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March 31, 2006

How To Get Vivi Back ...

Vivi's breeder, Bo Bengtson, provides this information on how to act around a lost and startled sighthound like Vivi. He encourages searchers to make copies and distribute it anywhere Vivi might have been sighted.

HOW TO GET VIVI BACK...

Guidelines for How to Act around a Runaway Dog

The following applies to most dogs that have gone “wild” and do not want to be caught.

The bottom line is: you cannot “catch” a spooked Whippet. Attempts to chase, catch, surround or contain Vivi will have the opposite effect, scaring her further away.

If you see Vivi:

1. Do not get out of the car close to her, don’t slam the car door and don’t call her. You will only frighten her further.

2. If possible sit down on the ground, eat something (noisily!), share with her if she gets close, drop some food on the ground. Talk to her gently and casually, as if you see her every day and don’t care that much about her. Don’t even look at her. If she lets you, pet her gently but do not try to grab her. She is much faster than you are and cannot be caught until she wants to.

3. You should not have a big or noisy dog with you. If you have a calm whippet or small dog on a leash and Vivi is nearby, make a big show of feeding your dog. Nothing makes her hungrier than seeing another dog eat.

4. Do not walk directly toward her; avoid eye contact; act casual but friendly. Not until you can quietly put a strong leash with a choke collar around her neck should you try to do so, and don’t even do that if you are not experienced enough to deal with a dog that might easily panic.

5. In a best case scenario, quietly close a door or gate (a tall one, she can probably jump 6 feet if necessary) behind her. If not, just making non-threatening contact is a huge step forward, and establish a place where she can be fed.

6. The most important thing right now is that Vivi should not feel chased or "hunted" so she doesn't feel like you're moving into her comfort area

7. If you catch Vivi, put her in a car or safe room ASAP. Make sure nobody accidentally opens a door. Be calm and quiet, don’t scare her and CALL 1-877-JFK-VIVI (1-877-535-8484), or 917-626-1374, or 516-776-0923 - IMMEDIATELY!

Losing Vivi after “nearly” catching her will make it even more difficult to instill confidence in her again. She has most likely been chased by more people than we know who grabbed for her in misguided attempts to catch her. Much better to encourage her confidence by feeding her, leaving her alone and petting her if she lets you – until you are SURE you can catch her and put her inside a car or a safely confined area.

Flier Blitz tomorrow

Honi Reisman, search coordinator, offers this information about tomorrow's "flier blitz":

<<I am planning a "Handout Blitz" tomorrow. Our objective will be to have volunteers go to heavily traffic areas ie; supermarkets, post offices, car washes, dry cleaners, banks, parks, etc. to hand out Vivi flyers and talk to as many people as possible. I will be at our regular spot, Utopia Parkway and Peck Avenue from 7 a.m. till 12 p.m.

<<I need two volunteers who know the surrounding areas, Flushing, Whitestone, College Point, etc. well. I need you to assist in getting the volunteers headed into an area and finding a good location to set up their post. [If you can help in this regard, email Honi at roxiethedoxie@aol.com.] I want to record where the volunteers will be and their phone numbers.

I am also requesting that the volunteers report back to the Home Base if they get any information that could help us locate Vivi. This is not going to be a stakeout -- this is a "word-out."

Please let me know if you can work with me or if you will be a post volunteer.

We have been receiving a lot of mixed reports about where Vivi has been seen.  We need everyone to note as much information as possible so we can put this puzzle together and get her home safe and sound.

Volunteers will also be provided with a "What to do if" flyer. We have a new toll-free number for our efforts, 1-877-JFKVIVI.  We are in the process of adding this to any new fliers or posters being made.  All fliers/posters will still have the numbers that have been posted. This new toll-free number links to those and will be easier for people to remember.

On behalf of Jil, Bo and Paul, thank you for all you are doing.....you are the greatest!>>

Daily message from Vivi's breeder

Bo Bengtson writes:

<<UPDATE AS OF THURSDAY NIGHT, MARCH 30, 2006

    Another unconfirmed sighting in the same location as Monday night’s, but this one was supposedly at least a couple of days earlier. A man out walking his dog saw a “skinny” dog which ran away when he went up to it. That area had not been posted with flyers yet so he didn’t know anything about Vivi and didn’t call anyone until today.

    Denise Flaim has kindly posted flyers which can be printed out in four languages – English, Spanish, Chinese and Korean – at
http://newsday.typepad.com/news_local_flaim/

    A new 1-800 telephone number is being set up to make it easier to call in Vivi sightings. It’s ready to go, but we want to make sure the number works before posting it, which will take place tomorrow. At the same time guidelines for what to do if anyone should encounter Vivi will be circulated to as many people as possible in the area. The sightings aren’t going to get Vivi back unless whoever meets her manages to win her confidence. No chasing, no shouting, no walking towards her - just quiet, casual friendliness, food and non-threatening behavior: sit on the ground, lie down, walk away!

    It’s difficult to focus any attention on the airline right now, but a couple of things need to be mentioned. According to unconfirmed sources a Delta employee who works as a cargo loader went to give Vivi a drink of water and that’s when she bolted. I personally don’t believe this story: Vivi liked her crate and wouldn’t get out just because someone put in a bowl of water. It also does not explain why the door latch was broken. (A bigger mystery is that the Skychef employee who saw Vivi 12 hours after she was lost is certain that she was then NOT wearing her broad leather collar, which she had when she was loaded. How could she possibly have lost that so quickly?)

    Jil’s lawyer has given Delta five days to respond to a final request for the response to our questions which was promised earlier, and payment at least of the intitial expenses in the search which was also promised earlier. If Delta does not respond we will obviously have to change our tactics. We have been very careful at every turn to not blame Delta for what happened, since nobody knows for sure exactly how Vivi got out of her crate. The fact, however, is that she was lost while in their care, and that Delta has done very little to help us get her back.

    Bo>>

March 29, 2006

Around the World in 4 Vivi Fliers

For those who want to print, contribute or post Vivi fliers in northern Queens, here are the most recent versions:

Vivi flier in English: Download Vivi_english_1.pdf

Vivi flier in English/Spanish: Download ViviNewFlyer.pdf

Vivi flier in Korean:  Download Vivi_Korean.doc

Vivi flier in Chinese:  Download Vivi_chinese_1.pdf

College Point coordinator needed

Search coordinator Bonnie Folz sends this message via hotelier-whippet sympathizer Brian ("Big Dog") Rosenberg:

"Please ask your fellow bloggers to select one coordinator to dole out sections of blocks to work in the College Point area. There are MANY businesses there along the waterline/shore. Have them contact the various businesses within that block radius by phone, email, faxing info and flyers to them to hand out and make their employees aware that Vivi is still missing and was sighted in that area. Any help the bloggers can provide is so very appreciated."

Bonnie adds that the coordinator does not have to be local, and can do the job long distance.

Brian asks that bloggers use this thread for College Point coordination only.

March 28, 2006

Park update and unconfirmed sighting

Vivi searchers met today with New York City Parks Department officials, who will not give them permission to drive their vehicles through the park. The searchers were driven through the park in a Parks Department vehicle -- shades of JFK Airport.

