One story this week. A local shelter reaches their fund raising goal and is able to build a new facility.
Stories from 5/29 – 6/05
Earlier this week Pia Salk was invited to show off some local pets on Mike and Juliet. Pia also discussed a new feature on our website we are calling Social Petworking. Find out what happened on the show, and what Social Petworking is all about.
Social Petworking is all about sharing the idea of adopting pets with your current friends on Twitter, Facebook and other social applications. Now once you find a pet in need on AdoptaPet.com simply hover over the button on the top right of the page description labeled “SHARE.” There you can send the pet page to any of your friends. This is an awesome, and kind way of creating awareness of pets in need with your family an friends.
Pia discusses more about the Social Petworking on the show.
Welcome back for another week’s addition of Good News In Pet Adoption. This week lots of positive stories have emerged. Highlights included, two college students raising money with twitter to save a Dog’s life, Vets teaming up with shelters to offer pets care, and how an adopted pet named Boo helped his owner get help after a icy fall.
Stories from 5/23 – 5/29
– Two Texas college students raise money through twitter to pay for a dog’s surgery.
http://mashable.com/2009/05/24/twitter-dog/
– The Dog Valor Awards – Several stories profiling of dogs helping their owners in tough situations.
http://www.beloblog.com/KHOU_Animal_Attraction/2009/05/the-dogs-of-val.html
– A local police department rescues a dog from his death bed and makes him one of the squad.
http://www.coloradoconnection.com/news/news_story.aspx?id=305363
– San Francisco Vet reaches out to help shelters care for pets.
http://www.pr-inside.com/teaming-up-to-help-shelter-pets-r1277190.htm
Having trouble deciding if it’s a smart idea to purchase pet insurance? Not sure which plan or provider is best for you? Choosing pet insurance should be evaluated much like choosing insurance for yourself. Here are a few questions to consider…
For more on this topic, check out our blog article on how to Prepare for You Pet’s Vet Costs.
Hello from Adopt-a-Pet.com! We are proud to bring our readers a brand new post series today titled “Good News In Pet Adoption.” What is the purpose of this new post series? It is to provide uplifting news from around the country about pet adoption.
Whether you’re looking to adopt, or a volunteer in a shelter the problems of pet overpopulation can seem overwhelming, and no one can do it all. We want to help keep morale strong and inform everyone of good things are happening in the name of helping some of our furry friends.
Stories will come from around the country discussing topics such as people reaching out to help shelters, and entertaining stories about the pets that are being adopted everyday.
Here are a few positive stories from the past two weeks.
– 200 dogs rescued from puppy mill arrive at LI shelter
– Zach Wilson, 9, and his mom created the Central Florida Animal Pantry
– Youngster helps Shelter with bake sale
– Some animal rights advocates working to strengthen new puppy mill bill
Moving can be an incredibly stressful event for you and your family. Often, we’re so wrapped up in the stress we’re feeling that we forget that this is a difficult time for our pets, too!
Pets are truly creatures of habit, and change can be very scary and unsettling for them. In addition, pets are extremely sensitive to our moods and emotions, and they are affected by all the upheaval going on inside us before a move worry about getting everything done in time, concerns about finances, fears about adjusting to a new job or a new city, sadness at saying goodbye to your old home or your friends and family… all of these things we feel are picked up by our pets, too. Then, when we pack, all they know is that not only are we upset or excited, but everything familiar to them is disappearing, too.
There are ways to ease the transition, though. First, try to maintain your pets’ normal routine as much as possible. Make sure your pets are getting enough exercise during this period remember, a tired pet is a well-adjusted, happy pet. A good, long walk or hike can do wonders for your pets’ stress levels (and yours, too!). Here are some other tips for a safe and = successful move with your pets:
Today, the world’s oldest dog turns 21. Chanel, a dachshund who lives with her owner on Long Island, NY, wears goggles to protect her cataracts and long ago faded from red to grey. She still is a much-beloved family member, though, treasured every bit as much today as she was when she was adopted from a shelter in Virginia as a puppy.
