Mount Bross , locate in Colorado , is a nose candy - topped summit measuring in at 14,000 feet above sea level . A mountain that high is inhospitable and inexorable .

A kinfolk mislay Chloe , their 14 - year dog there in mid - August after she broke forth while on a walk .

Hikers had see late barking up there , but because of the ruthless nature of the mountain , combined with the distance of time the hotdog had been miss and the previous age of the dog , hoi polloi dismissed these barks as those of a coyote .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog

Photo: Trinity Smith

It was believed by most , admit the family , that Chloe had perished .

But after reading reports of hearingdog cries up on the deal , Trinity Smith leapt into action . She knew she had to seek to help Chloe if there were any chances it could be her .

The first day she ascend , she went alone . finally , she heard barking .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Mount BrossPhoto: Trinity Smith

Smith urgently attempt to get across down where the barking was come from , but came up empty . Eventually , the sun start to set , and Smith make out she could n’t lay on the line her own life getting lost in the dark on a insensate plenty . So she turn around to go home .

But she was n’t giving up .

The next mean solar day , she came back , this time with the help of her friend , Sean Nichols .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Trinity Smith, pictured here.Photo: Trinity Smith

For three hours , Smith and Nichols braved the chutes of Mount Bross , trying severely not to create intense careen slides . They shout for the cad , over and over .

Just as they were about to give up again , fate step in , and they find out the fainthearted cry of the dog . She must have been desperately tell them , “ do n’t go . ”

They were able to track her location , and launch Chloe on top of a cragged sway . She was visibly starved , and the distich could say at first glimpse that the dog did n’t have much endurance metre left .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Photo: Trinity Smith

Smith immediately scooped her into his arms , and the hikers sway Chloe down the mint .

The pair put Chloe in the car to begin the drive back to townspeople . The dog was exhausted , but must have know her terrifying trial by ordeal was coming to an end , and that she was on her room home .

Smith and Nichols found Chloe at an astounding 26 pound – originally , she ’d weighed 90 . Their first military mission was to immediately get the starving puppy some intellectual nourishment , and spread the word that they ’d found her .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Photo: Trinity Smith

Word got around so quickly to Chloe ’s class that within 5 minutes of stopping at the grocery store computer storage for solid food , Smith and Nichols were meet there by Chloe ’s family . The hotdog ’s proprietor charged into the computer memory , frantically asking if it were really his dog who had just been found .

But when the family saw Chloe , there was no dubiety in anyone ’s thinker – this was their frankfurter .

Chloe is in full recovery mode at place now .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Photo: Trinity Smith

Smith and Nichols were lately able to visit Chloe to see her much improved condition .

It will take her some clock time to bounce back from her trial by ordeal and gain all the exercising weight back , but now that she is back in her warm and loving home , a fully recovery is possible .

The first snows have begin to precipitate on Mount Bross , which Chloe would not have been capable to survive .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Photo: Trinity Smith

Chloe was a fighter all the mode through , and nobody can know what she endured those 6 long week .

Thanks to the heroic dedication of Trinity Smith , Chloe can now rejoice in spending the ease of her days with her loving family , where she belongs .

Hikers Rescue Starving Dog Lost for 6 Weeks on a Mountain

Photo: Trinity Smith