Searchers are free to canvas the 1,255-acre park on foot.

Because Flushing Meadows is so wide open, the searchers think Vivi might not stay in the park for long, and wonder if she has already moved on.

This hunch was buttressed by an unconfirmed sighting last night from a College Point resident who lives near 119th Street and 29th Avenue, due north of Flushing Meadows.

The woman said that around 9 p.m. Monday, she was turning out her porch light when she saw a dog matching Vivi's description outside her home. She did not call in the sighting until today.

West Coast weighs in

A note from Vivi's breeder, Bo Bengtson:

<<UPDATE AS OF MONDAY NIGHT, MARCH 27, 2006

    After no sightings since last Wednesday, around 11AM today a retired police officer saw what appears to have been Vivi at the Flushing Meadows Park. He is apparently not particularly dog-savvy, didn’t know what she was and described her as an “odd-looking” white dog, trying to eat out of a garbage bag at the bottom of the foot bridge to the park. He was amazed at how fast the dog ran and said he had never seen a dog move that quickly. When he got home and told his wife, she pulled up a picture of Vivi on the web and he was convinced that's her.

    After talking to the officer, Jil is confident that if it wasn’t Vivi it was at least certainly a Whippet he saw: “He described her to me as that he thought she was a male, then realized it was her tail curling through her legs. She then took off, not because she was afraid of him but because a green park truck was whizzing around. Tomorrow we'll see if any park people working in the AM saw her. Anyway, he said that the way she ran was beautiful how she curled her body into an arc (the way Whippets do when they run).”

    If this sighting is legitimate, as it seems to be, it means that Vivi has moved west, crossing the Van Wyck Expressway (perhaps via an overpass). Flushing Meadows-Corona Park is much larger than Kissena Park, the area where Vivi seems to have spent the last two weeks. Flushing Meadows covers over 1200 acres, which means that a new approach for capturing her has to be devised.

A DIFFERENT APPROACH

    Denise Flaim explains it best in her Newsday blog: “Every expert who has experience finding missing sighthounds … has been quoted … saying that these ethereal and independent creatures are not your average canine Joes. Sighthound experts stress that in the vast, huge, incalculably significant majority of times, lost sighthounds are either recovered serendipitously by a stranger, or are caught in a humane trap. … Bottom line: You do not ‘catch’ a spooked sighthound… Attempts to ‘catch,’ ‘surround’ or ‘contain’ Vivi are very likely to have the opposite effect, pushing her even further away and prompting her to move on in her journey. This is possibly why she left the Kissena Park area, where she had become established and comfortable until zealous search efforts were put in place. Volunteer searchers are asked to resist human nature, leave Vivi alone, and instead focus on posting and handing out fliers in the area, as well as communities to the north, west and south.”

    I am sure that all those of us who are closest to Vivi agree wholeheartedly with Denise. Please DO NOT go out into the park trying to catch Vivi. If you see her, do not stop, get out of the car, or call her. You will only frighten a now feral Vivi further. She needs to get a chance to calm down and find her own way back to people. What you SHOULD do if you come upon Vivi is sit down, eat something, share with her if she gets close, but DO NOT TRY TO CATCH HER! She is much faster than you are and cannot be caught until she wants to. Not until you can quietly put a strong leash with a choke collar around her neck should you try to do so, and don’t even do that if you are not experienced enough to deal with a dog that might quite easily panic. Losing Vivi after “nearly” catching her will make it even more difficult to instill confidence in her again. She has most likely been chased by more people than we know who grabbed for her in misguided attempts to catch her. Much better to encourage her confidence by feeding her, leaving her alone and petting her if she lets you – until you are SURE you can catch her and put her inside a car or a safely confined area. ... Please note that vehicles without special permits are not allowed on the park grounds.

    It is of course extremely important to emphasize to the public that Vivi should NEVER be chased and, in fact, that nobody should even try to catch her until she is really willing to come up and be petted, or until you can close a door or a six-foot gate behind her. She is much safer from traffic at Flushing Meadows she was in the more built-up areas, so there is even less reason to rush things and risk scaring her further.

    Baited humane traps are being put out into the park. They have had no success in the past, perhaps because Vivi had a traumatic experience in her crate at the airport, or because she is eating well anyway, or because (as some have suggested) a covered trap is less inviting than an open trap. (I frankly find that hard to believe, but it’s worth trying provided that the uncovered trap is positioned so that Vivi does not get exposed to the elements if caught for several hours.)

HOLD THE CALLS!

    Honi Reisman and Bonnie Folz are being inundated with calls and emails, many of which are not helpful. Via Denise Flaim, Bonnie has asked bloggers and volunteers to please stop calling all the points of contact previously posted on her blog. Also, Honi has asked me to tell everyone the following “It is Bonnie’s and my belief that too many chiefs are out there trying to make decisions and not checking with anyone who is in the core search group. I know everyone wants to help but they can’t just haphazardly run off and do their own thing.”

    Please understand that Honi and Bonnie have accepted the responsibility of heading the search in New York at Jil’s request. No decisions concerning the search for Vivi should be made without consulting Honi. She and Bonnie, as well as many volunteers, are devoting untold hours to the search out of the goodness of their hearts. They have their own jobs and lives (or at least had, before Vivi!) and have refused to even get their expenses covered. If you think you can imagine what life has been like for them, and for all of us in Vivi’s family, for the past month… well, frankly I think that’s difficult. Losing a beloved, happy, confident and people-loving dog who has now been turned into a fugitive, feral animal is tough enough. Doing this in the glare of unprecedented spotlight and what can only be descriped as a “media circus” is even more difficult.

DEALING WITH DELTA

    In response to repeated questions, I have no idea what’s going on with Delta. Jil’s lawyer, Joyce Randazzo, has formally appeared on Jil's behalf and is awaiting a response. We are very grateful to her for her assistance, as she has totally volunteered her services. Delta has asked for Jil’s input in how to improve their procedures when shipping dogs, which is a positive step. However, Delta has still not provided a response (promised on Feb. 28) to my request for a report of the internal investigation that reportedly took place after Vivi’s loss while in their care at JFK. They comped us two rooms for two nights immediately after Vivi’s disappearance and, I believe, comped a return ticket to NY for Jil and a one-way ticket for me back to LA. That’s it. Delta at one point promised to send Jil $2,000 as a good-will gesture to help with some of the initial expenses, but they have so far not done so. We have received no further offers of assistance, financial or otherwise, of any sort. We are still hoping that Delta will step up and assist with at least some of the considerable costs incurred by everyone involved.

SIX WEEKS LATER…

    That Vivi has managed to stay alive and fend for herself for nearly six weeks of New York winter is, to me, amazing. It says a lot for our so-called “pampered show dogs” that she has been able to do so, and for the wonderful condition Jil has always kept her in. Frankly, I almost wish she were a little more of a spoiled wimp so she would be looking for human help by now. If left to herself, I am sure that she eventually will do so.

    I know it’s tough to wait and not rush things. However, it’s crucial.

