The drone hovered about 300 feet above a snowy forest on the edge of the Adirondacks, beaming back a thermal video image to Chad Tavernia half a mile away.
The video was just indiscriminate blobs of gray and black, like an old film negative, except for the bright white dot glowing in the middle of the drone controllerโs screen.
โItโs such a bright white thereโs no way it could be anything but an animal,โ Tavernia said.
In 45 minutes of scanning the forest from above, the thermal camera had picked up a lot of deer, chipmunks, even birds. But the white dot was too small to be a deer, too big to be a chipmunk. Coyote, maybe? Tavernia wondered.
Thermal camera video image from Chad Tavernia’s drone, showing a forest in Ellenburg, NY. The white dots are heat signatures belonging to Ryan Luebbers and his lost dog, Max.Chad Tavernia
Or was it the missing puppy Tavernia had been hired to find?
Tavernia switched to the droneโs regular camera to get visual confirmation, but the drone didnโt respond. Power lines overhead interfered with the signal. He would have to recall the drone and fly it back to the exact spot from another directionโand hope the white dot didnโt move in the meantime.
Tavernia is a recently retired New York State police officer, and a newly minted, FAA-certified drone pilot. Last October he hung his digital shingle on Facebook for North Country Drone Search & Rescue, based in Malone. He charges a flat fee of $300 to find lost pets.
Business was slow at first, but after successfully locating a hound dog lost in a Vermont swamp, things began to pick up. On Jan. 28, a 4-month-old German shepherd named Maximo ran away from his home in rural Ellenburg Center.
Maximoโs owner, Ryan Luebbers, searched for four days with no luck. Now he stood next to Tavernia, staring at the at the glowing white dot on the drone controllerโs screen, hoping that it was Max.

Aerial shot of the forest outside Ellenburg, NY, where Max the puppy got lost for four days…
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