<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Monday,  November 18 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Life / Pets & Wildlife

A classic love tail: Man rescues dog. Dog rescues man.

By LEANNE ITALIE, Associated Press
Published: May 13, 2016, 6:00am
2 Photos
In this Monday, May 2, 2016 photo, George, a once neglected and homeless 140-pound Newfoundland Landseer, stands with his owner, Colin Campbell, after an interview in New York.
In this Monday, May 2, 2016 photo, George, a once neglected and homeless 140-pound Newfoundland Landseer, stands with his owner, Colin Campbell, after an interview in New York. Campbell is on a nationwide promotional tour for his new book, "Free Days with George." (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews) (Bebeto Matthews/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

NEW YORK — It’s a classic love tail: Broken man means broken dog and together they make life good again.

Colin Campbell was a regular guy living a regular life in 2008. He had a nice job, a nice house and a beautiful wife until, as heartache often happens, he returned from a business trip to learn his beautiful wife didn’t want to be married anymore.

“I really struggled” is Campbell’s short description of what went down. “I was shocked. There were no second chances. No discussion about it.”

Living in Toronto, Campbell’s friends grew concerned, suggesting he do something that he had never done before: get a dog.

Rambling around his house alone and depressed, he went online to a pet rescue site and found about as much dog as any human might bargain for, the kind-faced George, a 140-pound Landseer Newfoundland.

George, too, was in need of saving. He had been abandoned. There was evidence of abuse and neglect. He was wary of men in particular, including Campbell, and had trouble with trust.

Together the two healed, and a move a year later to Los Angeles worked some magic of its own.

Newfoundlands are water dogs, though George had never had the opportunity to experience the ocean. When Campbell went surfing, George swam right out and hopped on his board, earning accolades over the next three years from the surf crowd at Hermosa Beach and competing a couple of times in a doggie surf competition that raises money for pet rescue.

“I don’t think he had ever swam before, but he just instinctively knew how to do it,” said Campbell, 54. “He had balance and he had an affinity for it and he did really well. So George went from homeless in Canada to surf champ in California.”

All of this, it turns out, made for a great book, “Free Days with George,” out this month from Anchor Canada, an imprint of Penguin Random House. The title, Campbell said, comes from something his grandfather used to say, having saved from drowning three Allied comrades on D-Day as they stormed Juno Beach at Normandy.

He, Seymour Wylde Howes III, considered all good days spent doing something you love, with people who love you, free days. “That’s a good day,” he’d say. “That’s a free day on Earth.”

That’s how it felt for Campbell, surfing with George, loving George, sharing George with all of his admirers.

Loading...