    Thanks for understanding.

    Bo>>



March 27, 2006

Good Intentions

Bonnie Folz asks bloggers and volunteers to please now stop calling all the points of contact previously posted on this blog, as they are now being inundated with phone calls.

Which segues neatly into the next point (end Bonnie commentary, begin Denise commentary):

Every expert who has experience finding missing sighthounds -- that's sighthounds, not regular dogs -- has been quoted, in this space and elsewhere, saying that these ethereal and independent creatures are not your average canine Joes.

Sighthound experts stress that in the vast, huge, incalculably significant majority of times, lost sighthounds are either recovered serendipitously by a stranger, or are caught in a humane trap. Neither of which involves someone clutching a Virginia ham sandwich and singing Kumbaya.

Bottom line: You do not "catch" a spooked sighthound any more than you "cuddle" an unhappy Fila.

Attempts to "catch," "surround" or "contain" Vivi are very likely to have the opposite effect, pushing her even further away and prompting her to move on in her journey. This is possibly why she left the Kissena Park area, where she had become established and comfortable until zealous search efforts were put in place.

Volunteer searchers are asked to resist human nature, leave Vivi alone, and instead focus on posting and handing out fliers in the area, as well as communities to the north, west and south.

Spreading the whippet word

Search organizers ask volunteers to please call the various museums and organizations located in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, many of which are listed here:

www.nycgovparks.org/sub_your_park/vt_flushing_meadows/vt_flushing_meadows_park.html

Also, Terrace on the Park restaurant, which offers aerial views:

www.nycgovparks.org/sub_your_park/historical_signs/hs_historical_sign.php?id=12772

Please note that vehicles without special permits are not allowed on the park grounds.

Search organizers are in touch with park officials to obtain this permission.

The Drought Breaks!

Vivi reportedly spotted this morning at 11 a.m. in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.

These details from search coordinator Bonnie Folz:

A man who lives on Blossom Avenue off of College Point Boulevard  -- on the west side of the Queens Botanic Garden -- decided to get a little fresh air after a morning of house painting.

From the botanic garden parking lot, he crossed the footbridge to Flushing Meadows-Corona Park and saw an "odd-looking" white dog at the bottom of the foot bridge. He said she was trying to eat out of a garbage bag, but bolted when a green truck screamed by.

He was shocked at how quickly the dog ran off, as he had never seen a dog move that quickly. He returned home and chatted about it with his wife, who forwarded him a photo of Vivi that she got from Newsday.com, and he identified her as the dog he saw in the park.

If this sighting is legitimate, it means that Vivi has moved west, crossing the Van Wyck Expressway (perhaps via an overpass). Flushing Meadows-Corona Park is much more open than Kissena Park, where Vivi was seemingly lingering in the last two weeks.

March 25, 2006

Darkest Before the Dawn

Search coordinators Honi Reisman and Bonnie Folz thank the more than 40 volunteers who turned out today in Flushing to search for Vivi. Unfortunately, there were no sightings.

Pet-detection dog trainer Laura Totis and Sam Connley returned to canvas the area with their three search dogs. There were no "hot" tracks. This might be due in part to weather conditions over the last week -- sunny, dry and windy weather is not ideal for keeping scent concentrated.

Bottom line? "There wasn't anything that we're terribly excited about," Laura says. "We came, we looked, and we didn't find."

Laura, Vivi's owner Jil, Honi and others are regrouping to determine what the next phase of the search should be.

March 24, 2006

Got My Number?

Honi Reisman, who is coordinating the Vivi search, appreciates efforts some volunteers have made to obtain 800 numbers. HOWEVER, for expediency, consistency and to keep search efforts centralized, any donated posters should contain only the following numbers:

(917) 647-4848

(917) 626-1374

(516) 776-0923

Search organizers remind volunteers that any and all decisions involving the search need to be made in direct consultation with Vivi's owners.

False Alarm :-(

Vivi, it turns out, was really Eva -- a 12-year-old white whippet with brown markings who lives in the area. Her owners had let her loose on the lawn to play, and a concerned neighbor called in.

Searchers Rosa Chile and Tina Potter went to the site to confirm the case of mistaken identity.

To reinterate: today's sighting at 192nd Street an 50th Avenue was incorrect.

Back to the waiting game.

Vivi resurfaces

Vivi was sighted this afternoon, noonish, near 192nd Street and 50th Avenue, lying on someone's lawn.

This sighting is just northeast of Peck Park, and is within the "zone" that Vivi seems to have created for herself in the Flushing neighborhood.

All's Quiet on the Vivi Front

Vivi's breeder, Bo Bengtson, checks in in last night's update:

<<

UPDATE AS OF THURSDAY NIGHT 23 MARCH 2006

No more sightings of Vivi today, the first day for some time without a single reported sighting as far as I know. The sightings prove that Vivi is still in the area where she’s been now for at least 12 days, but as long as there is no reason to believe she has moved out of her established territory there may be no cause for concern. Jil and Rick are disappointed, however. Their experience probably mirrors Paul’s and mine in previous weeks, and the most important object of their journey was to lay down their scent to keep Vivi comfortable in this area. As the experts keep telling us, lost dogs almost never come back to their owners or the searchers but almost invariably wander into some unsuspecting person’s back yard where nobody makes a fuss, just gives them food and quietly closes a gate at the right moment.

The "stake-out" organized on Saturday by Bonnie Folz may provide an opportunity for Jil to get close to Vivi.  ...  I believe Bonnie has emphasized to the volunteers that nobody should try to grab Vivi unless they are absolutely sure of success. Trying to get ahold of her and losing her would make her even more wary of future capture. The important thing is to get Jil on the scene ASAP whenever Vivi is seen. Hopefully she will recognize Jil, although the experts are not certain that a now-feral Vivi would necessarily even do that, at least not immediately.

I would like to get local school children involved in the search. Vivi is demonstrably less afraid of children than of adults. It isn’t going to be easy for a child to catch Vivi but it’s worth a try. I have a couple of suggestions from people who might be able to help with local school contacts in New York. If you can help, write to me through the Contact Us form on this site and Jeff will forward an email to me.

"LOST GREYHOUND" ADVICE

We were advised to contact Michael McCann, who has had a lot of success in catching lost Greyhounds over many years. He is busy with several other cases but writes that we don’t need his help since it seems we are doing everything right anyway. The following is reprinted with his permission from his "Finding Your Lost Greyhound" from GreyTalk.com. Whippets and Greyhounds aren’t identical but the breeds are closely related, and much of what Michael says would apply to Vivi and other lost Whippets as well.

"Post flyers on every available telephone pole, in every supermarket, drugstore, school, church, police station, vets’ office or any other public building surrounding the area. Ninety percent of lost dogs who are found, are found because someone saw a flyer. The area should be so saturated with flyers that you can’t turn around without seeing one."

"Schools are a great resource for search help. Ask the principal to make announcements about the lost dog and leave flyers to pass out and post on bulletin boards. Kids see everything in the neighborhood — if you give one kid a flyer, five more will have seen it by the end of the day. Don’t ignore the little kids either. They tell their folks everything."

