Ireland’s new search and rescue dogs looking for people to join their team

ISSARD crew training day at Carrigaline Lions Club centre

A volunteer-led organisation that provides highly trained K9 search and rescue teams to assist in missing person searches across Ireland is looking for new members.

A relatively new K9 search and rescue organisation, Ireland’s Specialist Search and Rescue Dogs (ISSARD) is is working to develop dogs across the disciplines of mantrailing, airscent, and cadaver, with a special focus on low-land and urban searches.

Working alongside tasking agencies like An Garda Síochána and other recognised search agencies, ISSARD deploys specialist dog teams to support in search, rescue, and recovery missions across Ireland. Combining professional standards with a strong community spirit, the organisation’s team goal is play a role in supporting families, communities and emergency services when someone goes missing.

ISSARD Chairperson, Becci Jeffers, is based in Courtmacsherry. Her pet dog, Pepper, adopted from West Cork Animal Rescue in 2023, is working towards assessment in the discipline of cadaver/HRD on-land and in drowned victims recovery.

Becci Jeffers water training with Pepper

Becci says the legacy of volunteering in her family and the ethos of the organisation encouraged her to join. “My dad served with the RNLI, so he likes to say ‘Pepper is continuing the family tradition of SAR work.’ I initially volunteered as a dog’s body in 2024 to support the work of the team, but as time went on the mission, work, and culture of the organisation really struck home for me.”

She continues, “the team is professional and full of eager, hardworking people who are dedicated to contributing to the exceptional demands of search, rescue, and recovery in a collaborative fashion and with a specialist focus. It is a particularly challenging line of voluntary engagement, one that requires significant commitment from our members, but equally one that offers critical services to communities in need. Recently too, we have been engaging in valuable inter-agency exercises with Killarney Water Search and Recovery, Tipperary Search and Rescue, Dublin Homeless Awareness, and the Coast Guard, which have emphasised the many contributing resources and significant voluntary hours involved in search and rescue operations. We welcome new volunteer applications through our onboarding process, and should anyone be interested in joining in some capacity, more details can be found on our website.”    

ISSARD’s onboarding programmes are currently held twice each year. These recruits initially serve as “dog’s bodies or mispers” i.e. volunteers who assist in training exercises by acting as search subjects for the dogs. This vital role helps develop and maintain the dogs’ search skills while giving new members an opportunity to learn about the team’s operations and become involved in the organisation’s work.

The next onboarding call will be for August, 26, please see www.issard.ie or follow on Facebook or Instagram for more details.

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