Chris Townsend


"A's Talk" - Tune in the post game show
and call in! (888) 979- 4627 (GOAs)
 
 
 
TOP ESPN NEWS
Garber: R is for rematch, not revenge
Eli, Giants deny Pats again to win Super Bowl
Manning wins second Super Bowl MVP award
M.I.A. flips middle finger during halftime show
It ads up: Super commercials cost about $3.5M
Goodell: Ceasing Pro Bowl under consideration
Sources: Manning flexible on deal demands
Ticket sales for NFL game in London to resume
LeBron, Heat stave off Raptors' rally attempt
Venus returns as U.S. reaches Fed Cup playoff
DATING & LOVE
One-Night Stand
Shutterstock" />
It's easier than you think.
Why Men Lie
Shutterstock" />
Turns out we're not great at being honest. Surprised?
Why She Broke Up With Me
Shutterstock" />
Sad? Confused? Unable to understand why? Here's a dose of reality.
Words Women Hate
Shutterstock" />
The latest Twitter trend just revealed why our girlfriends can be so moody.
How To Talk To Women

Memorizing a line ain't gonna cut it. But changing your mentality will.

 

Story of the Weekby Chris Townsend, posted on Mon, Apr. 6, 2009

Dog overboard found four months later

SYDNEY (AFP) – A pet dog that fell overboard in rough seas off Australia has been reunited with its owners after surviving alone on an island for four months, reports said.

Sophie Tucker, apparently named after a late US entertainer, fell overboard as Jan Griffith and her family sailed through choppy waters off the northeast Queensland coast in November.

The dog was believed to have drowned and Griffith said the family was devastated.

But out of sight of the family, Sophie Tucker was swimming doggedly and finally made it to St Bees Island, five nautical miles away, and began the sort of life popularised by the TV reality show "Survivor."

She was returned to her family last week when Griffith contacted rangers who had captured a dog that had been living off feral goats on the largely uninhabited island, in the faint hope it might be their long-lost pet.

When the Griffiths met the rangers' boat bringing the dog to the mainland they found that it was indeed Sophie Tucker on board.

"We called the dog and she started whimpering and banging the cage and they let her out and she just about flattened us," Griffith told the national AAP news agency.

"She wriggled around like a mad thing."

Griffith said that when the dog was first spotted on the island she had been in poor condition.

"And then all of a sudden she started to look good and it was when the rangers had found baby goat carcasses so she'd started eating baby goats," she said.

Sophie Tucker, a member of the Australian cattle dog breed, had been quick to readjust to the comforts of home, complete with airconditioning, Griffiths said.

"She surprised us all. She was a house dog and look what she's done, she's swum over five nautical miles, she's managed to live off the land all on her own," Griffiths said.

"We wish she could talk, we truly do."

Check out this link...

Other Articlesby Chris Townsend

Know where they are and where they’re going
Simple and FREE, enter your email address and click join!
 

Babe of the Day

Brought to you by

Terms & Conditions

RSS Feed

Site brought to you by

 

 

The Chris Townsend © 2006-2012. Website Design by JVF Consulting.