23/04/2026
They are the most loyal dogs you will ever own. We are so privileged to have had our boy Brax and will forever miss him.
To the receptionist at the pediatric clinic in Oceanside, California who stepped around the front desk and quietly asked if the dog could “wait outside tied to something” while the appointment happened,
She meant well.
She was also asking the wrong thing of the wrong dog.
His name is Chief Petty Officer Anchor. He is a 93 pound Rottweiler with a chest so broad his handler jokes that he has his own zip code. He has a scar across his right eyebrow from a rooftop clearance operation in Erbil, Iraq in 2018 that his handler does not joke about.
Anchor served six years with Naval Special Warfare, SEAL Team support operations, as a multi purpose K9. He was a water insertion specialist, meaning he deployed from boats, from submarines, and twice from low altitude aircraft into maritime environments that most working dogs never encounter in a full career.
He completed 38 operational missions. He never once failed a water insertion. He never once lost his handler in the dark.
His handler, Senior Chief Petty Officer Damon Wakefield, returned from his final deployment with a TBI and bilateral hearing loss. Anchor’s secondary role, completely self appointed, nobody trained it, became sound alert dog. He wakes Wakefield when the baby cries. He nudges him when someone knocks. He has become, without paperwork or certification, the reason a Navy SEAL’s household functions.
The appointment was for Wakefield’s eight month old daughter.
Anchor had been with her since the day they brought her home from the hospital.
He came inside.
Nobody asked again.
Share for Anchor. Six years in the water so his family could have dry land.