Global News Podcast - The Happy Pod: The tiny dog back home after a big adventure
Episode Date: June 15, 2025A tiny dog famous for her big adventure reunites with her overjoyed owners, after 529 days in the wild. Also: the escaped Tennessee Zebra; why a man risked his life to save 41 others; and a footballin...g first for Senegal.
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This is the Happy Pord from the BBC World Service.
I'm Bernadette Keogh and in this edition,
it was just the best feeling ever.
Incredible moment where I don't think I'll ever go over for a long long time.
Our house is just exploding with love.
A tiny dog who found fame on a giant adventure finally makes it home.
A man who risked everything to save 41 people.
The families of these young men who were trapped couldn't help, but I could.
Putting your life on the line for other people, that's what we should do.
That's at the heart of what humanity is all about.
Also hunting for an elusive rare species.
We're basically chasing ghosts. We can't see it, we can't hear it, but we know it's there.
Christina can hear it.
Plus the joy of a footballing first for Senegal.
We start with the story of a tiny dog who went on a huge adventure. Valerie the Daschand was just a puppy when she escaped during a camping trip on Kangaroo
Island off the south coast of South Australia back in November 2023.
Her owners feared she wouldn't survive on the large, sparsely populated island
alone, and for over a year her fate remained unclear. Then, back in February, Valerie was
spotted, and after more than 500 days in the wilderness and a rescue operation involving
a thousand hours of volunteers' time, she's finally made it home
and has just celebrated her third birthday.
Helena Burke spoke to Valerie's owners,
Georgia Gardner and Josh Fishlock.
We spent the remainder of our trip
hiking through the hills, looking for her.
Yeah, it was horrific, pretty devastating.
Yeah, it was horrific, pretty devastating. Yeah, it was a pretty, pretty hard time. We both
were very upset with having to go back to our jobs and back to the mainland. But once we had spoken
with King Gala Wildlife Rescue, we knew that if anything was to come up, they were more than capable of
conducting the rescue mission. We did at times think that maybe she had passed away or something
like that, but we also tried to not let those thoughts take over our mind. We had to keep
thinking that she might be still out there
and living her best life.
How long was it until there was those first signs that maybe she'd been spotted?
Two weeks after we left, there was two sightings of her, but they were both very far apart.
And then we didn't hear a single thing. There was no sightings for a year.
And then it wasn't until this year, end of February,
when there was another post by a completely different other woman.
And she said that her partner had seen a sausage dog running through a panic.
And then Kangala saw the post as well, and we got in contact with them.
We're like, hey, what do you think?
They were like, yep, she's alive.
We're going to try and trap her and rescue her. We were like, oh my goodness,
but also just trying to keep really level-headed because we just did not want to go through
that process of what it was like when we lost her and how upset and how devastated we were
and how much we'd grieved.
LW – Can you talk me through how they caught her in the end? I remember reading online
that they'd put one of your t-shirts in the trap to lure her with the scent.
Jess So they had a big cage that was initially set
up as a pig trap. They had that in an area that she was seen. Initially, she would just
come get the food and run off and be super, super fast. I also sent over a shirt that
I wore and played a game of netballing with no deodorant and walked around and spent a whole day in that was very, very stinky.
And so they cut that up into tiny little pieces and they put it along the fence line and they
put it little pieces around the trap.
And then it got to the point in the end where she, she laid down, you know, and, and had
a little nap in there.
So in the end they had a remote controlled trigger.
And then when she was inside right at the back
then they were able to press the remote trigger
and it just slid the door closed.
So I was actually at work when Lisa called me.
I was just ecstatic.
I was so excited.
Then I got to FaceTime Josh and I didn't tell him initially. I then I was like, well, you know, look at the photo I've so excited. Then I got to FaceTime Josh and I didn't tell him initially.
I then I was like, well, you know, look at the photo I've sent you and it was a photo
Lisa had sent me through of her and then just watching his face light up and he
was just so euphoric. It was, oh it was just so good. Oh my goodness. It was
absolutely amazing. It was quite incredible. I don't think I said anything for a good couple of seconds.
