Alberta pup heads to Ukraine to help with war effort by sniffing out explosives
CBC
An Alberta canine is putting his nose to good use.
Torch is a 3-year-old Belgian Malinois and a professionally trained explosives detection dog. In the fall, he will head to Ukraine to locate landmines and unexploded ordinances — explosives that did not go off or function as intended — in the conflict zone.
Torch was trained by Alberta K9, a Gull Lake, Alta., company that specializes in preparing dogs for roles in policing, personal protection and private security.
The dog's overseas trip is sponsored by an Edmonton-based charity, Firefighter Aid Ukraine. A dog with Torch's specialized skills would normally be valued at $25,000. But Alberta K9 is loaning Torch out for free to the charity.
"We just wanted to find a meaningful way to help out," said Matt LaPointe who co-owns Alberta K9.
Torch is a late bloomer and was born in 2019. One of his littermates, Marshall, started working with Edmonton Fire Rescue Services in 2021 as an ignitable liquids detection dog.
LaPointe said he and Kelsey LaPointe, his wife and co-owner, knew they had a perfectly good pooch sitting in the kennel, but were trying to find a match for Torch's personality.
"He's a very, very intense focused dog," He said. "And we figured with everything going on over in Ukraine, why don't we train him on explosives detection."
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With a new career plan, LaPointe got in touch with Firefighter Aid Ukraine, which also trains Ukrainian first responders and raises donations for firefighters.
Project director Kevin Royle said Torch is one of the more unique donations they've sent overseas.
"We've shipped over really high value equipment like X-ray machines and anesthesiologist machines," he said. "But to be able to ship over something like this, that is so so specialized … It's pretty incredible."
Dogs are trained to detect explosives through scent association. When they locate a certain smell, they alert their handler appropriately, which leads to a reward. For landmine detection, the scent is buried deep underground, and depending on the job — and the workplace — training can look a little different.
"There's a little bit of fine tuning," said LaPointe. For example, Torch was trained in both English and hand commands, to allow him to work silently.