For eight years, James Caughill and his dogs have been walking thousands of kilometres across Canada to raise awareness about the lack of homeless shelter options for people with pets.

In 2016, Caughill’s father had to move into a long-term care home, giving up the apartment they shared. Caughill thought he found an apartment for him and his dog, but it turned out to be a rental scam and he lost his savings.
He found himself homeless, and he soon discovered there were no shelter options in his hometown of St. Catharines, Ont., because he had a dog.
In order to continue collecting social assistance, he needed a home address and a shelter would have sufficed. A social worker recommended he give up his dog, but for Caughill, that was not an option.

He tried to make due on the streets until winter, using a library computer to search all of Canada for a shelter that would accept him and his dog. His search was fruitless.
“I looked all over Canada, West Coast to East Coast,” Caughill said. “Nothing.”
So he decided to walk from St. Catharines to Vancouver to shed light on this issue.
“Pets are important to people. They are essential. They are family,” said Caughill.
The dog he set out with, Muckwah, has since died of cancer. But that didn’t deter him from pushing on. He’s currently stopped on Montreal’s South Shore, in Longueuil, as he is walks east with his new dog, Muck.
He is on his way to St. John’s and he is raising funds to open a pet-friendly shelter.