"In our experience, rewards often work against getting sightings. What happens is that you will increase the numbers of people looking for the dog, yes, but the new people tend to be bounty hunters, teenagers, or ‘cowboys’, who just think of the money, not the safety of the animal. Often, when they see the dog, the first thing they do is chase, and sometimes they chase the dog right out of the safety of the territory the dog has felt comfortable in." (The reward for Vivi’s safe return was set by Jil at $5,000 long ago and will be honored. We would not have gotten the media interested without a reward, and this has played a vital role in making local people aware of Vivi. The "bounty hunters" are a concern, however. According to a newspaper article today several such types have moved in to look for Vivi in Flushing. They won’t catch her but they could scare her away.)

"Finding a lost Greyhound is difficult; catching a loose Greyhound who doesn’t want to be caught could be one of the most frustrating challenges one ever faces in Greyhound rescue."

"When you or your volunteers see the hound, do not chase or follow him, make him think you have no interest in him. Turn away, don’t make eye contact, sit down on the ground, and if you have a hound with you, give some treats to him. There is nothing that will make a hungry dog more curious than watching another dog eat. If he approaches you, stay on the ground, avoid eye contact and toss treats in his direction; gain his trust through his food motivation. Lick your lips, and yawn, a lot. These are ‘Calming Signals.’ Have a looped leash handy in case he approaches close enough."

There is much more, mostly information that we have published before. Michael lists a number of Greyhounds which have been lost for several months, even years: Mike for seven months in Marshfield, MA (captured in a live trap); Barney for over a year in Southbridge, MA (captured in a live trap); Scarlett for seven months, from November 2001 to May 2002 in Pawtucket, RI (captured in live trap); Phantom for at least 10 months in Cincinnati, OH; Connor for 18 months in Camptown, KS; Cavan or seven months in Bennington, VT; and Lady Grey for at least 15 months on the campus of Eastern New Mexico University. Note the locations and the temperatures these dogs endured. None of them was loose in a city, however.

THE "MEDIA CIRCUS"

Several people have commented on the "media circus" that has developed around Vivi. Initially we encouraged coverage in an attempt to make the people living where Vivi is aware of her. Things have escalated to an almost unreal level, however. Katie Couric on The Today Show this morning made a comment that she was sure Vivi would be found soon. I believe Bonnie Folz is going on Good Morning America to talk about lost dogs. The Los Angeles Times ran a color photo of Vivi on its front page today and made it the top story of its The Nation section. CBS and Fox News have called for updates today; Karin Goin tells us that BBC called her trying to get our phone numbers.

Following reports that bounty hunters are moving in to chase Vivi, we have decided to cut down on interviews. The only media that really matter to us are those that people in Flushing read or watch, and according to Jil there is sufficient coverage there. Denise Flaim’s Newsday updates at http://newsday.typepad.com/news_local_flaim/ provide by far the most comprehensive information.

We are very grateful that almost nobody has pointed out how unfair all the focus on Vivi’s misfortune is. There are thousands of other dogs out there who deserve every bit as much attention. We don’t know why her story has captured the nation’s (and the world’s) attention to such an unprecedented degree, but in so far as it benefits Vivi, and hopefully other lost dogs also, we cannot be other than grateful.

Thanks for your good wishes.

Bo >>

March 23, 2006

Babes in Vivi Land

Vivi's breeder Bo Bengtson would very much like to get local schools involved in the Vivi search in some way. If you are a local searcher or volunteer who has an education background or a connection to someone in the New York City school system, and have the time and expertise to liaison with local schools, he asks that you please email him at bobengtson@impulse.net.

Conspiracy Theorizing 101

No Vivi sightings reported today because ...

... no one called in a sighting today.

Saturday Stakeout Details

Bonnie Folz calls to share the following details about the Saturday Vivi search:

Volunteers are asked to assemble at Peck Park (Utopia Parkway and Peck Avenue) at 6 a.m. sharp for orientation. Volunteers will receive an information packet containing, among other things, a map and a specific protocol to follow when Vivi is sighted.

Some volunteers will be given stationary locations, while others will be "floaters."

The protocol for a Vivi sighting will be to contact Vivi's owner Jil Walton to come to the location, all the while slowly, casually and cautiously keeping the dog in sight. "Floaters" will be repositioned around the perimeter of the sighting while those in stationery posts are required to stay at their posts in the event Vivi runs their way.

This cannot be overstated: What is needed on Saturday are volunteers who can show much-needed restraint in the event of a Vivi sighting and allow Jil to approach the dog without any interference or histrionics.

Volunteers will be given a specially colored ribbon to tie to their car antennae so they can be instantly recognizable to one another. They will also be supplied with bait such as hot dogs (or, ideally bring your own).

For those who plan to arrive later, Bonnie will be at the Peck Park location all day to distribute info packets and assignments.

Vivi: A random Q&A

Q. Did the man walking his Doberman near Flushing Cemetery notice Vivi's state of health, specifically, her eyes?

A. No, it was 3:30 in the morning and it is safe to say he didn't have his Starbucks yet. He did say, however, that his Doberman pulled him down the block on his Flexi lead to the precise spot where Vivi was standing on the other side of the cemetery gate. Presumably, the Dobe got a better look, but, like most Working dogs, he is not inclined to comment.

One of Vivi's favorite friends at the barn where her owner Jil Walton works is a Doberman, which may explain why she is drawn to the breed. She hangs with a Dal as well.

Q. Is Vivi in heat? Do we need to worry about "whip-pits"?

A. Of all the things to obsess over, Vivi's reproductive status is not one of them. She is not due to come into heat until the summer.

Q. Is it my imagination, or are the Vivi posters and fliers disappearing?

A. No, Dorothy, you're still in Kansas .. er, Flushing. Much to the searchers' frustration, New York City Sanitiation Enforcement has been removing Vivi fliers and posters from telephone poles and other public places where they are posted. They like whippets as much as the next guy, but it's the law.

Q. How about darting Vivi with a tranquilizer?

A. Dumb, dumb, dumb. What works for coyotes in Central Park under helicopter surveillance does not work for whippets lost in Queens or anywhere else, for that matter.

Sighthounds like whippets have very low reserve of fat stores, which is what make them so speedy. This low body fat also makes them very sensitive to anesthesia and especially barbituates.

Also, tranquilizing dogs of any breed is often not recommended by animal-control professions, because before the drug takes effect, the animal can run off and hide, potentially leaving it vulnerable to predators, traffic, adverse weather or other dangers while unconscious.

The best tool in the search for Vivi is patience, something which seems to be in short reserve these days.

Q. Why does Vivi run away? Why doesn't she want to be caught?

A. Back to the sighthound thing again. Unlike more biddable breeds, such as sporting and herding dogs, hounds are bred to operate independently of their handler. They are hard-wired to think for themselves, which is what makes them such an interesting sight to behold in the obedience ring.

Sighthounds breeds such as salukis, greyhounds, Afghan hounds and, yes, whippets, quickly resort to feral mode when they are lost in strange places. Their very ability to survive on their wits, independent of bumbling humans, is also what makes them so elusive and difficult to catch.

