Community Corner

Search Continues For Missing Foster Dog Who Doesn't Know His Name

Dozer has been missing a week, and the search continues in Mattituck as his foster family and others work tirelessly to bring him home.

Dozer is a year old, and looks like a young black Labrador, with a border collie neck, white with black spots. He has a very narrow blade between his eyes and "white socks with spots," his foster said.
Dozer is a year old, and looks like a young black Labrador, with a border collie neck, white with black spots. He has a very narrow blade between his eyes and "white socks with spots," his foster said. (Courtesy Denise Magyar.)

MATTITUCK, NY — The search continues for a missing foster dog who doesn't even know his name.

Denise Magyar had only just brought home her new foster Dozer, a neutered male Lab mix, one day earlier when he went missing last Wednesday, Feb. 2. She told Patch that Dozer did not know anything about the North Fork or even his new name.

According to Magyar, the dog was brought up from Georgia on a transport; he went missing Wednesday afternoon from Soundview Avenue in Mattituck.

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"He is fearful, so please do not chase him," she said.

Dozer, Magyar said, has never been out of his cage; she had planned to foster him so that he could one day find his forever home. But, she said, "He's not ready yet for adoption."

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Despite the fact that she has a triple gate system, and Dozer is on a 4-foot black leash, Magyar had an appointment and Dozer, who is afraid of men, bolted away from her husband, despite his best efforts to catch him.

Dozer, she said, is a year old, and looks like a young black Labrador, with a border collie neck, white with black spots. He has a very narrow blade between his eyes and "white socks with spots," she said.

"He looks like a Lab who had an altercation with a Dalmation," she said.

He also has dewclaws, or extra toes, on his hind legs, with nails that are both pink and black.

The dog, Magyar said, had only just been named Dozer. "It's a recent name," she said. "He doesn't recognize his name."

Magyar is frantic with worry about her new charge. "He's very skittish; he's scared," she said.

Her heart breaks, she said, because bringing him home was supposed to mean a new beginning for Dozer: "He has so much potential to be adopted. I'm so sorry this has happened."

Magyar said she had just been starting to settle Dozer in. "We were trying to alleviate the anxiety, the fright — to show him what it is, to be in a home," she said.

Magyar said although Dozer was caged at night to prevent accidents, she slept beside him so that he could see her all night long. "So he had that comfort," she said.

Magyar said she and her husband Christopher, as well as others, including volunteers from a local animal shelter, formed a search party.

The have driven around the area, trekked over properties through the snow, met resident Holly Browder and her husband, and continued the search. Also helping was Dowser's sibling, "the alpha female," Magyar said.

"When I took them to where I lost saw Dozer, I found his paw prints and his sister went crazy," she said.

As for Magyar, she has fostered dogs before; she is worried that Dozer is missing during the cold winter.

Her own dog died recently, Magyar said. "I wasn't ready for a new dog, but I wanted to help — I wanted to give back," she said.

Anyone who spots Dozer should call 631-765-1811 ext. 2. Magyar said most important is that whoever sees him should explain when Dozer was seen, what time, where, and what direction he was heading in.

"These are the crucial pieces of information needed," she said.

Magyar also wanted to thank the many who care, and are working so tirelessly to bring Dozer home safely.

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