To Rescue Lost Animals, She Climbs into Places Most of us Avoid

Callie Clemens was close to falling asleep when an emergency message on the Facebook page she runs—Lost & Found Pets of Spring Branch & Spring Valley—caught her eye. Whimpers had been heard from inside a nearby storm drain, so there was likely a puppy—maybe more than one—stuck down there.

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Callie Clemens was close to falling asleep when an emergency message on the Facebook page she runs—Lost & Found Pets of Spring Branch & Spring Valley—caught her eye. Whimpers had been heard from inside a nearby storm drain, so there was likely a puppy—maybe more than one—stuck down there.

Callie Clemens was close to falling asleep at around 11 p.m. last 26 July, when an emergency message on the Facebook page she runs—Lost & Found Pets of Spring Branch & Spring Valley—caught her eye. A tiny black puppy had been spotted scurrying across a road in Spring Branch, the Houston neighbourhood where she lives. Whimpers had been heard from inside a nearby storm drain, so there was likely another puppy—maybe more than one—stuck down there.

Clemens sprang out of bed and drove to the scene. Once there, she heard desperate howls and whimpers from underground echoing through the storm drain. She grabbed her son’s toy flashlight from her car, pulled a metal grate off the drain and shimmied down.

“I wasn’t very well equipped,” Clemens says. “I was not expecting to go into the drain.” But nobody else was around, and puppies were stuck in there. “Somebody’s got to do it.”

This was not Clemens’s first foray into a storm drain. An animal lover and the mom of 7-year-old twin boys, Clemens is known in the Houston area for her rescue efforts. Aside from the Facebook page, Clemens also runs Paws Off The Streets, an outreach programme for needy animals. She has saved dogs and cats as well as the occasional ­possum and raccoon. Over the past nine years, she estimates she’s saved at least 100 creatures exposed to danger.

After lowering herself roughly 7 feet down the drain, Clemens crawled through about 10 feet of a 24-inch-wide cockroach-infested tunnel before reaching an area where she could crouch and search. It was 700 yards of pitch black.

“I heard splashing,” Clemens says. She pointed her flashlight and saw “two sets of eyes looking at me.” Then the dogs ran off. “They were crying,” she says.Around midnight, staffers from the local Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to An...

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