Family reunited with stolen pet dog after four-month search lead campaign to promote micro-chipping law

A family who were reunited with their dog after she was stolen from outside a supermarket in Northamptonshire are urging people to get their pet microchipped.
Back home...Bella with Phil Osborne, Joseph Luckman 13, Sarah Osborne and Bethany Luckman in Rothwell.
PICTURE: ANDREW CARPENTER NNL-161102-153241001Back home...Bella with Phil Osborne, Joseph Luckman 13, Sarah Osborne and Bethany Luckman in Rothwell.
PICTURE: ANDREW CARPENTER NNL-161102-153241001
Back home...Bella with Phil Osborne, Joseph Luckman 13, Sarah Osborne and Bethany Luckman in Rothwell. PICTURE: ANDREW CARPENTER NNL-161102-153241001

From April 6 this year, it will be a legal requirement to have your dog microchipped - under the Microchipping of Dogs (England) Regulations 2015 - and to keep registered details up-to-date.

For the Osborne family, the fact their dog Bella was microchipped led them to be reuinted four months after she went missing.

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Four-year-old springer spaniel Bella went missing from Rothwell on October 20 and was found more than 110 miles away - in Bristol.

The black and white dog wandered into a shop in Bristol on February 10 - four months after disappearing from outside a shop.

Taken to the RSPCA’s Bristol Dogs & Cats Home by the council dog warden, Bella didn’t have to wait long to be reunited with her ecstatic family.

Sarah Osborne, husband Philip and son Joseph, 13, drove the 110-mile journey to Bristol in convoy with Sarah’s parents as soon as they received a phone call to say that Bella had been found.

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Sarah said: “Bella is a massive part of our family and we were devastated when she was taken.

“It was our anniversary and I asked Philip to go down to the shop to pick up some chocolate. He took Bella with him for a walk and tied her up outside. His back was turned for no more than 40 seconds and she had disappeared.”

The family hunted for Bella, launched a social media campaign, put up posters and contacted the local media but there were no sightings of her.

“We were left with a gaping hole. We had four months of stressing and worrying, especially when the weather was really bad.

“Everything goes through your mind, it’s horrible.

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“Joseph found it really hard and started suffering from panic attacks,” said Sarah. “When we were reunited you could see the weight lift off his shoulders!

“Bella knew instantly that it was us, she went absolutely loopy!”

The RSPCA advises all pet owners get their animals microchipped, including dogs, cats, horses and rabbits. Microchipping acts as an identification programme. Each chip has a unique number and each number is logged alongside the owner’s contact details, so it’s important that the details are kept up-to-date. This means that if your pet goes missing or is stolen and is later found, he can be scanned and you can be contacted.

The new law will not cover other pets, such as cats, but microchipping is strongly recommended.

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Sarah added: “I think compulsory microchipping is fabulous. I don’t think everyone realises, when they take on a pet, how important microchipping is. If Bella hadn’t have been chipped, we never would have seen her again.

“I’m really glad it’s coming into force in April, I just hope that most places will start to scan pets.”

The RSPCA relies on public donations to exist. To assist our Inspectors in carrying out their vital work please text HELP to 78866 to give £3 (Texts cost £3 + one standard network rate message).