As a longtime adventurer, Tom Hudson has done and seen it all. He’s captained sailboats through harsh winds, he’s spotted enormous eels in New Zealand waterfalls and he’s surfed the foreboding waves of Central America. Clearly, Hudson is no stranger to surprises. But recently, while paddling down the Saskatchewan River on a canoe trip across Canada, Hudson saw something that managed to shock him.
Up ahead, barely perceptible along the muddy shoreline, was a fluffy white dog all alone.
Curious, Hudson paddled over to the area and got a better look.
At first, Hudson thought the pup might just be cooling off in the river. But soon it became clear that she wasn’t luxuriating — she was trapped.
“[W]hen I got closer, I heard more of a … whimpering,” Hudson told The Dodo. “[I] knew straight away she did not want to be there.”
Hudson removed the sticks and logs from around the pup, then he gently lifted her out from the mucky shoreline.
“[I]t was a struggle,” Hudson said. “But she was helping me as best she could with her front legs.”
The dog was finally free, but she was too weak to move on her own. Hudson considered leaving her there and going to search for help, but he quickly realized she did not want to be left alone.
“The way she cried and looked at me when I took a few steps away from her, I knew I had to take her with me,” Hudson said.
Hudson carefully loaded the dog into his canoe. Together, Hudson and his new companion paddled down the river, searching for her family.
Eventually, Hudson came to a house along the shore. He moored his canoe at the house’s dock and settled the dog on dry land. With hope in his heart, Hudson knocked on the house’s door and explained the situation to the man inside. Miraculously, the man knew exactly who Hudson had found. He explained that the pup was his — her name was Ivy, and he’d been searching for her for days.
Ivy’s dad picked her up and moved her into a kiddie pool. Hudson helped Ivy’s family scrub the mud off of her fur. Clean and cared for, Ivy munched on food and began regaining her strength.
Ivy’s grateful family asked Hudson if he’d stay for dinner and offered him a bed for the evening. After so many nights on his own, Hudson gladly accepted.
“I’ve been living in my tent outside in the wilderness for the past two months, so to get offered a house and a warm bed was huge for me,” Hudson said.
You can watch the whole story unfold in a video here:
Waving goodbye to Ivy and her family the next morning, Hudson paddled away with an immense feeling of satisfaction and a renewed sense of positivity.
“The kindness I have received from the people here in Canada has far exceeded my expectations,” Hudson said. “Since helping Ivy, the messages I have received from around the world [have] been so reassuring that there’s so much good in the world.”
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Source: Tampa Bay Times