Wednesday,  December 11 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Northwest

Washington woman quits job, searches 57 days for missing dog

A Washington state woman whose 7-year-old border collie went missing in Montana quit her job and searched for 57 days before finding her with the help and encouragement of Kalispell-area residents

By MACKENZIE REISS, The Daily Inter Lake
Published: September 19, 2019, 10:40pm
2 Photos
Carole King of Deer Park holds her border collie, Katie, on Tuesday. Katie went missing for 57 days before she was located in a Kalispell, Mont., neighborhood.
Carole King of Deer Park holds her border collie, Katie, on Tuesday. Katie went missing for 57 days before she was located in a Kalispell, Mont., neighborhood. (Mackenzie Reiss/Daily Inter Lake) Photo Gallery

KALISPELL, Mont. — After 57 days, a Washington woman’s exhaustive search for her missing border collie ended in tears of happiness when the pair were reunited in a Kalispell subdivision.

Carole King, of Deer Park had traveled to Flathead County for a four-day getaway with her husband when the unthinkable happened. They arrived the night of July 20 and left their 7-year-old border collie, Katie, in their hotel room while they went out for dinner. When the couple returned to My Place Hotel in Kalispell, Katie was nowhere to be found.

“It was devastating. I got sick to my stomach,” King told the Daily Inter Lake .

She frantically searched the room for any signs of her beloved companion before racing to the front desk clerk in hopes that Katie was still in the building.

“I said to the clerk, ‘please tell me you have my dog.’ The clerk says ‘no, she left about four, four and a half hours ago,'” King said. When the automatic doors opened, Katie had gone right out.

King and her husband searched the hotel grounds, calling for Katie until the wee hours of the morning to no avail. King suspected that the thunder from an evening storm caused Katie to panic, open their hotel room door and flee. The clerk helped get the word out on social media with a post in a local missing pets Facebook group and assisted King in creating a flyer.

As the days turned into weeks, word about Katie spread like wildfire online, spurring the creation of multiple Facebook groups of users who offered words of encouragement and shared information about recent sightings in hopes of bringing Katie home.

King posted at least 500 flyers around the county, searched into the night and set up a few game cameras in spots where Katie had been spotted.

“I never gave up. I never lost hope,” said King, who quit her job as a postal worker to continue her search for Katie.

Early on Sunday morning, Sept. 15, King got a call from a gentleman in the Country Estates neighborhood, just north of Glacier High School, that a dog matching Katie’s description was in his yard. Just the day before, King and her friend Jan Leland of Kalispell posted flyers in that very neighborhood. She called Leland for help and rushed out the door, but by the time they arrived, the dog had already gone.

Not easily deterred, the pair walked the neighborhood, scanning the area with binoculars in hopes of spotting Katie. They encountered a couple walking and asked if they’d seen a border collie. King handed the couple a flyer and was about to continue on her way when the woman addressed her.

“As the lady was walking back, she points over to the tree where it’s real dark and says, ‘Is that your dog?'” King said. “And I turn and it’s Katie.”

After some initial excitement, the group went quiet and King called out to her beloved dog, “Katie. Katie girl!”

She trotted over and they were reunited at last.

“I just bear-hugged her, I wasn’t going to let her go,” King recalled.

Support local journalism

Your tax-deductible donation to The Columbian’s Community Funded Journalism program will contribute to better local reporting on key issues, including homelessness, housing, transportation and the environment. Reporters will focus on narrative, investigative and data-driven storytelling.

Local journalism needs your help. It’s an essential part of a healthy community and a healthy democracy.

Community Funded Journalism logo
Loading...