I think I was just in shock.
I was just staring at the photo and the video and then I started to get really emotional
to being like, wow, like it's actually happened.
This is amazing.
Like I never thought that this moment would ever come.
Just to like see the
emotion on Georgia's face as well was incredible. Some emotions I don't think I've ever felt
before.
Can you tell me about the day that you guys got to see her again after 19 months?
She just ran straight up to me and remembered me straight away, wagging her tail, like no
tomorrow was giving me kisses and incredible
moment where I don't think I'd like go over for a long long time.
Words can't describe it was just the best feeling ever.
I just started bawling my eyes out.
I was euphoric.
I was just like, like Valerie, like where have you been?
And she was, she jumped all over me and she was licking my face and licking my
mouth and you know, I saw her and she'd gained a lot of muscle mass and you know,
she'd also gotten older.
So she changed slightly in that term.
You talk about the fact that she was looking really healthy.
And is that surprising for you guys, how well she did out there?
Which has you showing any sign of being the survivalist dog before then?
Not really. She was definitely a pampered little pooch. I never went anywhere without her. She
would follow me around. She'd had her little car seat. She had a ramp up to the bed. It was incredible
the fact that she had survived and it really just plays a tribute to her breed, to the resilience of
dogs. It has been so great to have her home. Our house is just exploding with love.
Georgia Gardner and Josh Fishlock. And if you have an amazing reunion story, we'd
love to hear about it. Just send us an email or a voice note to globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk. And it's been quite a week for missing animals. In Tennessee, a zebra has been caught after
several days on the run. Holly Gibbs has the details.
That's the sound of a zebra being airlifted through the sky to an animal trailer.
The footage, which shows the animal wrapped in a net and being carried by a helicopter, has become an internet sensation.
He's been given the name Ed by the public,
and some social media users have said Ed is now a celebrity.
The zebra was reported missing by his owner at the end of May,
just a day after arriving at his new home.
He was spotted galloping on a road and wandering around a neighborhood in the days before he was captured.
At one point, a major interstate road was shut after a sighting.
Rutherford County Sheriff's Office, which helped with the search, said he was found in a pasture near a subdivision in the Christiana community in central Tennessee. His owners say Ed is safe
and unharmed and in a new, more secure location until he can hopefully be rehomed in a zoo or
wildlife park where his newfound fans can visit him. Now to a rather unusual school that's been
built under a busy road junction in Mumbai in India. And it's not just the location
that stands out. To save money and speed up construction, the building was made out of
shipping containers, the giant metal boxes usually used to transport goods around the
world.
Chavy Suchdev went along to find out more.
It's known as the Signal School because it sits on an island next to countless
traffic signals and it was set up for children who might otherwise spend their days selling
or begging at those signals, the very poorest kids. The school itself consists of eight
shipping containers. For founder Bhattu Savant, it made perfect sense. Shipment containers is an easy way to build infrastructure in a speedy area. When we are
in a container, it has become soundproof and we can teach like any kind of school.
The containers are painted over with bright pictures of children, flowers and stars. Even
the flyover above the school has been painted to look like the sky.
So I'm in a class with the teacher, Shaila Desai.
There are 25 little children.
And it's story time, so Shaila is going to read them a story.
The story is in Marathi, the official language here in Thane.
But most of the kids are children of migrants and back
home they speak Pardhi, a tribal language. This language barrier is one of the main
reasons that these kids would struggle in a mainstream school.
Yes, now they understand Marathi. When I first got here they would only talk among themselves.
When they started to get to know us, we began introducing new vocabulary
and brought them to this point where they know Marathi.
And it is in a mix of Marathi and Hindi that I chat with the kids a bit later on.
Gaurav and Sagar are both 11.
Gaurav's family sells eggs and Sagar's makes gajras, the jasmine garlands that they sell
at traffic signals.
Sagar still spends his free days helping his parents make and sell the garlands, but he
has big dreams.
Sagar tells me he'll be a big man.
