I’m not affiliated with one particular rescue organization, seriously, it doesn’t take a NASA engineer to figure out I’m partial to Labrador Retrievers, but Labs aren’t for everyone.
Instead I like to advocate for rescue.
On the rare occasion someone asks me about getting a dog, I like to educate them a bit on the joys of rescuing. That’s not to say people shouldn’t get a dog from a responsible breeder, I just make sure they know where pet store puppies come from and how much work goes into training.
Rescues have some pretty strict guidelines when it comes to adopting a dog. The rescues I’ve been associated with do a home visit.
Where will the dog sleep, how will the dog be exercised, where will the dog be when you are out of the house?
These are all important questions.
I get why they do this. They are over-whelmed with dogs and understaffed with…well staff.
They see the horrors of the rescue world on a daily basis. The dogs that have been neglected or worse yet, abused.
In many instances they have the unbelievable task of choosing which dogs will live and which ones will not.
Day in and day out they see the result of people not being responsible and spaying and neutering their dogs.
I get it. I really do.
And yet, I wonder how many more dogs could be saved, if their guidelines were a bit less stringent.
Case(s) in point:
Stay at home dog mom.
When we made the decision to enlarge our pack I went immediately to Petfinder. Honestly I spent hours and hours on that website searching for the right dog.
I submitted a fair amount of applications for puppies. I was turned down on each and every one.
Why?
Because I wasn’t home during the day to let the puppy out for potty breaks.
I couldn’t understand that, we both worked full-time and had managed to successfully raise Sampson from a puppy.
Yes it was true someone wouldn’t be with the puppy 24/7, but my mom lived next door and could go over at three and four times a day to give the puppy a break. By that time we had fenced in our yard so exercise wouldn’t have been a problem, plus there was already an older dog to provide companionship.
A Tale of Two Labs.
I mentioned in my Tick Tick Boom post there were two wildly crazy labs in the drop-in agility class. The mom told me, they’re sisters and are inseparable.
I questioned Sara afterwards.
This well-dressed, established couple in their mid-fifties, with a beautiful home, a fenced in yard with a pool, applied to rescues and were turned down.
Why?
Their yard was too narrow.
The result was they went out and bought two dogs. The woman said, what else could I do?
Spaying and Neutering:
A young couple I know rescued a 16 week-old lab mix, the female dog was altered before being adopted.
The dog has urine leakage, which I’ve heard can happen if they are spayed too early. A perfectly healthy dog now on medication, making an additional expense for the adopter, because the rescue spayed too young.
A friend whose rescue dog, came unaltered. The rescue sent a van out to spay the dog, 15 minutes later the young woman gets her dog back, still groggy on anesthesia. 15 minutes!!
Newsflash, my mammogram takes longer than 15 minutes and they’re just squashing boobs!!
What’s the answer?
I’m not sure I know.
I do know having someone home 24 hours a day does not necessarily make them a great dog owner.
I do know having a narrow yard is not the end of the world and does not mean the dog won’t be exercised.
I do know the numbers of animals in shelters and rescues is astronomical, but I don’t believe creating health problems in healthy animals will resolve the issue.
The key to changing any behavior (as those of us in the dog world know) is education.
Educate yourself and educate others, it’s the only way to stop the bleeding.
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