A husky was spotted roaming the sand dunes near Irving and the Great Highway on Wednesday, collar on but tagless, doing what huskies do best: absolutely ignoring the social contract.
The dog appeared well-groomed and healthy — clearly someone's pet, not a long-term stray — but was reportedly skittish and uninterested in being caught. As one local put it, "Definitely not a stray! Lost baby!!!" Another SF resident noted the obvious: "It looks well kept, can't be out for long."
For the uninitiated, huskies are essentially furry anarchists. They were bred to run across frozen tundra, and no amount of domestication has fully overwritten that programming. "Huskies love to do a runner," observed one local, and anyone who's ever owned one is nodding right now.
One SF resident shared a perfect cautionary tale: years ago at Baker Beach, a dog walker simply left his husky behind after the dog refused to get in the truck, then came back later to try again. "I do Not recommend this, at all," they added — sound advice for the ages.
SF Animal Care and Control is the right call here, and residents quickly pointed others in that direction. This is actually one of those cases where city services work the way they're supposed to — reuniting pets with owners is a pretty straightforward government function, no bloated task force required.
But here's the gentle PSA: tag your dogs, people. A collar without an ID tag is like locking your front door but leaving the key taped to the frame. Microchips are great as a backup, but a simple $5 tag with a phone number is the fastest path from "lost dog panic" to "crisis averted."
We hope this majestic escape artist is home by now, probably plotting the next jailbreak.