Muddi

1st Place winner
2024 NZ Top Office Dog
award

Muddi

Breed: Collie Cross

Barking from: Rolleston

What's up dog?

Muddi is the office dog at Shirley Vet Clinic in Christchurch. He is a distinguished gentleman of nearly 14 years of age. He has a spot under the desk in the managers office and will stay there even when the door is open. He provides much needed emotional support to all of the vets, nurses and support staff at the clinic, in what can be an extremely stressful job. (Did you know that vets have some of the highest suicide rates of any profession?) He has also offered support to children whose families are in the process of losing their own pets and is an incredibly gentle soul with them. He seems to understand instinctively who needs time for a cuddle or a quick pat in passing. Muddi's talents are not restricted to the workplace however. He is a registered therapy dog with St John and has a regular placement at a residential home for adults with intellectual disabilities and also offers support to students prior to stressful exams. He is a retired avalanche search and rescue dog, he was qualified to find people buried in up to 2 metres of snow. All of this from a dog who was labeled as a problem when he was just 1 year of age and destined for euthanasia. As his owner, I have never regretted once deciding to bring him home that day all those years ago. Even in his golden years he is bringing comfort and solace to many people, and although I may be very biased I think he derserves some recognition!

2024 #NZTOPDOG Awards Ceremony

After 9 weeks and nearly 400 entries, the search is over. Frog Recruitment, in partnership with sponsors Simparcia Trio and Jetpark Hotels, were proud to have presented our 2024 NZTOPDOG competition. On behalf of our entire NZTOPDOG team, thank you to everyone for entering our 9th edition and help make it our biggest and more successful competition to date.

The last few months have been about celebrating our furry best friends and shedding some light on their paw-some work. While each entry was uniquely different, the one thing they all had in common was that having your tail-wagging pal around had helped improve your mental health.
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