felicia Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 i just read a story about a dog living on a mine site, it was being fed but the conditions of where it lived weren't great, whta do you think they should have done or what would you have done in this situation....i'm really not sure what i would do, i feel sorry for him though : okay, the link wasn't really working so here's the photo and story - Within the environmentally hostile confines of the Berkeley Pit lives perhaps Superfund's most amazing paradox. Its name is `` The Auditor.'' Its genus is Canus, but its species -- if indeed there ever were another single dog like it on the planet -- would be nothing other than extraordinarius . This mysterious mongrel has called the 5,000-acre contaminated expanse of the Berkeley Pit federal Superfund site, combined with Montana Resources' active mine permit area, its home since 1986. Ironically, its only help in surviving has come from the compas sion of miners. `` He really is a neat dog,'' says MR Operations President Steve Walsh. The Auditor, who got his name by always showing up `` when you least expected it,'' has served as the open pit copper mine's de facto mascot since its employees befriended the stray nearly 16 years ago. Numerous snap shots of him are proudly placed alongside ore samples and awards plaques in the main office's glass display case. Workers on the night shift have been dili gently putting out food and water for the dog whenever it has shown up for the majority of its residency at the mine. For the past few years, baby aspirin has been added to his diet, on a veterinarian's recommendation to help an arthritic limp he's developed. And now, with the recent flurry of activity with the construction of the Horseshoe Bend water treatment plant, the dog has shown up unexpectedly over the past few months, accepting an occasional handout from the workers. MR employees also erected a shanty dog house at the foot of an enormous waste rock dump where the dog is still fed and sometimes sleeps. Mirroring its owner's mangy appear ance, the shack is bleak and bedded with rags. But it's better than nothing. As a rule, feeding time around 7 p.m. is the only time The Auditor can be expected to appear in all his unsightly glory. For the rest of his waking hours, he roams the vastness of his toxic home in elusiveness, sometimes miss ing for weeks, even in the dead of winter. In these instances like a drunk disappears on a bender, the small group of people who care for the dog have feared his death more than once. But just as he got his name, he's always shown up. `` God only knows what he does all day,'' says MR employee Ron Benton. `` You've got to won der why an animal would choose a place so forlorn.'' Forlorn indeed. Not a single blade of grass, nary a tree, shrub or weed can survive on the acidic crust that dominates this animal's yard. Reeking of sulfur and acidity, this is the kind of soil that eats men's boots, let alone the feet of any normal dog. And the water here is lethal, should you suppose he walks on that. In 1995, the deceptively calm surface of the Pit infamously claimed the lives of 342 snow geese that made the mistake of a migratory stop. `` It's unbelievable how it could live in a place that's supposed to be so toxic,'' says local veterinarian Ed Peretti. `` He's one tough dog, I'll tell you that.'' Regardless of whom you talk to who has seen him, the `` one tough dog'' description is the first definition given of The Auditor. Charlie Palagi, now retired from Montana Resources after serving his entire career in the Butte mines, still buys the food for The Auditor. He fondly tells many a tale about the mutt, all beginning or ending with the declara tion of The Auditor's toughness. `` He's kind of like our mascot, huh,'' says Palagi, who has several photos of the dog in his retirement albums at home. Perhaps the dog's most evident trait comes from his origins in the gritty town from which he most obviously wandered. From its heyday as a raucous mining boomtown in the early 1900s to its current economic hardship in the troubled industry's absence, an enigmatic toughness has always been the bread-and-but ter of Butte's sometimes-ugly reputation. Once heralded as The Richest Hill on Earth, its loca tion now serves as the beginning of the nation's largest Superfund area, stretching 120 miles from the Berkeley downstream to the Milltown Dam just east of Missoula. MR suspended its operations in June 2000 because of high, deregulated energy rates coupled with another drop in the price of cop per. That's when Peretti got a call from a MR employee concerned with The Auditor's future at the mine. The plea was to track down the dog for an examination and to help its caretak ers formulate a long-term survival plan should they close for good. After driving around for several hours on more than one occa sion, the most Peretti ever got was a glimpse of the dread-locked mutt as it lumbered over a rocky dump too steep for the vet to fol low. In