

Tip & Taz:
Two Heroic Dogs
By Pat Close
Cow dogs play an invaluable role on many ranches in the West and more than earn their keep. But two such
dogs belonging to Mike Laughlin and Lee Raine went above and beyond their normal work when they
undoubtedly saved the lives of both Mike and Lee.
The dogs are Tip, a female Border Collie mix, and Taz, a male registered Australian Cattle Dog (Red Heeler),
who was just eight months old at the time.
The incident happened in August 2009. Even though Mike is on the shady side of 70, he likes to stay busy
on horseback, handling and working cattle. For the past couple of years, he has been doing day work for
the Maggie Creek Cattle Company Ranch out of Lamoille, Nevada. Day work, in ranching lingo, means that
he's not on the payroll as a full-time employee, but works for the ranch when it needs extra help.
Lee is also a sure-enough good hand with horses and cattle in her own right, and sometimes rides
alongside Mike.
On this particular day, Mike and Lee loaded their horses in the stock trailer and the two cow dogs in the
pickup, and went out to look for remnant bulls. There was a Red Angus bull someplace who had been left
behind by the crew a few days earlier when they gathered that pasture because he was giving them trouble
and did not want to travel. Hoping he cooled off by now, Mike and Lee set out for the water tank where the
bull had been left.
Arriving at the water tank, no bull could be seen. So Mike walked about 100 yards through the sagebrush
to the top of a hill to get a better view of the area. The dogs stayed with Lee closer to the truck. When he
reached the top, Mike spotted the bull, maybe 100 yards away lying down...and the bull spotted Mike.
Normally, range bulls are tractable and present no threat to people. But this guy, who weighed about 1,800
pounds, was apparently in no mood to have anyone mess with him because as soon as he saw Mike, he
jumped up and charged.
No way Mike, in cowboy boots and spurs and a little stove-up after 60 years of cowboying, could out-run the
bull back to the pickup. And there were no trees or brush he could get behind. As Mike says, “I got caught
out in no man’s land with no place to hide.” He later (a long time later) laughed, “I should have held out a
red cape!”
Hoping to dodge the bull at the last second, Mike faced him head-on -- and got freight-trained. The bull’s
head slammed Mike right in his sternum and sent him flying about 20 feet. Badly hurt, Mike could not begin
to get up when the bull charged again and attacked Mike on the ground. For sure, Mike thought he had
ridden his last roundup.
Lee saw what was happening and started yelling, and she and the dogs ran toward Mike and the bull. When
the bull saw them, he turned his attention from Mike and charged Lee. She tried all the bullfighting tricks
she’d seen, like throwing her hat and trying to dodge him, but to no avail. He hit Lee from behind and
threw her through the air. She curled up best she could, knowing the bull was still coming, but then
realized he was not. Both dogs had sprung into action. They instantly attacked the bull and succeeded in
driving him away from the battleground -- and kept him away while Lee helped Mike get up and to pickup.
Lee loaded Mike into the passenger side, whistled for the dogs who jumped in the back, and headed for
the main road as fast as she could travel on the rough, two-track road through the pasture. Mike was in
excruciating pain, but never passed out.
When they reached the main road, the ranch cow boss loaded Mike into another truck and sped toward the
nearest hospital in Elko, Nev., 22 miles away. Lee and another cowboy took the horses and dogs home.
It turned out Mike had all his ribs broken on the left side, a cracked rib on the right side, and a cracked
sternum. He needed 14 stitches over the right eye and his left arm was hanging down, useless. After an
MRI, it was found that the bull had torn Mike’s rotator cuff in the left shoulder.
Although Lee was seriously bruised, she did not suffer any broken bones.
Six months later and after rotator cuff surgery, Mike is horseback again...and both he and Lee will be
forever grateful to Tip and Taz. Mike says, “These two dogs definitely saved our lives. That bull would
have killed us had it not been for our dogs. They both have a home with us for the rest of their lives.”


I am so grateful to Mike and Lee for giving Taz such a wonderful home out on the range where these dogs were bred to work. I am so thankful that Taz was there when they needed him most and that he was able to help drive the bull away before it was too late. BRB Ranch's Nevada Red Tas is by CH Hill St.'s Eli's Coming HIC and out of Ayres' Rosin Spurs N Mascara JHD NAC NJC HRD1-1 TT CGC CHIC-A.
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"Taz" received the 2009 Hero Dog Award during the 2010 California Cattle Call ACDCA National Specialty in Woodland, CA on Friday October 15th, 2010.
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Taz & Tip