Every dog should be as lucky as Chanel. In an idea world, all dogs would have a warm, safe home in which to grow old. All dogs would have a loving family to take care of them in their later years. Unfortunately, through a variety of circumstances, many senior dogs end up in the animal shelter. Sometimes their owners, also elderly, must move to a care facility that doesn’t accept pets. Sometimes, owners can no longer afford to care for a dog that needs age-related medical procedures or medication. Sadly, in some cases the owners simply want a newer, younger dog. It’s tragic, but true.
In honor of Chanel, let’s make today Adopt a Senior Dog Day! Seniors make wonderful companions and they have so much love to give. Please go to the “Search Dog” page, enter in your zip code, and select “senior” from the age menu. Find a wonderful senior dog in your area. If you can’t adopt that sweetheart yourself, post a link to the dog’s information page on Facebook, Twitter him/her out to your followers, or simply email a link to all your friends. Let’s get those beautiful seniors out of the shelter and into the loving homes they so richly deserve!
Taking your new pet (whether dog, cat, hamster, or any other living thing) to the veterinarian should be your first priority. This is especially true if you have other pets. It’s a good idea to make sure your new pet is healthy and doesn’t have any diseases or viruses he or she could transmit to other animals in the house.
Your first veterinarian visit should be an enjoyable experience. You’ll learn all kinds of things about your new companion! Plus, you’ll want your veterinarian to get to know your pet during times of health so he or she will easily be able to recognize abnormal behavior if your pet ever becomes ill.
Here are three essential questions for your new vet, for detailed information check our What to Ask The Veterinarian Guide.
Hard workers who are committed to helping our county’s shelter animals come in all shapes and sizes. The Dalhart Animal Wellness Group and Sanctuary in Texas’ panhandle is proof positive of that!
This very special rescue group is run almost entirely by children. One historic spring in 2003 school teacher Dianne Trull was talking to her students about pet over population and one child earnestly inquired, “Why do the dogs have to die?”
Able to grasp the power in that moment and unwilling to tell her students that they were powerless to help these desperate animals, Diane instead took it upon herself to empower these young leaders. As Diane puts it, together her students, her family and she set out to “change how the world works. And change the world they have done indeed–in spite of tremendous obstacles– for themselves and the over 5,000 dogs and cats they have placed in loving homes!
Diane’s commitment and that of her students was tested early on when the community forced them out of their existing shelter and they had to move over 500 animals during a blizzard to another nearby location. Regardless of season, the weather in Dalhart continues to pose some of the most challenging obstacles; Wind speeds get up to 70 mph and temperatures can range from 70 degrees one day to below zero the following day…not to mention tornados and hurricanes that frequent the area.
However, D.A.W.G.S. founder Diane is reluctant to focus on these challenges. She invariably brings the conversation back to focus on the animals saved and the amazing kids who, now in high school and mentoring other young students, are still hard at work helping the animals.
In an effort to protect the shelter from the forces of nature, D.A.W.G.S. is now enrolled in a USDA conservation program that will match the funds they raise to build a natural windbreak out of trees. This is yet another challenge for the amazing team at D.A.W.G.S, a challenge we have no doubt they will meet. Especially if we all put the word out and show them that they have the support of all of us. See: http://www.dawgsntexas.com/HTML/newdonations2007.html if you’d like to help.
And with volunteers like fourth grader Hannah, we know the D.A.W.G.S. animals are in great hands; According to Hannah, the shelter is like “the little engine that could–we just keep thinking we can, thinking we can, thinking we can….and finally we make it!”
Struggling to name your newly adopted pet? If you’re curious, here are the top ten names for Dogs and Cats.
1. Buddy
2. Max
3. Daisy
4. Molly
5. Charlie
6. Lucy
7. Bear
8. Lady
9. Lucky
10. Maggie
1. Kitty
2. Tigger
3. Tiger
4. Princess
5. Smokey
6. Angel
7. Max
8. Lucy
9. Molly
10. Baby