Short answer: A golden will sell his soul for a ham sandwich. A whippet won't.

Q. How did Vivi get from JFK Airport to Flushing, which is actually closer to LaGuardia?

A. Pet detectives stress that owners underestimate the distances their dogs can travel. Consider the story of Lucas, a whippet that was lost in downtown Atlanta, only to resurface one month and 26 miles later, having traversed some of the city's most dangerous thoroughfares.

That said, there are some tantalizing signs that Vivi didn't get loose on her own. An airport employee who saw Vivi the night of her escape Feb. 15 says she was not wearing her black leather buckle collar, which was fitted snugly so she could not remove it herself.

And there is some evidence that Vivi might have been in someone's keeping during her adventure in 718-land: A resident who fed her bread in Flushing Cemetery said she had a piece of white twine around her neck in kind of a homemade leash.

Q. Other than the dry facts of where Vivi has been sighted, what can I learn from this blog?

A. Reading the blog postings is an excellent glimpse at the complicated psychology of our own species.

Vivi backyard interlude

Vivi, the wily whippet who yesterday morning was spotted in the Queens Botanical Garden, was back near her usual stomping grounds near Flushing Cemetery by nightfall.

Search coordinator Bonnie Folz reporst that around 6:30 last night, a woman on Jasmine Avenue near 156th Street called to say that her daughter had seen Vivi in their backyard. The family leaves dog food outside for their own canine, and Vivi saw fit to partake. By the time the family got outside, Vivi was in a community driveway behind the house, and -- as is her wont -- sped off when approached.

The Jasmine Avenue sighting is about six blocks west of Flushing Cemetery, where some searchers believe Vivi beds down for the night. Searchers surveying the cemetery last night with night-vision goggles reported neither canine nor paranormal activity.

March 22, 2006

Pet Detective reports

Laura Totis, the pet detective from Baltimore whose searches confirmed that Vivi was in the Flushing area, sends this report to breeder Bo Bengtson and Vivi's owners:

<<After discussion with you and the family I felt our goal was defined as having two priorities:

  1. Check areas of recent sightings to determine if they might be Vivi or not.
  2. To use the dogs to help narrow down the specific area she may be in

We checked the sightings and found that in two of the areas the dogs were able to pick up a trail were the others we were not able to locate any tracks. We checked tracks previously found and determined they were most likely raccoon not canine. If you think of sightings, dog prints, physical evidence of animal activity, hair, dog alerts, photographs, as clues then, each clue from a different resource adds credibility to an area allowing the search management to prioritize areas of higher or lower probability. Although you can never say with 100% certainty she is here or she is not here until you have the subject (Vivi) home safely. My suggestion was that you try to locate the area Vivi may be in then work with resources that specialize in capturing dogs to try to trap her. We narrowed the area we felt was the most promising based on substanting clues including sightings, the scent specific trained dogs were able to pick up scent in the area and surrounding areas, and dog prints consistent with a whippet sized dog. We suggested areas for two traps Since Mr. Bengtson was concerned she may be "trap savvy" we bated the unset traps with food the first night. The dogs are a resource to help you locate Vivi, however the dilemma still remains of what to do with that information, you still need to capture her. Animal control may be of some greater assistance. The people in the houses with sightings that we worked with were extremely cooperative, leaving gates open to the yard and willing to set and check traps in their yard, use baby monitors to listen for activity so they could either close the gate behind her or call for assistance capturing her. It was all very encouraging when we left the city. I left the following suggestions for the folks managing the search on the ground.

  1. Hire a search coordinator to work closely with the family and folks  running the search in the area. This might help take some pressure off the  people who have been dedicating an awful lot of time and resources to the  effort.
  • They can track what is being done and when
  • Where to focus the flier placements
  • Track where fliers have been posted
  • Coordinate a local response to sightings
  1. Prioritize placement of fliers so that they can be most effective.
  • Start with Major intersections in a several mile radius using large  posters on corners and at bus stops.
  • Next hit the intersections where neighborhood roads come out to main  roads
  • Volunteers can go through areas with high probability sightings almost  door to door passing out fliers and checking for collaborating evidence.
  1. It almost seems like the search is moving into a maintaince stage. I don’t  think it necessarily gains a lot for the family to be on the scene. They can  maintain a presence for Vivi through the use of scented items they can mail  regularly. If they are on the scene their time can be spent walking areas of  highest probability the goal being to keep her into an area until she can be  trapped. It is unlikely she will come to being called even by family.
  2. Consider using wildlife motion detector cameras to check potential  sightings. If she seems to be returning to a yard use baby monitors to  determine if/when she is in the yard.
  3. Work with someone specializing in trapping live animals to help recover her.

Good luck I am always happy to help if you lose the area she is in again. Remember trailing dogs by definition are behind the subject you really want to determine how to get her into a safe area where she can be trapped and recovered. We are always concerned that an enthusiastic pursuit can sometimes push the subject out of an area. That is where your shotgun approach to posters will prove helpful. All of your volunteers on the ground are doing an amazing job! If anyone can catch this dog they will.

Good luck!!

Laura Totis>>

Cindy Adams today at the Garden City Hotel

Whippet owner, Vivi supporter and hotel impressario Brian Rosenberg hosts Cindy Adams today, Wed., March 22, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., at the Garden City Hotel. The gossip columnist will be signing her new book, "Living a Dog's Life," and dishing, natch, at the hotel's Rein bar and bistro. For more information, call (516) 877-9385, or visit www.gchotel.com.

A portion of proceeds from book sales will be donated to the Vivi search.

Playing telephone

Search coordinator Bonnie Folz (who has no time even to joosh herself up for her interview this afternoon with Good Morning America) says there is not one iota of evidence that Vivi was sighted anywhere else other than the Queens Botanical Garden. Bonnie spoke directly to the caller. Vivi has not been seen further west than that.

While it might be prudent and useful to call business and authorities in other parks and communities such as Flushing Meadow Park, Vivi has not been sited there.

Bonnie adds that anyone who wants to help with media coverage or place ads in local newspapers and publications should coordinate with Brian Rosenberg at brosenberg@gchotel.com.

Vivi Stops to Smell the Roses

... and the forsythia, and the croci ...

Searchers say Vivi was seen today at 11 a.m. at the Queens Botanical Garden. This means Vivi would have crossed busy Main Street to get to the 39-acre garden, which is in line with an east-westerly greenbelt that Vivi seems to traverse in her jaunts around the neighborhood.

Vivi's owner, Jil Walton, says it is not surprising that Vivi is drawn to the bustling Asian community to the west of Kissena Park and Flushing Cemetery. The barn where Jil works in California is located near a similar community, and Vivi is likely familiar with its sights and smells.

Vivi's foray to downtown Flushing does not necessarily mean she has forsaken the more residential neighborhood to the east where searches and sightings have been clustered in the last couple of weeks. Not to mention the peaceful cemetery that has become a favorite, er, haunt: At 3:30 a.m.  today, a man walking his dog near 46th Avenue and 163rd Street says his Doberman was nose-to-nose with the whippet through the iron fence of Flushing Cemetery.