I'll have a salary, a job, a car, a big house and good money.
What's your name?
Janvi.
How old are you?
Nine.
Nine-year-old Janvi's family also sells the flower gardens. Her favourite subject is maths
and when she grows up she's going to be a chitrakar, an artist.
The idea is that eventually all these kids go on to take the
state board exams when they are 15 or 16, and then move to
mainstream colleges.
I'm under yet another flyover, but this one is under
construction.
Shankar, who's 21, is one of five students who's gone from
these classes in a shipping container to starting his own
business.
who's gone from these classes in a shipping container to starting his own business. Going to the Signal School brought me to this point in my life.
If I hadn't gone there, I would probably be working at a Signal like my mum and dad.
Keeping him off the streets impacted the family's daily earnings.
When I first started, I would attend school for a day.
Then my parents would pull me out for two days.
But now they're backing me to do something good because of school.
Negotiating with parents to let their children come to the Signal School is, Bhattu tells
me, the hardest part of his job.
This kind of dropout, it's not permanent dropout.
They drop out, we search them again, and bring them again in mainstream education.
This is the first generation of this homeless student
who are in mainstream education.
It's a proud feeling for me.
I am feeling that it is our duty,
and this duty give me lots of pleasure. I think myself as a good citizen of India.
That report from Chavi Suchdev. And you can hear more about the school and other ingenious
uses for old shipping containers on People Fixing the World, wherever you get your BBC
podcasts.
Coming up in this podcast... It's been the best thing that's happened to me and I learnt it all from here and it was wonderful.
I mean seeing myself riding, it's like amazing. If other people can do it, why can't I?
How learning to ride a bicycle can help tackle depression.
Now imagine being responsible for trying to save the lives of dozens of people trapped
in a collapsed tunnel and succeeding. Back in November 2023, 41 workers spent over two weeks stuck
deep under the Himalayas in India when the road tunnel they were building caved in. The
relatively soft and fragile rocks made attempts to free them extremely dangerous, both for
the trapped men and the rescuers, and several attempts failed.
But when he was asked to help, Australian expert Arnold Dix promised the world's media that no one would be hurt,
and instantly became the public face of the rescue efforts.
Arnold, a professor of engineering who was then the president of the International Tunnelling Association, told my colleague Joe Fidgen
why he was prepared to risk everything to save these 41 lives.
I felt, and I can't really explain why I felt it, that if we could just be calm and
sort of keep focused, maybe this was a chance. I just had a feeling that we could do this. I knew that
the families of these young men who were trapped couldn't help, but I could. Putting your life
on the line for other people, that's what we should do because that's what distinguishes
us from animals. That's at the heart of what humanity is all about. And I mean, I've already
had my kids and I've had a good life and everything and I am uniquely skilled to be
able to deal with this.
The media were tracking Arnold's every move. But two weeks in, he had no good news for
them. The rock was too soft and kept collapsing. Time was running out. The rescuers were taking
lots of different approaches
to get to where the men were and were getting closer. But the final few metres were proving
very difficult.
So the main method that we were putting our hopes on was the auger, pushing a pipe into
rock and then inside that pipe we have an auger that spins and it drags the rock out
like a big sausage mincer or something and then the auger itself blew up.
Before the auger exploded it had succeeded in drilling a pipe to within 10 metres of
the trapped miners.
Even though everything was broken we've now got, and credit to the team that I was working
with, they got in what they call the rat miners who actually dig by hand. So these are really,
really hard working, come from the poorest parts of the country and they work in pipes, to unblock pipes and then
we went literally millimetre by millimetre and the last 10 metres took us a few days,
about two, I think it was about two and a bit days. Then we break through and then the
first man comes out, everyone's cheering and it's like you can't believe it,
like he is the first man. But for me what was amazing, because I'm sitting behind the families,
they were just stunned, like just quiet and just sort of weeping.
It was probably one of the most moving experiences I've ever had, which is just as extraordinary.
They looked like 41 men who had a second life.
I mean, they looked like people who had been reborn.
All I could see was their smiles and just so, so happy.
