Share this @internewscast.com
A courageous dog successfully located a missing two-year-old girl, who was found alone and frightened in the New Hampshire woods as temperatures dangerously fell.
The child’s mother reported her daughter missing at 4:07 p.m. on October 10, noting that the toddler had been unaccounted for nearly an hour in Dorchester.
Responding swiftly, authorities launched an extensive rescue operation due to concerns over the girl’s young age and the rapidly dropping temperatures, as stated by the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department.
The search effort, enlisting over 90 volunteers, led officials into the thick woods in pursuit of the child.
Among those helping was Jeremy Corson, a volunteer with New England K-9 Search and Rescue, accompanied by his 7-year-old German Shepherd, Freyja.
Corson shared with WHDH, “I rushed out the door as soon as I heard the words ‘two-year-old’.”
‘It’s like go go go right out of the gate, so I basically pulled over, got the dog, and started running into the woods.’

Jeremy Corson and Freyja, his 7-year-old German Shepherd, were responsible for finding a missing New Hampshire toddler

Corson has been a K-9 search-and-rescue professional since July 2012

The girl was reported missing at 4.07pm on October 10, New Hampshire Fish and Game said
Corson is a full-time software engineer based in Massachusetts but has volunteered as a K-9 search-and-rescue professional since July 2012.
‘Time is of the essence with a two-year-old,’ Corson told the Washington Post. ‘Both because they’re young and because the more time passes, the more they can travel.’
The girl, whose identity is unknown, had disappeared from her home’s gated front yard at 3.15pm alongside her family’s two dogs.
The pets had seemingly ‘pushed through’ a spot where a wooden fence meets a metal wire fence.
Christopher McKee, a sergeant with New Hampshire Fish and Game, said: ‘The gate was secured, everything was locked.’
The girl’s shoes were found about two hours into the search, and the family dogs returned to their house moments later.
However, the girl was still missing.
Now, she was completely alone – with the temperature in Dorchester expected to drop into the 20s.

Corson said he was ‘out the door pretty much immediately’ when he heard a two-year-old was missing

Corson is a volunteer with New England K-9 Search and Rescue

Authorities were concerned about what dropping temperatures could mean for the toddler
Corson told the Washington Post that the New Hampshire woods were ‘so thick’ that he could not see ‘much more than a couple feet’ ahead.
Then, Freyja picked something up.
Corson said to WMUR: ‘On the second pass, the dog pulled us back to our previous pass and started investigating and started displaying that human scent behavior.’
His dog’s ‘incredible nose,’ Corson wrote on social media, took him right to the ‘scared but safe little girl who was ready for her bath and bedtime.’
Corson revealed the toddler initially thought he was her father.
He said her first first words were: ‘I’m cold, I think I’m ready for a bath.’
‘That just broke my heart,’ he added.
New Hampshire Fish and Game said the two-year-old girl was found at 7.52pm.

Corson said Freyja’s ‘incredible nose’ took him to the missing toddler

Freyja was partnered with Corson in May 2018, according to a Facebook post from New England K-9 Search and Rescue (Photo posted May 20, 2018)

Now, she is widely recognized as a hero (Photo posted May 20, 2018)
She was carried out to an ambulance and taken to Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center for evaluation.
However, Corson said, there was one final sweet moment between the missing girl and his dog, who ‘loves kids.’
He said: ‘The subject in this case was alert and ready and likes dogs, so I was able to give her a ball and have her throw it to Frejya.’
The full search effort involved New Hampshire Fish and Game, State Troopers, New England K-9, Upper Valley Search and Rescue Team, Pemigewasset Valley Search and Rescue Team, Canaan Fire Department, Rumney Fire Department and Grafton Fire Departments, authorities said.
A helicopter and drones were also used.
Corson said: ‘This is why I signed up to do it.
‘It’s taken me thirteen years to get here, but I wouldn’t be anywhere else but that spot.’