
In the vast, unforgiving wilderness of Manitoba, Canada, silence is usually a sign of peace. But for solo adventurer Tom Hudson, the silence was suddenly broken by a sound that made his blood run cold.
He was days into a grueling canoe trip across the country, documenting his journey for his channel “What In The World.” His arms were tired, his mind focused on the river ahead. He was alone. Or so he thought.
Drifting from the dense, tangled brush on the riverbank came a sound. It wasn’t the howl of a wolf or the splash of a fish. It was a rhythmic, desperate noise.
Woof… woof…
It was a bark, but it had no power left. It was the sound of a creature that had been screaming for help until its voice gave out.
Tom paused. His paddle hovered over the water. He almost kept going—it could have been a farm dog miles away. But a gut feeling, a pull he couldn’t explain, forced him to turn his canoe around.
That decision saved a life.
As he pushed through the reeds and mud, squinting into the shadows, he saw it. A patch of white that didn’t belong in the dark sludge. It wasn’t a rock. It wasn’t debris.
It was Ivy.
VIDEO: “I Found Her buried in the Mud”: The Dramatic Rescue of a 14-Year-Old Dog Left for Dead
The Trap: A Slow and Silent Death
The scene was heartbreaking. Ivy, a majestic 14-year-old Great Pyrenees, was trapped in a nightmare.
She was half-submerged in the freezing river, her heavy body pinned down by a fallen log. The mud around her acted like quicksand—the more she had struggled, the deeper she had sunk.

She had been there for nearly two days.
Her back legs were paralyzed from exhaustion. Her white fur was matted with thick, heavy sludge that weighed her down like an anchor. She was shivering violently, her eyes clouded with the dull look of resignation. She had fought for 48 hours, but she had nothing left.
If she had lowered her head to sleep, the water would have claimed her.
“You’ve been here a long time, haven’t you, buddy?” Tom whispered, his voice cracking.
Ivy didn’t growl. She didn’t try to run. She simply looked at him, her eyes pleading. She knew this stranger was her last chance.

A Rescue in the Quicksand
Getting her out wasn’t simple. It was a physical battle against the elements.
Tom couldn’t pull her from the boat; the angle was wrong, and Ivy was dead weight. He had to get in. Stepping out of his canoe, he immediately sank into the knee-deep, sucking mud.
He wrapped his arms around her cold, wet body. Ivy was large and heavy, and the mud refused to let go. With every ounce of strength, Tom heaved. He slipped, he struggled, but he didn’t stop until he hauled her body over the edge of his canoe.
She collapsed onto the floor of the boat, a shivering heap of mud and fur. She was safe, but she was terrified.
Following the Paw Prints to a Miracle
Tom was now a detective in the wild. He scanned the bank and saw faint paw prints disappearing into the bush.
He paddled upstream, his eyes scanning the shoreline for signs of life. About 300 yards away, he spotted a dock. It was a long shot, but it was the only lead he had.

He climbed the bank and found a house. When he knocked on the door, Tom Stait and his wife Janine answered.
“I found a dog,” Tom said breathlessly. “She’s stuck in the mud. A white one.”
The color drained from their faces, replaced instantly by tears of shock. They had been searching for Ivy for two days. They had walked the woods, called her name until they were hoarse. But the riverbank was hidden, inaccessible. They had begun to accept the terrible truth that their beloved senior dog was gone forever.
From Stranger to Hero
The reunion was a blur of emotion.
Ivy, too weak to walk, was carried to safety. Tom Stait and Janine rushed to feed her, giving her water and warmth. Then began the arduous task of washing away the evidence of her ordeal.
Tom Hudson didn’t just drop her off and leave. He stayed. He rolled up his sleeves and helped scrub the thick, hardened river mud from Ivy’s coat. As the dirt washed away, the “monster in the mud” transformed back into the gentle, loving dog she had always been.

The Stait family insisted Tom stay. They shared a dinner, a warm bed, and stories of gratitude. In the span of a few hours, Tom went from a solitary traveler to a hero sitting at a family dinner table.
A New Legend on the Water
The next morning, Ivy was resting in her favorite spot under the truck. She was clean, safe, and recovering.
Tom Hudson paddled away, continuing his solo journey across Canada. But he wasn’t the same man who had arrived. His fans, watching the dramatic rescue unfold on YouTube, have begged him to name his sailboat “Ivy”—a tribute to the life he saved.
It is said that adventure is about what you find at the end of the road. But for Tom Hudson, the greatest adventure was stopping in the middle of nowhere, listening to a faint cry, and refusing to paddle away.