Something strange recently happened to reporters from The Associated Press while on assignment in Greenland. AP journalist Emma Burrows explains that during a shoot with dog‑sledders in the Arctic Circle, the team suddenly realized one of their cameras had vanished.
“We realised that one of our cameras had gone missing,” Burrows recalls.
At first, she and AP photographer Gena searched everywhere — high, low, and in the freezing dark — convinced the device was gone for good. But then came the unexpected twist: a dog was the culprit.
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Burrows says she spotted several dogs running away from the spot where they last remembered seeing the camera. So she followed them through the pitch‑black snow, guided only by iPhone lights and sheer hope. The missing device? A $700 360° camera — not exactly something you want disappearing into the Arctic night.
Amazingly, the dogs led her right to it.
And the best part? The dog had hit record.
The recovered footage shows the mischievous canine chewing on the camera, picking it up, running with it, and hiding under a sled — essentially turning the pricey device into a very expensive chew toy. Luckily, the dog eventually emerged with the camera still in its mouth, allowing the team to retrieve it.
The footage may not win a Pulitzer, but it’s undeniably adorable — a true “doggie selfie” moment captured in the wild.