To get a sense of the area where Vivi has been ranging, click here. To the immediate left of the red dot, on the west side of Main Street, is the Queens Botanical Garden. Flushing Cemetery is about an mile and a half to the east.

Long note from Vivi's breeder

The daily update on the Vivi search from her breeder, Bo Bengtson, posted to www.awc2006.com:

SUMMARY & UPDATE AS OF TUESDAY NIGHT/WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 21/22, 2006

Tomorrow, on Wednesday, it will be five weeks since [Vivi] was lost at JFK. Having walked the streets and parks of the area where she has been sighted, it is almost unbelievable to me that she is obviously still alive. Having had whippets, Vivi’s ancestors, for more than 40 years I know how tough and resourceful whippets can be, but never having lost one before I would not have expected them to survive for so long in the harsh climate and heavy traffic of New York in February and March. Yet judging from all the recent sightings it seems certain that she has done so. I’m not sure if all whippets could do that, but Vivi was always exceptionally strong and resourceful. Perhaps it would have been easier to catch her if she weren’t.

In the future these updates will be brief, pending major developments, but there are a few things I want to address. Some of these may perhaps be useful for anyone who in the future has the misfortune to lose a dog.

FINDING AN ENVIRONMENT

It seems certain that Vivi has found an environment where she can cope pretty well. How she got so far from JFK, across so many heavily trafficked roads, we will probably never know. She may have been caught at JFK and transported by someone who then lost her; she may have made it on her own. In any case, over the past ten days Vivi has been sighted at least a dozen times in an area of perhaps a few hundred acres, consisting of a greenbelt of parks and residential areas in Flushing and Bayside in New York. Most of the sightings are very reliable and have been further confirmed by three teams of five tracking dogs: Karin Goin, Laura Totis and her tracking partner Sam Connley. In one single day (Sunday) Vivi was sighted three times by different people at a cemetery; yet she has not responded to calls from Paul, Jil or me. (Paul spent the first 12 days in NY searching JFK and later went back for a few more days’ search in Flushing; Jil and I went home to California after a few days at JFK but have both been back twice – Jil and her fiancé, Rick, are in NY now and plan on staying for the rest of the week.)

“GOING FERAL” AND SURVIVING

We have learned a lot about how dogs react when they are lost. Much of this may be surprising even to experienced dog people who have a close bond with their dogs. It is difficult to accept, but most dogs become feral fairly soon, go into a survival mode and almost never come back on their own to their owners or people they know, especially when they were lost in the obviously traumatic manner that Vivi was (somehow knocked out of her crate at JFK and chased along the runway by several Port Authority vehicles). The pet detectives told us the same story: the person who finally catches a lost dog is almost never the owner, nor the searchers, but rather some unsuspecting person in whose backyard the dog comes in looking for food. That person must not try to grab the dog but needs to be calm, give it a treat, speak softly and encouragingly, and quietly close a door or gate that precludes further escape. In other words, we are looking for a miracle.

The other alternative is traps, which Vivi has so far avoided, either because she is wary of crates (possibly after a traumatic experience at JFK) or because she can find sufficient food elsewhere. I found a surprising number of sources of food for hungry dogs and cats in NY: kind-hearted people regularly put out large bowls of food in the parks, outside buildings, etc. Three traps have been set up in areas which Vivi is known to have visited, are baited with appealing, smelly food and checked regularly.

According to some experts, Whippets are among the hardest dogs to catch. Of those I’ve heard mentioned, only Salukis and Italian Greyhounds are more difficult, the former because they remain feral longer than others, the latter because of their size and speed. Mary Hudson, President of the Italian Greyhound Rescue Foundation, sent some interesting information: “We have had dozens of IG’s in the same situation as Vivi right now. It is important to remember that these dogs when scared will run, run, run until they are too tired and hungry. It sometimes takes them a LONG time to tire and become hungry enough that they will be daring enough to get close to someone, let themselves be seen, or allow themselves to be caught, but THEY WILL. Sounds like that may be where Vivi is at the moment. We have had IG’s that have been lost 6-8 weeks, sometimes for months in warmer climates with no one able to catch them. There are always plenty of sightings, but these dogs (and Whippets as well) when lost and scared become terrified of EVERYONE very quickly. They DO NOT EVEN RECOGNIZE their owners/breeders when they call them as they search, because they are so traumatized. Their brains are on survival. Even after they are caught, it often takes a while for them to remember their owners, etc. and what their life was like before. If someone comes up on them if they are near the crate, they tend to run into the crate for safety instinctively and one can just close the door behind them. Again, they need to be tired and hungry enough. My heart breaks for this little whippet and I pray she is found soon. These sighthounds are amazingly resilient when lost and scared, though.”

Although Jil, Rick, Paul and I have gone back to NY hoping that Vivi would come up to us, this is not likely to happen. (Jil and Rick have the best chances, since Vivi has lived with Jil for more than three years. Although she was bred by me she only spent her first few months here and has visited about once every couple of months since then.) The most important reason for us to go, following the pet detectives’ recommendation, was to imprint the trails and places where Vivi is with our scent, encouraging her to stay in this neighborhood. I would not have thought a sighthound could be able to scent us in such a large area, but those with experience in tracking lost dogs are confident that she can. It is vital that Vivi should stay in this area if she is going to be comfortable enough to let herself be caught.

THE MEDIA, THE PUBLIC AND THE VOLUNTEERS

It is amazing to me that so many people still care so deeply about Vivi’s disappearance. I don’t know why she has become the poster child for lost dogs, but apparently the media keeps running updates because of strong pressure from viewers and readers. (We expected the media interest to die off after a few days, but today she has been on Channel 7 and 12 on TV, in the NY Times, Daily News and Newsday; tomorrow on an NBC affiliate, etc.) Obviously Vivi’s family will never stop looking for her, but if all the attention that her experience has received will benefit how dogs are handled by the airlines, then at least some good will come out of this. I know that the generous donations to “Bobbie and the Strays,” the shelter at JFK, will benefit a lot of lost dogs who are not as lucky as Vivi in having people looking for them. Without that knowledge it would be difficult to accept all the attention that Vivi is getting.

Thanks to the media, practically everyone I talked to while walking the streets and parks in Flushing had heard of “the dog that was lost at JFK,” but nobody knew she is now in their neighborhood. This points to the importance of putting up flyers, or preferably posters large enough to be visible from passing cars that slow down or stop at major intersections. Apparently local media is starting to cover the search more extensively, and we are hoping that all coverage will emphasize the fact that Vivi has stayed in this area for more than a week. Obviously that, plus a mention of the $5,000 reward for returning her to us, increases the chances that whoever finds her in their back yard will be able to act quickly and helpfully.

Another resource I hope can be utilized would be the local school children. Vivi is not afraid of children, has reportedly played with a 12-year old girl and didn’t run away until an older person disturbed them. If it were possible to educate children how to act around a stray dog it would help: never chase it, give it some of your lunch if it seems friendly or hungry, and try to get it into a yard or room where the door can be closed. Obviously the child’s safety is paramount; a dog like Vivi would not pose a risk to any child, but I can see that security may be a problem in other cases.

