who trained/certified the Lost Pet Detection crew mentioned by RJ. A lost pet web site is a great start, but I'm actually surprised that the U.K. hasn't jumped at the chance to come here (Seattle, WA, USA) to learn what we're doing and launch CSI-based pet detective services in the U.K. We use cat detection dogs, scent tracking dogs, high-tech equipment, behavioral profiling, and forensics and conduct physical searches for lost pets with great results. I've had producers from the U.K. want to develop a reality TV show, but that never happened. The publisher of my memoirs (THE LOST PET CHRONICLES) is the U.K. based Bloomsbury, but the book was never published in the U.K. We've had a chap from IRELAND come over and take our course--he now runs a pet detective agency and does physical searches for lost pets. When will I hear somene say, "The British Are Coming, The British Are Coming!" Or better yet, if someone in the U.K. would organize the event (2 week certification course), I'd come over there and teach it! Really, I would!!
www.missingpetpartne
rship.org

RJ says...
10:06pm Tue 27 Oct 09

Hi Kat, glad you found this item.
With a website like this, plus the pioneering techniques you use… people could be spared a lot of heartache.

Why not drop Nick a line at animalfinders - maybe he knows a contact who will help.


Oxfordshire Animal Finders’ founder Nick Carpenter with Charlie, one of his cats Hannah Denly, four, front, with her sisters, from left, Lucy, Annabelle and Susie, and their mother Ali

Oxfordshire Animal Finders’ founder Nick Carpenter with Charlie, one of his cats

Hannah Denly, four, front, with her sisters, from left, Lucy, Annabelle and Susie, and their mother Ali



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