Have you had any contact since the rescue with either the men you helped rescue or the
other rescuers?
I met some of the men at the airport just by chance.
The men I rescued are so happy.
Like here's all these people and they're going to have a chance to have their lives.
Like they're going to have a chance to love, they're going to have a chance to play, to
have maybe have kids, just to live their lives and while I was doing the rescue I felt an incredible sense of connection
to everything and I felt as if I was meant to be there, like I was the perfect
fit for this particular problem. I was just one little part of the solution, one
piece in the puzzle
and every piece of that puzzle was needed, including me.
And if any one of them wasn't there, it wouldn't have worked either. So we all pulled together.
And when I spoke to the government after the rescue and I asked them,
what did I do? Like, how did I help? And they said, you made us believe. It's like,
oh. And I believed. Like, we all somehow believed we could do it and then we did.
Arnold Dix. And you can hear more of that interview on Outlook wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
Now let's go deep into the countryside of western Slovenia.
That's the sounds of crickets and grasshoppers, but it's another, rather more elusive insect
that UK conservationists have been trying to locate in the woods of the Idria Geopark. The black and orange Circadetta Montana used
to be the only cicada native to Britain, living in the New Forest in the south of England.
But none have been seen for the last 17 years, and their high-pitched call also makes them
hard to find in their remaining habitats across Europe and parts of Asia. Now though the
conservationists have a specially skilled helper, 12 year old Christina
Kenda. Marion Straughan has been finding out more. You won't hear the cicadas
Marion because you're too old as we are. The person who can hear them is Christina. This is the irony.
That's Dominic Price from the Species Recovery Trust.
They're at 13 kilohertz. When you're young, you can hear probably up to about the age
of 25. So we're using special monitoring devices to hear them. This is one of the things which
makes it such an incredibly challenging project is we're basically chasing ghosts for something
we can't see it, we can't hear
it but we know it's there. Christina can hear it because she's young enough.
Last summer Dominic and Holly stayed at an Airbnb run by Christina's mother and Christina
took an interest in their project.
They came here to Slovenia and they talked and I was there too and I listened and I was actually really excited.
This first night we went to the woods and we explored together and we put there some
nets and then I went every day to look after it if anything changed, if maybe I could catch
anything.
And so what were you looking for to see if they popped up out the ground? Yeah if they came out of that turret from the ground because they
usually fly on the trees. And let's hear more about this cicada from Dominic. It
can live anything but up to seven years. It spends most of its life living
underground and living off the roots of trees and grasses
and then they emerge and that's when they do this calling sound to attract a mate.
They lay eggs, the eggs hatch pretty quickly and then they go back down into the ground.
Why should we be so interested?
They're a really unique thing for us to have in England.
So they're a very sort of exotic insect for us and it's a shame when we start losing those sort of more exciting insects. We have lost so many species and you know within Europe
we are one of the worst countries for keeping our biodiversity. So at the Species Recovery
Trust we're just fighting for all of these species regardless of whether they perform
a function or not.
So once these cicadas get caught in the net by Christina, then how do they get back and
how many do you need and how quickly can they breed?
It goes through all kinds of various import and export licenses. They are then going to
a place called Poulton's Park in the New Forest, which some people will know as Peppa Pig World
as well. They have the attractions there, but they also have a very top class zoological
section.
We've built some enclosures where you can actually see under the ground, so we'll be
able to watch them burrowing into the ground, which as far as we know, nobody has done before,
so it's going to be really good to share that with the public.
This is a long-term project, and Christina has already been doing it for a year.
It became kind of viral, and we recorded some TV news. And do
you know how long you will be doing it for? I'm not sure, maybe. I think it's until you
catch some. It could be many years. We'll keep going. Do you think you can do that,
Christina? Do you think you've got the stamina to do it
for several years?
I hope it's going to happen, but I don't know. I will try to keep doing this, yeah.
Twelve-year-old Christina ending that report from Marian Straun.
Next to a group that's helping people with mental health problems simply by teaching
them to ride a bicycle.