It is impossible to thank all the volunteers who have spent hours, days and now weeks helping in the search for Vivi. Without them there would not have been any substantial search. It is important to confirm all reported sightings to be sure that she is still in the neighborhood. However, the most important help that can be provided now is producing and putting up more posters in the areas where Vivi has been sighted. It may seem more mundance than driving, walking or searching for Vivi but (again) according to those experienced in finding lost dogs, putting up as many posters as possible in the areas where the dog has been seen is the most important key in eventually getting the dog back. In fact, too many people actively searching for Vivi may be counterproductive, as the last thing we want is her getting scared enough to leave he area.

THE AIRLINES

As mentioned earlier, Jil’s lawyer Joyce Randazzo has received an inquiry from Delta Airlines concerning suggestions we may have for improving the procedure of shipping dogs. We take their offer to make some changes very seriously and want them to apply not only to Delta but to all airlines. Many have strong feelings about what should be required, but nobody has all the answers, so we would like the airlines to form an educated opinion after talking to a sufficient number of experienced pet shippers before making any decisions. It is almost impossible to find crates that stay closed even in an accident, yet are easy to open quickly in an emergency; that are warm enough in cold weather and cool enough in hot temperatures; light enough to be useful, etc.

We are very pleased that Delta has asked for our input in this matter. We are, however, also still awaiting information that was promised several weeks ago about the internal investigation that reportedly took place concerning what happened to Vivi’s crate.

I am indebted to Rudolph H. Auslander, of the Japan Airlines Management Corporation, a 37-year veteran of the airline industry, a dog lover and a volunteer with an English Springer Spaniel Rescue group, for the following information. He writes: “Since 9/11 and the implementation of the Transportation Security Regulations that we now operate under, unaccompanied baggage is carefully screened by TSA behind the scenes after you give it to the airline for check in. In the case of live animals, TSA does a visual screening of the crates in your presence. Is it possible that TSA agents opened the cage again to check the contents and failed to properly secure the lock after looking inside?”

Here is what Delta says about shipping pets on their web site: “At Delta, we take the time and care to ensure every animal travels safely and comfortably with our Delta Pet First™ service.” … “Rest assured that your pet will be treated with the same comfort and care you have come to expect from us.”

The following are Government Regulations: “Your pet must remain inside the kennel (with door secured) while in a Delta boarding area (during boarding and deplaning), a Delta airport lounge, and while onboard the aircraft.”

Here is what the Department of Transporation says about Transporting Live Animals:

“Over two million pets and other live animals are transported by air every year in the United States. Federal and state governments impose restrictions on transporting live animals. In addition, each airline establishes its own company policy for the proper handling of the animals they transport.”

THE WEEKEND

I was not able to send an update about the search in NY this past weekend because I was there and did not have access to a computer. The details in any case matter little; all I can say that is that it was incredibly frustrating to be so close to where Vivi was sighted without being able to find her. There were several sightings while I was there during Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, on at least one occasion just minutes before I got to that location. It is also quite possible that Vivi heard my voice but was still too feral to respond the way she normally would. In addition to the girl who may have played with Vivi, at least one man fed Vivi bits of bread through the cemetery fence. He is sure that she no longer was wearing her collar but had a rope around her neck, which means that she in fact must have been captured once and then let go.

Jil and Rick are walking essentially the same routes as I did, and Paul before us. I am hoping that they have more success than we did.

THANK YOU

It is impossible to properly thank all the people who have offered help and services in so many ways. There would be no organized search without Honi Reisman, who leads the activities in New York and should be consulted before any actions are taken concerning the search for Vivi. Bonnie Folz has organized the volunteers and keeps track of sightings. (It’s impossible not to mention two volunteers, Tina and Rosa, who have been out EVERY DAY assisting in the search, but the whole group is incredibly dedicated!) Brian Rosenberg has extended tremendous hospitality in placing the grand Garden City Hotel at our disposal for both the fundraiser and as temporary headquarters during Paul’s and my visits. Joyce Randazzo has offered to deal with Delta on Jil’s behalf, and Denise Flaim has assisted immeasurably in keeping the story alive through her Newsday updates, both in the newspaper and on the internet.

I am sure I have left out many names and apologize for this; I doubt whether any lost dog ever has had as many generous, helpful people devoted to finding her as Vivi has. We are immensely grateful to this and trust that all this will help other dogs from suffering the same misfortune. We are also, finally, still hoping for a happy ending to this very difficult experience.

My apologies for the length of the above. I hope it’s comprehensible; it’s now past 2 AM.

Bo

Vivi Eye Candy

For a photo slide show of Vivi in happier times, romping with friends from the barn where her owner Jil Walton works, visit www.carolbeuchat.com/vivi/index.htm.

Saturday Stake-Out

An email from search coordinator Bonnie Folz:
<<Seems as hard as we try to find Vivi, she's always just two minutes ahead of us.
 
The last two confirmed sightings, volunteers had passed that same spot only minutes before. With this said and the areas we've received the most sightings, it's time to hunker down, stay put and see where Vivi shows herself next.
Vivi has only been sighted during the daylight hours. Jil confirmed that this is consistent with Vivi's day-to-day routine at home.  She's out at 6:30 a.m. at work with Jil all day and by 4 p.m. Vivi is napping and sound asleep.
On Saturday starting at 6 a.m., we will be conducting a Stake-Out, where volunteer "Watchers" will be assigned specific corners/blocks to watch.
 
I will set up a specific protocol to use once Vivi is sighted by one of our group to keep everyone on the same page and proceeding in the same way when Vivi is seen. This protocol information will be given to all volunteers prior to Saturday.  There will also be a few "Floaters" out to assist the "Watchers" and help with food and potty breaks where needed throughout the team of volunteers.
I need to know by Friday afternoon who will be able to volunteer for the Vivi Stake-Out and what hours you will be available.  This will be an all day (dawn till dusk, so to speak) task.  I'm sure not everyone can be available for the full day but ANY time you can be there to help out would be so very appreciated.
Once I know how many volunteers will be on hand, I will give out assignments of the corner/block to watch so you can immediately go there first thing Saturday morning.
I will need to know who will be volunteering, what time you will be at your post and what time you need to leave for the day so I can coordinate who will be where and all areas are covered at all times.
Please email me this information at pawsativebf@aol.com, using "Watcher" in the subject line of your email.
We will leave putting up posters and flyers till the evening hours.
We've had a sighting every day for the past few days and this is a good thing.  In speaking with Laura Totis when she was here with her dogs, she told me it will not be her dogs that find Vivi, they can only tell where she has been.  It will take many more sightings, establish where to get ahead of her and then a plan to actually trap her.  This may take some time.
Lord knows I'd love nothing more than to see Jil and Rick leave New York with Vivi in their arms.
Once again, I cannot thank EVRYONE enough.  You have all been doing a GREAT job.  Hope to see everyone on Saturday.
Keep the faith!>>

Riding shotgun with Jil

THE FOLD

MISSING SHOW DOG

BY DENISE FLAIM
Newsday Staff Writer

March 22, 2006

When Jil Walton of Claremont, Calif., got off the red-eye at John F. Kennedy International Airport yesterday morning, she beelined to a corner of Queens she knew only from the grids of a Hagstrom map.

