Sheriff’s sergeant rescues dog from icy pond
Columbia County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Heath Benansky of the Copake area paddled into the icy waters of a pond on Pat’s Road in Ancramdale for Andy, a shivering Austrian German shepherd, who had fallen in. After the rescue, officer and dog were happily on dry land, having been warmed by other first responders at the scene. Photo courtesy of the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office 

Sheriff’s sergeant rescues dog from icy pond

ANCRAMDALE — Man’s best friend got a helping hand from Sgt. Heath Benansky, of the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office, who braved the icy waters of a pond on Pat’s Road in Ancramdale to rescue  a Doggie in Distress, a one-year old Austrian German shepherd named Andy who had strayed from home. 

According to department spokesman Lt. John Rivero, when the call for help came in on Friday, Jan. 15, Sheriff David P. Bartlett called Benansky, an off-duty member of the Water Rescue Squad and Copake area resident, who immediately headed to the scene. There he was assisted by Deputy Zachary Torchia and other members of the Dive Team equipped with cold water gear.

Rivero gave special credit to Benansky, a dog handler with “special place in his heart” for this familiar breed. 

Using a nearby paddle board he “was wet up to his waist and he had nothing on his feet… He didn’t care about getting his uniform wet or dirty. He went right in,” said Rivero.

Giving aid to both Andy and his hero involved a good deal of “scrambling” by the Dive Team, added Rivero, who said to dry and warm both man and beast it took a good many towels and blankets, and giving Benansky “a dry set of boots that he squeezed his feet into.”

The rescue was made possible thanks to the quick thinking of “two ladies that were in the area walking and heard the dog yelping — obvious signs of distress. When they located where it was coming from, they noticed that it had fallen through the ice — thin ice on the pond. The puppy wasn’t in an area where they could throw something to it or get to it easily,” added Rivero, so the two women thought fast and called the sheriff’s office.

“The most important thing was that the women were smart enough and had the where-with-all not to go in themselves, and leave it to trained professionals,” Rivero emphasized. “If a civilian had gone in there not trained, then we’re looking at two victims or multiple victims.”

The dog was taken to the Copake Animal Hospital, where he was checked and then returned to his owner, who had been located via an animal Lost and Found website. 

Rivero said as of Monday morning, Jan. 18, his postings about Andy’s adventure had received 39,000 views on social media — 20,000 as of the first night — and that Deputy Benansky “was stunned by that — the magnitude of engagement that it got.”

With winter bringing challenges for pets such as Andy, Millerton Veterinary Hospital’s Dr. Carolyn Cannon, DVM, advised that drying and gradually warming an animal who is cold and wet should be done immediately while its temperature is checked. If that drops below 98 degrees, the pet should  be taken in a warm car to the nearest veterinary location. 

If the temperature is above 98 degrees, the animal should be taken inside, walked around and warmed gradually with drier-warmed towels or blankets, which can be tented with the air inside — and not the animal — warmed by a hair drier.

Rather than relying on Lost and Found postings, the veterinarian recommends that pet owners invest in a $70 locator microchip, which are more reliable and will allow for an immediate reunions with lost pets.

Latest News

School-to-work apprenticing

In the children’s section at The Dover Plains Library, from left to right, Amy Smith (Director of Dover Plains Library), Meredith Hamilton (Teen Program Director), Katie Cariello (School to Work Coordinator), and Shannon (student intern).

Natalia Zuckerman

With funding from the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, North East Community Center’s (NECC) School-to-Work Apprenticeship Program supports young adults navigating the delicate transition from adolescence to adulthood.

Webutuck, Dover Plains, Pine Plains, and Millbrook Public School students (and recent graduates) are paired with local trades and businesses during their junior and senior years of high school, giving students an invaluable opportunity to explore a diversity of career fields while gaining transferable skills to shape not just careers, but lives.

Keep ReadingShow less
Amenia Town Board hears plans for new Town Garage

Conceptual rendering of the design for a new Amenia Town Garage calls for six bays for trucks and equipment.

LaBella Associates

AMENIA — The old Town Garage in Wassaic, built before 1955, is showing its age and inability to meet the town’s modern needs, according to a special report to the Town Board at its regular meeting on Thursday, April 4.

Flanked by images of the old garage and conceptual design plans for a new structure, Budget Officer Charlie Miller reported on the shortcomings of the old and the design features of a new expanded facility.

Keep ReadingShow less
Bank of Millbrook eyes North East site

The Bank of Millbrook may be opening a Town of North East branch on Route 44 at the location of Elizabeth’s Jewelry and Fine Gifts, according to bank president George Whalen III.

Christine Bates

MILLERTON — The Town of North East is abuzz with the probability that The Bank of Millbrook is in talks to open a branch locally.

George Whalen III, president of the Bank of Millbrook, was introduced around at the Millerton Fire Company pancake breakfast on Sunday morning, April 7, by Town of North East Supervisor Chris Kennan. Kennan commented he “wished more business people would reach out to residents of our community. I’m happy that they want to come to our town.” Asked for specifics about the purchase of property in town he replied, “It’s really premature. The bank hasn’t bought anything.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Hecate talks solar at Hillsdale meetings

Hecate Energy’s Matt Levin, center, discusses detail of the Shepherd’s Run project with Copake residents who attended an open house on Wednesday, April 3 in Hillsdale.

John Coston

HILLSDALE — Hecate Energy LLC held two open houses at the Hillsdale Fire Company on Wednesday, April 3 to present details of its upcoming application for a 42 megawatt (MW) solar farm in Copake.

Hecate officials said they expect to submit a permit application to the New York State Office of Renewable Energy Siting (ORES) in early June. In February, Hecate’s application for a 60MW solar farm was denied by ORES after the company lost control of 60 acres initially slated as part of the project.

Keep ReadingShow less