Posted on 08/26/2010 10:39:42 AM PDT by JoeProBono
POULSBO Neighbors are giving 14-year-old Kohl Serwold a hero's welcome after he rescued his dog from drowning last week.
Kali, a 3-year-old Golden Retriever who often plays in the waters near the Serwold's Scandia home, swam nearly 400 yards into Liberty Bay chasing two seals last Thursday. Neighbors said the tide was high and the seals were circling the dog, drawing her farther from shore. Several of them called the dog back, but she kept swimming.
Serwold was mowing the lawn when he noticed the canine swimming away.
"It was farther than normal so I started calling her. She would turn around, then she'd keep going," he said.
So Serwold followed a family rule and donned a life jacket before climbing in his family's kayak and paddling after Kali.
"She got more than halfway out by the time I finally got her," he said. "You could tell she was having trouble."
Kali was exhausted when Serwold reached her, and she began to panic, first trying to scramble onto the kayak, then jumping off of it, knocking off Serwold's paddle and nearly capsizing him.
Serwold was finally able to pull her aboard, and he waited until she sat down to safely paddle home.
The seals followed them the entire journey, he said, at times swimming close enough to touch.
Several neighbors cheered on the rescue.
"It was a real act of bravery on his part," said neighbor Jim LaFramboise.
Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife spokesman Craig Bartlett called the incident "highly unusual" and said the seals were likely either goofing around or protecting their pups.
"Seals don't normally interact that way with mammals. They're fish eaters," Bartlett said. "We haven't heard or seen anything like that before."
Seals aren't known to work in packs and usually eat salmon or squid. They are curious and playful, and this is pupping season, Bartlett said.
Kohl's father, Kurt Serwold, a Poulsbo firefighter who wasn't home at the time of the rescue, suspects Kali was similarly curious of the seals.
"I just hope she learned her lesson," he said.
This well-raised self reliant young man did everything right - he put on a life jacket, launched his kayak and saved his dog. The old lifeguard’s motto used to be “row, throw, and go”. Meaning use a boat first, or throw a flotation device second and only swim as a last resort.
Even more refreshing is its lack of diversity.
Great story....
Oh stop....People don't go into things like this worrying about their own hides...They just do it...
If not for people like this youngster, this would be a really sorry assed planet to live on.
LOL!!!
This is a great story with a happy ending.
No, you’re right. I’d stand there watching my dog swim to his death. And I’d think, with my children by my side, “gee, isn’t mommy great? Don’t risk a thing for an animal, sweet faces.
Be a great momma like yours truly. Now, run along and I’ll make you a buttery bowl of popcorn.”
Silly me.
Soon as I saw this I thought “how long before some jerk shows up to sneer that it’s only an animal and human life is so much more precious, blah blah blah.”
“”Sounds like seals wanted to play””
Not too mention the Golden Ret, my GR is a bundle of play, and mischief and fun.
Cute pup. Is that your dog or the kid’s?
People are not all the same.
For some of us, our pets are just about everything. I tend to minimize my intimate contacts with my fellow human beings, and comments like yours reinforce my decision to do so.
You, sir, may think that human life supercedes, but not everyone would agree with you. I would risk my life to rescue any of my three dogs. They mean everything to me. But I can think of a helluva lot of people that I wouldn’t walk across the street to save.
Different strokes for different folks.
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