Cycling Together offers the dual benefits
of exercise and companionship to women
with issues like anxiety or depression,
and those in abusive relationships.
Claudia Hammond went to Essex in Southeast England
to meet them.
They all learnt from scratch. Martha learnt here. You learnt here?
So you couldn't cycle at all a few weeks ago? No, no. I wasn't even scared to ride a bicycle
and it's been the best thing that's happened to me. Today was fantastic. We had to go into
the woods, you know, into the ditches, you know, we manoeuvred and everything. And I
learnt it all from here and it was wonderful.
The scheme is led by a collaboration between two organisations
and one of those is called Women Together
and it's led by Sidra Naeem.
It's quite interesting how many ladies cannot ride a bike.
Either it was they didn't get a chance because of maybe poverty,
they didn't have a bike.
In their home countries, they may not have had the money
or it was not the cultural norm
where it's seen that the men are the ones
who go out to work,
they are the ones who need to ride a bike.
And what difference have you seen it make
to people and to their mental health?
Absolutely massively and they love it.
Also, while they're engaged in cycling, they talk to each other without even realising.
At the same time we're not just promoting good mental health
but the cultural awareness from each other. The unity
and the community cohesion has been absolutely wonderful.
Where people have learnt from us and we've learnt from them.
The director of TrailNet where people have learnt from us and we've learnt from them. Got another one to squeeze in there.
The director of Trailnet is Geoff Fletcher, who runs the cycling sessions here.
How was your ride today?
Lovely.
Good? Did they fire it?
I love coming out in the group.
When I ride alone at home, which I do sometimes,
it's not as nice as getting out in a group
because we egg each other on and we support each other.
Don't stop talking.
I think you're right Jasmine that when you cycle on your own it's absolutely not the same as coming with all you lovely ladies.
Oi, oi, oi!
Yeah, I mean you hear the birds singing the bluebells are out in the woods.
It's really noticeable that you're all smiling.
Like, literally, you're all cycled in.
Everyone's smiling.
That's been dolphins and keratobans.
Coming out really early on a Saturday morning is quite difficult.
We've all got families, so some of us have got really big families.
And, like, you know, you see the washing up,
and you're like, oh, I can't do it because I'm going cycling.
I'll be late, you know. so that's our diligence as well just getting
that early. It's our thing once a week to do for ourselves. So it's your time in a way isn't it?
I look forward to every Saturday coming here for cycling. How would you say the group has helped
you Sazia? My life standard now is much better than it was before. I wasn't moving anywhere. I was staying in the house. I was in the corner.
So yes, I was going through so much.
And it was more conservative, like my background.
Women shouldn't be cycling outdoors, all these things.
I never had the chance.
I mean, seeing myself riding, it's like amazing. If other
people can do it why can't I do it? So that's the thing I had inside me. The
people around you they're amazing, they're so friendly. I wasn't talking much
so they would come to you and then just encourage you. Is it cycling in
particular that's made a difference or do you think any sort of group where you got to meet nice people? Everything, I would say
everything. So this is something like you look forward to every weekend plus I've
met some of these people who encourage me to go on hiking, go on holiday or
something. So through cycling yes I have expanded my friend circle as well. It's an incredible change that's happened to my life.
So yes, this is like amazing for me, life changing.
And we thought we'd end this episode with a moment of pure joy for football fans in Senegal.
On Tuesday, their team became the first African side to beat England in a senior men's international.
Their team became the first African side to beat England in a senior men's international.
The Lions of Turanga, as they're known, came from a goal down to win the friendly match, played in Nottingham in central England, by three goals to one.
Here's the reaction to that final to hear how happy he is.
And that's all from the HappyPod for now, but if you have a story you think we should
cover we'd love to hear from you. Just send us an email or a voice note to globalpodcast. at bbc.co.uk. And you can now watch some of our interviews
on YouTube – just search for The Happy Pod. This edition was mixed by Rebecca Miller and
the producers were Holly Gibbs and Rachel Bulkley. The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Bernadette Keough. Until next time, goodbye.