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Pet owners beware: Snares trap 2 dogs on Torbay trail

A Torbay man is warning dog owners to keep their pets on a leash after he found two beagles trapped in a snare Friday morning.

Warning: Details of the story may be disturbing to some readers

Alex Chafe found two dogs caught in snares not far from his Torbay home and alerted Torbay Animal Control. (CBC)

A Torbay man is warning dog owners to keep their pets on a leash after he found two beagles trapped in a snare early Friday morning.

Alex Chafe said he heard howling around his house on Evenings Path around 2 a.m. Friday, and went to see if he could find the source of the sound.

"I tried to track them but couldn't find them, so first thing this morning I went out to try and see where they were."

Chafe said he found two small dogs with wires like a noose around their necks about four of five metres off a trail.

'Not totally responsive'

"There was one dog that was in hard shape. The snare had really tightened around this guy's neck," Chafe said. "The second dog — he was in better shape but he was pretty spooked."

The snares had one wire tightly around a pure-breed beagle's neck, but two wires had trapped a second beagle-cross.

The area where the dogs were found was not far from a popular walking trail in the town of Torbay. (CBC)

"The beagle, he was in pretty bad shape. He was was not totally responsive and he had a snare really tight around his neck," he said. 

"The second dog [was caught in] two snares, but luckily for him they weren't quite as tight."

He called Torbay Animal Control, which he said showed up within a short period of time and freed the dogs.

They were then taken to a vet. 

Chafe said the snares were set just off a popular walking trail. He said he wants other owners to be vigilant. 

"It would only take my dog getting off the leash or me dropping the leash [and] he could be into the woods and caught in a snare in seconds."

Torbay Mayor Ralph Tapper told CBC News the dogs are expected to make a full recovery, and one has been released from the vet. 

The traps were set near the Torbay bypass road overpass which runs into Evenings Path in Torbay. (Google Maps)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ariana Kelland

Investigative reporter

Ariana Kelland is a reporter with the CBC Newfoundland and Labrador bureau in St. John's. She is working as a member of CBC's Atlantic Investigative Unit. Email: ariana.kelland@cbc.ca

With files from Carolyn Stokes