When danger fell, love stood up. 🐾❤️
Our dog didn’t think — he felt.
In one brave move, he saved our baby’s life.
That’s what true loyalty looks like. 💫👌🐕🤩🤗

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When danger fell, love stood up. 🐾❤️
Our dog didn’t think — he felt.
In one brave move, he saved our baby’s life.
That’s what true loyalty looks like. 💫👌🐕🤩🤗
A Red Cross nurse with decorated war hero Filax of Lewanno, who rescued 54 Allied soldiers during World War I, on display during the Red Cross parade, October 4, 1920.
Photo: Granger via Fine Art America
Owls Head Light, Owls Head, Maine. Perhaps the most famous resident of Owls Head Light, was a springer spaniel named Spot. Dog of keeper Augustus B. Hamor (keeper from 1930-1945). Gus's daughters, Pauline and Millie, trained Spot to ring the fog bell as vessels sailed by. Spot's favorite visitor was the mail boat, as the captain always brought him a treat. During one bad blizzard, Spot adamantly asked to be let out. He ran to the waters edge and barked until the mail boat captain, unable to see in the storm, heard the barks, recognized where he was, and avoided a collision with the rocks. Another Maine lighthouse hero dog.
Hero dog guides police to missing 3-year-old boy: ‘Lassie found him’
By Ronny Reyes
11 February 2026
A four-legged hero lent Kentucky police a paw during a search for a missing child in his neighborhood, with the pooch grabbing their attention and guiding them to the boy, new bodycam footage shows.
Louisville Metropolitan Police officer Josh Thompson and his fellow cops were searching for a missing 3-year-old boy on January 7 when an unnamed collie mix appeared and began barking at them, the police video shows.
Thompson said he was a “little leery” of the dog, which he did not recognize despite his usual patrols, but the dog was persistent and barked directly at the officers as though trying to get their attention.
It was then that Thompson jokingly relented and acknowledged the dog.
As Thompson looked around in the backyard, the dog came to him to lead the officers to the garage area, where a car was parked.
When officers looked in the car, they found the frightened child locked inside in the front passenger seat.
Thompson said he immediately went into “dad mode” as he tried to instruct the boy on how to unlock the door so the officers could get him out.
“He hit the door latch, and I just gave him the yank motion. He yanked, and I pulled that door open quickly,” Thompson said. “And he jumped from the car, bear-hugged my neck, and wouldn’t let go.”
The boy was scared but unharmed and was quickly reunited with his family.
As the cops celebrated the successful rescue, they were seen petting the hero dog and thanking it for its help.
“Lassie found him,” one of the officers cheered.
“I don’t know where the dog came from, but it was a blessing from God that day,” Thompson said.
Sean Calloway, a local resident, said the dog that helped the officers is a known friend in the Okolona neighborhood that walks the streets when the weather is good.
“He’s always out here like this, but he’s a good dog,” Calloway told WLKY, introducing the collie.
“You’re a hero,” Calloway added as he petted the so-called “Louisville Lassie.”
Dog Digs up Huge Haul of Medieval Coins in Poland
A rare collection of bracteates – thin, single-sided medieval coins – has been dug up by a dog near the city of Wałbrzych in southwestern Poland. Experts say the items – which date back to the 13th century – are the first such large discovery in over a hundred years.
The Wałbrzych branch of the Lower Silesia heritage protection office was alerted by the owner of the dog, named Kajtuś, about his rare find earlier this month. They immediately dispatched a team, including archaeologists from the University of Wrocław, to investigate.
“The person who contacted us was out walking the dog,” Anna Nowakowska-Ciuchera, the Wałbrzych heritage protection officer, told Gazeta Wyborcza. “Kajtuś started digging in the earth, and that was how he reached the jug with the coins.”
“The objects turned out to be medieval bracteates which were preserved in a damaged earthenware pot,” the Lower Silesia heritage protection office explained. Preliminary findings date the find to the first half of the 13th century and suggest that the coins were minted in Brandenburg, Saxony or Silesia.
“Finding a significant number of coins from this period is an exceptional occurrence,” added the office, because new currencies could be issued as often as two or three times a year, with previous sets of coins being melted down and reminted.
The discovered coins are in excellent condition, with mostly clear prints and little damage. Poland’s biggest collections of bracteates have previously been in Warsaw and Kraków, but the area of the new find will now become a “mecca” for medievalists, the heritage protection office predicts.
For now, however, they do not want to reveal the precise location of the discovery, to discourage amateur metal detectors from arriving, reports Gazeta Wyborcza.
Bracteates (from the Latin bractea, meaning a thin piece of metal) were used as coins in medieval times. They were printed on the obverse, with a concave “negative” of the image on the reverse.
Featuring representations of animals, fantastical designs and elements of architecture, they are an excellent material for medievalist studies, says the heritage protection office.
“The idea of stamping coins from a thin plate was caused by the low availability of ore – silver or, more rarely, gold, and the reserves of the mint. Kings, dukes, and bishops could mint coins,” the heritage protection office explains.
Only with the discovery of silver deposits near Prague did the “euro of medieval Europe”, the Prague groschen, begin to be minted, which gradually took over from bracteates.
The coins are archaeological heritage and will therefore eventually make their way into a museum rather than onto the numismatic market. First, however, they need to be properly studied and conserved – which will require time as well as academic grants.
As for Kajtuś the dog, “with his skills in mind, archaeologists are already making enquiries about his participation in excavations,” the heritage protection office joked.