A husky is being hailed for saving the life of a deaf student who was struggling alone through the Alaskan wilderness, reports Good News Network.
21-year-old Amelia Milling had been on a solo 3-day hike through the Alaskan wilderness in June when she slipped in the snow and started to fall. After falling for roughly 300 feet, she crashed into a boulder and tumbled down another 300 feet. When she finally came to a stop, she was dazed, bruised, and bleeding.
Thatโs when Nanook the husky showed up. Milling says that she thought the 7-year-old dog was a wolf until she saw that he had a collar and dog tag stating that he was a โCrow Pass Guideโ. The injured Tennessee college student inferred that the dog was there to help her โ and she was correct.
Nanook led Milling back to the trail and hiked with her until it got dark and she pitched camp. The husky then stayed with her through the night until she continued her journey the next day.
โHe gave me the motivation to get up and walk another seven miles,โ Milling said, โIf he didnโt show up, I probably wouldnโt have gotten back up and kept walking.โ
Nanook, also known as โNookieโ, came to Millingโs rescue again when they came across a freezing, fast-moving river. After watching Nookie cross the water, Milling gauged the situation and believed that she could follow suit. She tried to cross it once, only to fail. When she tried to cross a second time, she lost her footing and got pulled into the current.
For 15 minutes, she struggled against the water until finally Nanook grabbed a strap of her backpack with his teeth and started pulling her to shore.ย Then, hypothermic and dazed on the riverbank, Milling pressed the SOS button on her Spot Device. That alerted the Alaska State Troopers and sent a message to Milling’s mother and sister in Tennessee.
Nookie and Millie stayed on the side of that river for several hours until troopers in a helicopter spotted herย wrapped in a red sleeping bag with Nookie curled up beside her.