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Sandra, Emma and Peter Wright reunited with their yorkshire terrier Eddie.
Sandra, Emma and Peter Wright reunited with their yorkshire terrier Eddie. Photograph: Julian Brown/PDSA/PA
Sandra, Emma and Peter Wright reunited with their yorkshire terrier Eddie. Photograph: Julian Brown/PDSA/PA

Missing dog found half a mile from owners' home after five years

This article is more than 7 years old

Yorkshire terrier Eddie reunited with family in Stockport after microchip discovered during veterinary check-up

A dog missing for five years has been reunited with his family courtesy of a microchip that traced him to his new owners just half a mile away.

Sandra Wright, 50, from Reddish, Stockport, thought she had lost her yorkshire terrier Eddie when he disappeared from her sister-in-law’s home in Fallowfield, Manchester, in 2011 while they were on holiday.

“Neighbours were searching the streets, we put up posters everywhere, alerted all the local vets and rescue centres, reported it to police and registered him on all the websites,” she said.

“We even offered a reward, but he had simply vanished. With each week that passed, we knew the chances of finding him decreased. It was awful.”

The trail remained cold until this year when Jeanette Johnson, 57, also from Reddish, took in Eddie, now aged 13, from a neighbour who was struggling to look after him.

She brought him into Manchester PDSA pet hospital for a check-up and it was discovered Eddie had already been chipped and was registered missing five years earlier. The Wright family received a phone call to tell them their beloved pet had been found.

Wright said: “We still had conversations about Eddie – what he might be doing, if he was being looked after, if he was even still alive. But never in a million years did we think we would get him back after all this time.

“Best of all, he arrived home on my daughter’s 16th birthday. I printed off one of Eddie’s ‘missing’ posters from the computer for when she arrived home from school, then when she came in and saw Eddie next to it she was over the moon and said it was the best birthday present ever.

“We can’t know for sure just how Eddie ended up where he did, but he was clearly well loved during his time away as he is still as friendly and loving as ever. I’m so grateful to PDSA and everyone who helped to get him back to us – it just shows the difference a microchip can make.”

The veterinary charity PDSA treats more than 470,000 pets a year at its 51 pet hospitals in the UK.

Helen McEntee, the vet nurse team leader at Manchester PDSA pet hospital, said: “Every year, thousands of pets across the UK go missing. Sadly, many are never reunited with their owners, but microchipped pets stand a far better chance of a happy homecoming.

“It is now a legal requirement for all dogs in the UK to be microchipped once they are eight weeks old. And thanks to funding from players of People’s Postcode Lottery, PDSA will be delivering 50,000 microchips this year.”

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