by Bethers » Thu Dec 10, 2009 10:28 pm
I was on the board of directors of a humane society. Those dogs might come to the shelter, but if they were under 35 pounds, they found a home sometimes the day we put them up for adoption. The exception would be a problem dog. If they were a large dog, but mainly a breed that people liked (Lab, golden, etc) they would be pretty quick to go also. Larger dogs that were mixes of breeds or pure breds like dobermans, pit bulls, etc were harder to find homes for - however, the saddest part on those breeds were the number that had to be euthanized rather than ever getting a chance at being adopted. By no fault of their own, previous owners had trained them to do things that made them impossible (or illegal) to adopt - like dogs who had ever fought.
Janice, great idea - but unfortunately, most of those who leave dogs at shelters do so with no 2nd thought. It's amazing. One man brought in his dog - his wife and son both upset and crying - they'd had the dog 3 years. The man had only taken the dog out with him hunting once - said the dog was no good at it - so good riddance. Course, the dog hadn't been trained to hunt, either, just was supposed to know. Needless to say, we were thrilled to get this dog, but so sorry for the wife and child. Course, we were sorry for them that they even lived with that man. Then there were the dogs that had been obviously abused. Or how about the family who brought in a 5 or 6 month old puppy telling us we had to euthanize it because it tried to bite the baby. Turns out the mom was ok with the baby pulling the puppy around by the tail. The puppy tried to hide under the sofa and the baby reached in with anything it could find to get at the dog - finally got it's tail, pulled it out - and the puppy bit the hand. Well, I would have bit, too - probably a lot sooner. Luckily in this case, the dad pulled me aside while the mom was telling another worker this puppy was no good and had to be put to sleep. Dad signed a paper for me that we could see if we could get this puppy adoptable. Course, as soon as they left, the puppy lost it's fears. We simply wouldn't adopt it to a family with children under 12 - and warned the family who adopted it that it might never like to see another baby again. Oh, these are the nice stories. I could tell you about a case at a vets where a cat was brought in - obviously in major distress - tail was burned, and other signs of burning. To make a long story short, 12 year old boy had been home alone, and gave the cat a bath - then thought the cat would be better off and happier if dried quickly - so he put the cat in the microwave to dry it. Fortunately, he did it for a couple shorter bursts - the cat survived - but only after some miraculous work by this vet, that was even more miraculous after we found out the story. This boy actually thought he wasn't doing anything that could harm the cat. Scary, eh? I hope who took your pet into the shelter was someone of the unfortunates who simply have to do it for whatever reason. But those were not the norm.
Beth
“Dare to live the life you have dreamed for yourself. Go forward and make your dreams come true.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
"He who treasures the small things in life has found the path to true happiness"