Vivi1 The 39-year-old patrolled the marble angels of Flushing Cemetery, and trekked the trails of Kissena Park. Then from a remote trail, she spotted a pup tent camouflaged by high grass.

Her fiance and travel companion, Rick Patterson, 44, clambered down the hill. "Have you seen a little white dog?" he asked the human inside.

"Oh," came the reply, accompanied by a waft of marijuana smoke. "You mean Vivi?"

Vivi2 To dog cognoscenti, Vivi is Champion Bohem C'est La Vie, a prize-winning whippet who competed last month at the Westminster Kennel Club dog show. But to residents of Flushing, she is that slip of a hound that bolted from her crate at Kennedy Airport Feb. 15, and has now made her home in their community.

Thanks to a canine-centric consortium of animal lovers, Vivi has been tracked to this section of northeastern Queens by two pet detectives and five search dogs. Telephone poles have sprouted fliers, and volunteer searchers cruise by in cars plastered with Vivi posters.

"I know I'm just supposed to be putting down my scent" in order to encourage the whippet not to wander, said Walton, periodically shouting "Vi-veeeeee" as she walked. But in every rustle of dead leaves, she hears the jingle of dog tags. "I still have this fantasy that I'm going to find my dog."

Vivi3_1 She has reason to hope. Vivi alerts have come fast and furious since March 11, when the dog was spotted by both a landscaper and a resident near 192nd Street and 45th Avenue - a sighting confirmed by search dogs. Since then, Vivi was seen playfully approaching a 12-year-old girl and scarfing down Italian bread tossed to her by a resident around the perimeter of Flushing Cemetery.

An airport employee who saw Vivi the night she got loose at JFK said she was no longer wearing her black buckle collar, which Walton said was so snug-fitting Vivi could never have removed it on her own.

Yesterday at 5 a.m., Vivi was reportedly sighted on Bowne Street, about a dozen blocks from Kissena Park.

She's certainly not thrilled with most humans of late, bolting at least twice in the last week when passersby have tried to grab her. That aloofness is typical of the breed, but not her dog, said Walton, a horse trainer and former Olympian who took Vivi to work with her every day. "She's the greeter at the barn, and she loves boys," she said. "She's a shameless flirt."

As for Walton, her summer nuptials are on hold until her family is complete again.

"I told Rick, let's forget about the wedding," she concluded as she turned on to yet another brush-lined park trail, "and have a 'Welcome Back, Vivi' party instead."

For updates on the Vivi search, visit www.newsday.com/animalhouse.

Feb. 15

Vivi reported missing at Delta terminal and is spotted in marshes at the end of a runway.

March 11

Two tracking dogs pick up a trail in South Jamaica that leads them to Baisley Pond Park.

March 11

Later in the day, Vivi is reported near 192nd Street and 45th Avenue in Flushing.

March 15

Passerby reports Vivi at Utopia Parkway and Peck Avenue, Flushing.

Thursday

Sighting at 210th Street and 43rd Avenue, Bayside.

Saturday

Three children spot dog at Bagley Avenue and Auburndale Lane. They say they had also seen it there a day earlier.

Sunday

Vivi reported at Flushing Cemetery by neighbor who fed her bread at 164th Street and Pidgeon Meadow Road at 2 p.m.

Monday

Vivi reported at 12:30 wandering around Utopia Parkway and 47th Avenue. A woman who tried to approach said the dog bolted toward Flushing Cemetery.

Yesterday

Vivi reported near 42-14 Bowne St. at 5 a.m.

March 21, 2006

Bonnie request

Seach coordinator Bonnie Folz asks if any Vivi volunteers would reach out to the New York City Sanitation Department and alert them to the presence of Vivi in the area. She notes that tomorrow is garbage pickup day in this part of Queens, and sanitation workers would be likely to catch Vivi "dumpster diving."

Vivi Dos and Don'ts

Bonnie Folz calls on her cell phone from Flushing, where volunteers continue to post fliers and search, with this message:

Under no circumstances should any substance -- not antibiotics, not sedatives -- be placed in any food left out for Vivi.

Bonnie stresses that anyone wanting to be of help in the Vivi search effort should concentrate on posting fliers in the Flushing area. If out-of-staters want to contribute to the effort, she asks them to contact local vets' offices, police stations and shelters to alert them to Vivi's presence in the community; and to make large (11 x 17) brightly colored posters.

Wording should say:

- - - - - -

$5,000 reward

<<picture of Vivi>>

Last seen in this area. Do not chase. Please call:

(917) 647-4848

(917) 626-1374

- - - -

Overnight the posters to:

Vivi Search

3392 Bay Front Place

Baldwin, NY 11510

Jil on the Vivi Trail

Vivi's owner Jil Walton and her fiance Rick Patterson took the red eye from LAX this morning and headed straight to Flushing to start searching for Vivi. This is Jil's second trip back to the East Coast to search for her missing whippet.

Their first stop was Bowne Street, near Franklin Avenue, where Vivi was reportedly sighted at 5 a.m. This very populated part of Flushing is about 10 or so blocks west of Kissena Park,  where Vivi searcher Rosa Chile says she saw Vivi running near the duck pond yesterday. There was no sign of the speedy sighthound in either location this morning.

Volunteers had fliers made up in both Koren and Chinese, and posted them in the Bowne Street area.

In an effort to leave her scent in the less-trafficked, parklike places where Vivi has recently been sighted, Jil and Rick walked the perimeter of Flushing Cemetery as well as many of the paths and trails of Kissena Park.

This afternoon, a humane trap was being transported to the cemetery, whose caretakers have given permission for it to be set up.

March 20, 2006

Vivi still footloose

Vivi was sighted again today at 12:30 wandering on the street in the vicinity of Utopia Parkway and 47th Avenue. The caller said she allowed him to get close, but when he reached out to grab her she bolted toward Flushing Cemetery and ran along the cemetery fence line toward 162nd Street.

Another woman called to say she saw Vivi in the cemetery last night, but did not think to call searchers. Presumably locked in the cemetery overnight, Vivi must have escaped this morning when the gates reopened.

A note from Bonnie

One of the search co-ordinators, Bonnie Folz, emails to ask volunteers to please not blog about the specific locations of where traps are set in attempts to catch Vivi. This could hurt rescue efforts instead of help them.

Instead, volunteers are asked to continue to work on the general search for the missing whippet, posting mini-posters that are visible even by driversby, and handling out fliers.

March 19, 2006

Night of the Living Vivi

After Vivi was spotted this afternoon bolting into Flushing Cemetery, searchers, including breeder Bo Bengtson, Carol Reisman and Bonnie Folz, toured the cemetery with the caretaker after it had closed. No Vivi.

Bo then went to Kissena Park, walking it to see if he could glimpse his missing whippet