hindsight, it's probably better the dog's life wasn't interfered with, Peretti said. The Auditor is well over a hundred in dog years now. Belying his ailing and hideous appearance and despite the noxious surroundings he claims as home, the animal has been getting along fine ever since. Much the same, in the absence of a mining economy and under the shadowy stigma of Superfund, Butte has managed to keep hanging on as an undying anomaly to ghost town theory. The dog's only extremity that can be made out from beneath its filthy, grossly matted coat is its hardened snout. Some years back, one of the miners who cared for the dog was able to shear its bangs in one of the only instances of human contact The Auditor has ever allowed. Beneath his dreaded shroud shined a pair of beautiful eyes. Butte too, beneath its grizzled appearance from the outside, pos sesses a unique magnificence and embraces a human kindness found in few places. Whether the natives in The Mining City know it, they too have a mascot in the amazing Auditor. How threatening is the scarlet brand of Superfund upon a com munity already marked on the outside by its hard rock mining past? Since the area's listing on the EPA's National Priority List in 1983, nearly half a billion dollars that otherwise would not have been spent by the responsible parties has created a substantial environmental sector in the town's economy. Several amenities and needed infrastructure has also resulted from a number of cleanup remedies. Therefore it is difficult to insist it has been entirely bad. And for what has been bad, the people of this granite-hard town have lived by the unspoken creed of a mortal dog that has survived among the worst, reminding us always to never underestimate the unexpected. -- Matt Vincent of Butte is a reclamation specialist for ButteSilver Bow County. He also works part-time as a sports reporter for The Montana Standard. felicia Quote
imported_Debbie Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 :o Wow !! I don't know what to say........... The dog looks as though he could be a Komondor or something like that ??? Of course his coat could be entirely different because of years of non-grooming. (meaning the dread locks could be from not being groomed for so many years) The town doesn't see a need for him to be checked out by a Vet ? No one has followed him to see where he disappears to ? Poor guy looks like he's had a rough life......... :( Quote
imported_Debbie Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 Jessashelony napisaĆ(a):The only thing that upsets me is to think of him dying all alone. Never really knowing how much he was loved. :cry: That upsets me too...........obviously some human in his past threw him away to fend for himself..... it's nice the workers feed him, but is it enough ??? :cry: Quote
courtnek Posted June 18, 2005 Posted June 18, 2005 since he has only allowed ONE person to ever cut his bangs. he is probably wary of people. he will accept food, but he is basically a feral dog. to trap him and take him in, without much socialization first, would probably be the wrong thing to do. these people have offered, he has refused. he is a wild dog now. I would like to think of him dieing by somebodys fireplace too, but sometimes you just have to go with what IS.... Auditor, sweet dreams when your time comes.Know that people cared for you, if not in the way WE care for our pets, but in the fact that they did what they could to comfort you for all your long years. Quote
Canis erectus Posted June 18, 2005 Posted June 18, 2005 What a great story. The thing that really gets me is how old the beast was, especially so when you take into account where/how he was living. The text isn't entirely clear in regards to dates but I'm guessing that the story was written in 2002. The miners found him 16 years prior to that and I think it's safe to assume that he was an adult dog at that time. So he probably klive to be at least 17 years old. That's just astounding! I kinda like that he stayed behind in the wastes, it's been his home from beginning to end (he can't possibly still be alive). So RIP Auditor, may legends never die. Quote
felicia Posted June 19, 2005 Author Posted June 19, 2005 thats kind of how i felt when i read the story, firstly, what an amazing dog, living in such horrid conditions yet living to such an amazingly old age. what upset me too was the fact that he was dumped in the first place and that he will or has...died alone and not with someone who loves him :cry: he seemed like such an amazing dog, a loner but hardy, it was a great thing that the miners fed him though, would have made his life a whole lot easier. i also thought the auditor was a cool name and really suited him. i think he was maybe best left where he was used to but it's hard not to wish you could take him home to love and spoil rotten. this story made me feel so sad :cry: i wonder if he's still alive? somehow i doubt it... felicia Quote
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