Guy Buys Airplane So He Can Fly Homeless Dogs To Safety-HoangGA

There was no reason to think a 14-year-old dog up for euthanasia at a shelter in North Carolina would ever be saved.

Urgent shelter dog in North Carolina
Emma, dumped by her family, was going to be put down at a North Carolina shelter. | ANIMALS R FAMILY

Covered in parasites and sores, it was clear that her owners had kept her outside, probably for her whole life, and had never taken her to the vet. Then they dumped her at the shelter.

But now Emma gets to sleep on her first dog bed ever — all thanks to a very special pilot.

Senior shelter dog in her first dog bed
Emma is 14 years old, and she just got her first dog bed in her foster home. | ANIMALS R FAMILY

In the spring of 2013, network engineer and Army veteran Paul Steklenski decided to take up flying. As he was training and getting his license, he decided he wanted to welcome a dog into his family. These two things seemed totally unrelated at the time.

“We went to pet stores and then we went to shelters, and started to learn the difference,” Steklenski told The Dodo. Steklenski learned all about the amazing network of animal lovers who work to save unwanted dogs from shelters. And through this network Steklenski had never known about before, he found his new family member.

“We adopted Tessa in August 2013,” he said. “And it just changed me. It changed everything about me.”

Rescue puppy
Tessa when she was first adopted by Paul Steklenski | PAUL STEKLENSKI

Steklenski, meanwhile, completed his flight training and got his license. “I thought, ‘What am I going to do with it?’” he remembers. “A lot of guys just fly around and go to restaurants and do stuff like that. I can’t do that. I have to have a reason to put a plane in the air.”

Steklenski started doing some missions for Pilots N Paws, a group that coordinates volunteer pilots with animal rescue organizations that need help with transporting animals. But he kept feeling like even more animals could be saved if he started making the connections on his own. So that’s what he did in 2015, founding Flying Fur Animal Rescue. He would rent planes from Pennsylvania, where he’s based, and fly to North Carolina and then back up to the New York area.

Pilot with puppy
PAUL STEKLENSKI

Flying is key to helping as many animals as possible in a short amount of time — Steklenski often uses his allotted vacation days to make the trips. “If I were a ground-based rescue, it would be a lot harder because I can’t just take a half day off and drive to North Carolina and then drive back up to New York,” he said. “At the end of the day, with a plane, you’re getting 15 or 20 animals out of the kill shelter.”

Pilot with plane and rescue dog
PAUL STEKLENSKI
Plane used for rescuing shelter animals
PAUL STEKLENSKI

People often ask Steklenski how he does it. “The answer is: It has cost me a small fortune. I’ve spent about $25,000 in the last two years,” Steklenski said. “But I do it because it’s very rewarding.”

Luckily, other animal lovers have pitched in over the past few years — and Steklenski has been able to buy a plane just to save animals, which also helps save rescue organizations the cost and stress of coordinating transport of shelter animals who need urgent rescue. “It’s the only reason I fly,” he said.

Rescue pup on his rescue flight
PAUL STEKLENSKI
Shelter dog on tarmac
PAUL STEKLENSKI

Steklenski lives for these moments. And the photos of him in mid-flight with a rescue dog at his side capture the sheer joy of the trip. But Emma’s flight was especially memorable.

click to play video

Steklenski was flying the 14-year-old dog who’d been neglected her whole life up the East Coast when something amazing happened.

The airspace over New York City is one of the most crowded in the world, so small planes hardly ever get the go-ahead from air traffic control to fly over. Steklenski certainly never had — until he was in the plane with Emma.

“This wave of emotion came over me,” he said. “I have this 14-year-old dog next to me who wasn’t gonna make it, and now she gets to see all of New York City … She’s had no medical care, no proper attention her whole life and now she’s sitting in an airplane. It’s just incredible.”

Pilot with shelter dog he flew to rescue
Steklenski and Emma after her flight to safety | ANIMALS R FAMILY

The rescue group sponsoring Emma’s medical care is Animals R Family, through two generous supporters of the rescue. Currently in a foster home, Emma will be up for adoption once she’s healthy.

When Emma got off the plane, she was rushed to the vet. She had yeast and bacterial infections on her skin and she tested positive for heartworm. Her teeth were rotting out of her mouth. “She suffered like this for years,” Nicole Bruck, founder of Animals R Family, told The Dodo. “All these conditions could have been avoided with basic vet care.”

Senior shelter dog in foster care
ANIMALS R FAMILY

Despite all she’s been through, Emma is finally getting a chance to show just how loving she really is. “She craves any kind of affection, will stick to her foster like glue and gives wonderful little kisses,” Bruck said. “She is very special and we feel lucky to have been able to rescue her.”

Emma should be ready for adoption in the next month or two.

Pilot getting kissed by rescued dog
PAUL STEKLENSKI
Rescued shelter dogs in airplane
Shelter dogs on their freedom flight | PAUL STEKLENSKI

“Paul provides that vital, lifesaving link of getting the dogs from rural North Carolina to Westchester, New York, for us,” Bruck said. “Without his services, it would be difficult for us to rescue dogs from that area.”

It’s hard to think about what would have happened to Emma if she hadn’t caught that incredible flight over New York City with Steklenski at her side.

Pilot rescuing shelter dog
Steklenski says he tries to hold each dog he’s rescuing, at least for a moment. | PAUL STEKLENSKI
Pilot rescuing shelter dog
PAUL STEKLENSKI

“Sometimes I can’t even talk about it because I get so emotional,” Steklenski said. “And what I do is not even a drop in the bucket, we’re just trying to keep them from being killed. It all starts with education.”

Pilot and rescue dog

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