Press Release – August 7, 2020 Missing Kitten found in ducting under home!

Menlo Park Fire Protection District

Missing Kitten found in ducting under home!

Firefighters spend two hours looking for a missing kitten in heater ducting

that was finally located under a home in Menlo Park

 

From left to right – Firefighters Ryle Fitzegerald, Alex Torregino and Sam Pacholuk with rescued kitten Bear- Credit Menlo Fire

San Mateo County Public Safety Communications Center (PSC) received a single call from a resident on Gordon Avenue in Menlo Park asking for help to find a kitten that had crawled into a missing heater register and dropped into ducting under the home, Tuesday afternoon, August 5, 2020, around 2 pm.

Acting Captain Dave Bragg and the crew of Menlo Engine 3 arrived on scene and after talking to the resident determined that the kitten named Bear, was somewhere under the single story 1,800 square foot home in the heater ducting that ran the length of the house and could only be accessed through an 18 inch crawl space. The big question was where was the kitten? Bragg called upon his construction background and had the resident turn on the systems fan so air could pass through each vent register, using tissue paper to monitor air flow, they located the exact duct that had both an obstruction, which limited air flow, and smelled like cat!

That was the easy part, Firefighters Alex Torregino and Sam Pacholuk worked their way across the length of the home in the tiny crawl space carefully cutting open sections of the duct work in search of the “catty kitten” who had decided to now go silent. After two hours of crawling, opening and searching the duct work under the house, they successfully located Bear at almost the farthest point from where he had entered the duct work.

Fire Chief Schapelhouman said “people often joke with us about cats in trees, but actually many, if not most, of our animal rescues are from pipes and sub-surface crawl spaces and areas that animals get themselves trapped in. Curiosity did not injure or kill this cat today, but the homeowner is going to need to hire a repair person to fix the heater ducting, as careful as the firefighters were, that will need to be addressed. Bear lived up to his name today when it came to this rescue, but the good news is he’s doing just fine now, thanks to the patient and persistent efforts of our firefighters”.  

The Menlo Park Fire Protection District, provides critical fire and emergency services to its areas in the Town of Atherton, Cities of East Palo Alto and Menlo Park, unincorporated San Mateo County and the SLAC National Accelerator and Laboratories.

For more information from the Fire District please go to our web-site at www@menlofire.org: or follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Next Door

Please contact me with any questions.

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