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Family grieved dog for 6 days after home exploded. Then barking is heard in rubble

A gas leak led to a home explosion in Virginia, displacing two families, firefighters said. A family pet was rescued from the rubble days later.
A gas leak led to a home explosion in Virginia, displacing two families, firefighters said. A family pet was rescued from the rubble days later. Photo from the Prince William County Fire & Rescue System

It seemed unlikely that a family pet survived when a home exploded and “instantly disintegrated” in Virginia, firefighters said.

But six days after the explosion, the sound of barking came from the rubble pile.

On Oct. 15, a private contractor replacing a water line in Haymarket accidentally struck a gas line, causing a gas leak, according to the Prince William County Fire & Rescue System.

Firefighters and the gas company arrived at the scene and began evacuating nearby homes, when one suddenly exploded, according to first responders.

The home collapsed into a pile of rubble, which then caught fire, firefighters said.

Efforts from firefighters and some “good old coaxing” helped free 6-year-old Brandy from the rubble of the collapsed home.
Efforts from firefighters and some “good old coaxing” helped free 6-year-old Brandy from the rubble of the collapsed home. Photo from the Prince William County Fire & Rescue System

Two families comprised of six people living at the home had cleared out and no human injuries were reported, according to fire rescue, which extinguished the flames following the explosion.

But Brandy, a couple’s 6-year-old dog, was inside at the time, her owners told InsideNoVa.

“There was a lot of grieving,” Megan Schnapp told the outlet.

Then, on Oct. 21, six days after the “horrific” incident, an insurance investigator visiting the wreckage heard an unexpected sound — a dog barking, WUSA reported.

Crews returned to the scene and said they also heard the barking from underneath a collapsed part of the home.

“Firefighters were able to free the animal after about 20 minutes of deploying structure collapse stabilization shoring techniques and some good old coaxing by the home’s owner,” rescuers said. “She appeared to be in good shape and showed her happiness of being freed by rapid tail wagging.”

Lt. Mark Waldrop of the Prince William County Fire Department told WUSA9 that structural collapses can make “a void space that creates livable conditions for anything that may be trapped in there.”

He added it was “remarkable” that the dog withstood the immense water from firefighters’ efforts to extinguish the blaze, on top of surviving without food.

Firefighters said the dog is expected to recover fully.

“And now our family is complete again,” Schnapp told InsideNoVa.

The exact cause that sparked the explosion is under investigation.

Prince William County is part of the western Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.

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This story was originally published October 22, 2024 at 2:48 PM with the headline "Family grieved dog for 6 days after home exploded. Then barking is heard in rubble."

OL
Olivia Lloyd
mcclatchy-newsroom
Olivia Lloyd is an Associate Editor/Reporter for the Coral Springs News, the Pembroke Pines News and the Miramar News. She graduated from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. Previously, she has worked for Hearst DevHub, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and McClatchy’s Real Time Team.
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