By Nancy Jaffer
Dec. 25, 2018
Okay, he didn’t have eight tiny reindeer and a sleigh. His transportation was a propeller-driven airplane that landed at an airport, not on a rooftop. But Matt Kiener might as well have been Santa Claus this Christmas Eve.
After a five-hour flight, the pilot arrived yesterday in his single-engine Piper at Sky Manor in Pittstown with a load of puppies and a few older dogs, 26 canines in all. It was a special delivery from Mississippi by FlyPups to Puppy Love Pet Rescue, serving Union, Ocean, Monmouth and Middlesex counties.
The area from which these dogs came isn’t prosperous. Many of the residents cannot afford to spay or neuter their animals, leading to overpopulation. Shelters often have no choice but to euthanize some dogs to make room for others. Puppy Love offers a solution, with its volunteers fostering the dogs that FlyPups brought north.
Patty Gilmore of Union, whose sister, Joan leads Puppy Love, had volunteers go down south to clean up shelters. Using adoption fees, they also pay for spaying and neutering dogs that remain in Mississippi.
“There are very few organized rescues there,” explained Patty, noting Puppy Love volunteers last summer picked some dogs they wanted to bring to New Jersey.
“It’s very difficult to get the dogs up here. We’re so grateful to be able to get these dogs flown up. Some of them are so little; the 22-hour drive is so difficult for the puppies, versus a five or six hour flight,” she pointed out.
Patty recalled that when her organization contacted Matt, “he responded instantly. He can handle so many more than we can in a car. We are so grateful for Matt, especially at holiday time.”
The video below shows the arrival of the dogs at Sky Manor Airport.
You may know Matt’s name, because he has a connection with the horse world. The Jersey Fresh International Three-Day Event at the Horse Park of New Jersey this year hosted a 5-K run to benefit Fly Pups. Many equestrians have adopted dogs that arrived in New Jersey via FlyPups. Matt also works for Cassie and Carl Segal in Pottersville, where he takes care of retired eventing stars My Boy Bobby and Ballynoe Castle RM (Reggie), Buck Davidson’s former ride, who took his final bow before the public at Rolex Kentucky in 2017.
Matt got involved with dog rescue when a friend whose plane was grounded asked him to fill in bringing five dogs to New York State. At the time, Matt had an aerobatic plane without much room for cargo, but he was able to handle the five puppies involved.
“I flew the mission and it was an awakening, if you will. I hadn’t known that something like this needed to be. I didn’t understand that there were so many dogs that were in dire situations and would ultimately be destroyed if they were not relocated.
“On the flight home, I ended up naming the one dog I adopted Piper, knowing I’d have to sell my Cessna and buy something bigger that would allow me to do this more effectively and efficiently. It was one of those pivotal days when you just knew things were going to change,” Matt recalled.
“Five months later, I was deep in debt with this plane—it’s a mortgage payment—but look what I get to do. So it’s worth it.”
Matt was assisted by student pilot Liz Alexander of Rhode Island. Liz, who has been working with rescues for three years, flew the whole way to New Jersey with a five-week-old hound mix on her lap.
Explaining why she is so devoted to the rescue process, Liz said, “It’s good to see the puppies come out of disaster situations and go to foster homes and be happy and clean and healthy and not on the streets. And be home for the holidays.”
Cris Schoefer, who has five dogs, went to Mississippi in August to check out dogs who would be likely candidates and fell in love with Leyland. He was an unusual case, because he had been in a shelter for four years, since he was a puppy. When he arrived, Leyland seemed a bit overwhelmed, but stoic. Cris, however, was crying. Those were tears of joy, as she thought how happy she would be “just to see him sleeping on the bed tonight” at her home in Brick.
There were two blind dogs in the Christmas eve shipment. Pearl was an adorable blind and deaf 8-week old Aussie. That’s familiar territory for Cris, who owns a blind and deaf dog, Aspen.
She taps on his butt or nose to communicate with him, “but everything else, he does by himself,” she said. When her house lost power one day, he was operating without a problem; he’s used to being in the dark.
People had told her it was cruel to keep Aspen alive, but she is so glad she took him, and he’s happy.
“This dog makes me laugh more than any dog I’ve ever had,” she observed.
“If you’re in a bad mood, just him being his goofy self will bring you out of it.” And having Leyland around will make her even happier.
Joyanna Gilmore, Joan’s daughter, grew up with the rescue group, which has regular adoptions on Sundays at Petco in Toms River.
“I always thought it was interesting,” said Joyanna.
“I find it good for myself, volunteering and being able to help out animals. I love doing it.” She and her mother have three dogs of their own, but they still “foster whatever needs to be fostered.”
The 18-year-old Union County Community College student noted, “It makes my heart feel warm. I have my Christmas, and this is a Christmas present to them, because we’re giving them somewhere to be instead of a shelter. We’re giving them another chance at life.”
The Mississippi flight that saved the Puppy Love volunteers 22 hours of driving each way was certainly easier on the dogs. But it’s an expensive proposition for Matt, who spent $1,500 on operational costs, including gasoline, hotel and landing fees, and not including insurance or maintenance. He operates on donations, which can be made through his website www.flypups.org. The rescue takes contributions on its website www.Puppylovenj.com.
Listen to Matt and Joyanna talking about their mission.
I was so inspired by the efforts of Matt and the Puppy Love rescuers that I was in the right mood for Christmas Eve when I got home. I turned on my favorite movie, “The Bishop’s Wife,” with Cary Grant and Loretta Young, really taking to heart the final scene, the Christmas Eve sermon by David Niven, who plays the bishop. It’s about what Christmas should mean. Here it is:
“All the stockings are filled, all that is, except one. And we have even forgotten to hang it up, the stocking for the child born in a manger. It’s His birthday we’re celebrating. Don’t let us ever forget that. Let us ask ourselves what He would wish for most, and then let each put in his share. Loving kindness, warm hearts and the stretched-out hand of tolerance. All the shining gifts that make peace on earth.”
Merry Christmas.