How to Help Animal Shelters and Rescues Affected by Hurricane Harvey

 

For updated information about how to help animal shelters in Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico after the recent catastrophic hurricanes, click here.

Hurricane Harvey has been wreaking havoc on the Houston area for days. This morning, for the first time in its history, a dam overflowed, which will cause even more devastating flooding.

Animal shelters and rescues throughout Texas and neighboring states are taking in as many displaced dogs and other pets as they can. They need donations of cash and supplies — and, especially, volunteers to provide foster homes for all those homeless pets. Here’s what you can do to help some of these shelters and rescues.

If you know of other shelters or rescues that need help due to Harvey, please leave a comment and I’ll add them to the list.

SPCA of Texas

The SPCA of Texas, located in Dallas, is “putting every available resource behind assisting pets and people who have evacuated the Gulf Coast to the North Texas area,” according to its website. “We are deploying staff, volunteers and supplies to support evacuees housed at the mega shelter opening in Dallas, working with city and county disaster officials to care for the pets of evacuees.”

You can help by:

Tall Tails Animal Rescue

When a dam was opened without warning Aug. 28 near Hankamer, Texas, where Tall Tails Animal Rescue is located, the nonprofit’s kennels were flooded with over a foot of rising water, putting the lives of over 100 dogs in danger.

After Tall Tails founders Kat K Tschirgi and Kevin Miller put out cries for help on social media, volunteers in boats arrived to save some of the dogs. This video of the rescue effort, posted by Miller on Facebook, has been viewed more than 166,000 times.

The nonprofit Dallas DogRRR is collecting cash and supply donations on behalf of Tall Tails Animal Rescue.

You can help by:

Austin Pets Alive!

The Austin Pets Alive! (APA!) shelter, which itself was flooded during a 2015 storm, has been taking in hundreds of homeless pets from Houston.

“As we continue to care for the animals we have already saved, we have to prepare for even more animals who will need us in the coming days,” APA!, a nonprofit organization dedicated to keeping Austin no kill, notes on its website.

“We’ve been receiving reports from shelter partners in areas hit hardest by the hurricane and areas expecting the most flooding that … they are anticipating another significant influx of animals that they may not be able to help. We have also heard reports of extensive lines of people surrendering their pets, so Austin Pets Alive! needs to be ready to help and brace ourselves for additional animal intake.”

You can help by:

  • Donating needed items: Check the APA! website for its updated top current needs. Thanks to donations, it currently has enough crates, canned and dry dog food, and Clorox Wipes.
  • Making a cash donation.
  • Permanently adopting a large dog, as long as you have no other dogs. Short-term fosters are not currently needed.

Houston SPCA

Located at ground zero, the Houston SPCA needs cash donations, which fortunately have been pouring in from near and far — including over $160 from some awesome Hamburg, N.Y., school kids who raised the money by selling lemonade.

“The animals are cared for and safe,” Houston SPCA wrote on its Facebook page Aug. 28. “We have been overwhelmed with gratitude by the outpouring of support from the community.”

Photo via Kevin Miller/Facebook

San Bernardino Detectives Rescue Stolen Puppy and Drive Him Home

When a dog breeder and buyer met in the parking lot of a San Bernardino, Calif., supermarket earlier this month, the sale of a puppy didn’t go at all as the breeder had planned.

“The alleged buyer took the puppy, pushed the breeder and ran,” San Bernardino police Lt. Mike Madden told the Sun.

After the breeder contacted the police, two detectives were able to track down the puppynapper in the High Desert. According to a Facebook post, the thief was in the process of reselling the puppy when the detectives intervened.

The detectives rescued the stolen puppy, who appears to be a Pit Bull, and, as you can see in these photos, drove him back to the breeder.

The Sun reports that the puppynapper has not yet been charged with any crime, which seems odd. The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office is currently reviewing the robbery case.

With so many stories of cops shooting dogs for no reason, it’s reassuring to know there are compassionate people in law enforcement who do the right thing and truly care about animals.

However…are Pit Bull breeders doing the right thing by raising and selling these dogs? With so many Pit Bulls in animal shelters, in my opinion, the answer is no.

If you’re thinking about getting a Pit Bull or any other breed of dog, please consider adopting one from a shelter or rescue instead of buying one from a breeder. In my own experience with dogs from breeders and shelters, it really doesn’t matter which they came from. And by adopting a shelter or rescue pet, remember that you’re potentially saving two lives: that of your new family member as well as the dog who will now be able to take his place in the shelter — and hopefully be just as lucky.

Photo via Facebook/San Bernardino Police Department

Clear the Shelters Event August 19 Will Hopefully Do Just That

UPDATE: Over 75,000 pets were adopted on Clear the Shelters day this year — 25,000 more than last year!

If you or anyone you know wants to adopt a new furry family member, be aware that Aug. 19 is the third annual Clear the Shelters Day. During this event, hundreds of animal shelters across the country are lowering their adoption fees or dropping them altogether. (But, rest assured, most of these shelters will still be screening potential adopters.)

The goal, as the name implies, is to get as many pets adopted as possible. The previous two Clear the Shelters events were hugely successful. More than 73,000 dogs and cats have found forever homes on this special day since 2015, including over 19,000 in 2015 and over 50,000 in 2016. Hopefully the number of adoptions will double again this year.

Among the lucky dogs who found homes last year were Rose, a Husky with a neurological syndrome who had traveled from Turkey to a shelter in New York, and Tootsie, a senior Shih-Tzu with one eye who was adopted by a family from Chicago.

There’s really nothing better than seeing a sign like this on an animal shelter’s door.

Mission accomplished @DallasShelter. #ClearTheShelters @NBCDFW #desocuparlosalbergues @Telemundo39 #Dallas #DFW pic.twitter.com/JrUtEXr4E4

— Brian Curtis (@BrianCurtisNBC5) August 15, 2015

The Clear the Shelters initiative is spearheaded by NBCUniversal Owned Television Stations. For the second year in a row, VIP Petcare is co-sponsoring the event and donating more than $200 of preventive veterinary services to every pet that’s adopted. Petco is also a sponsor, and will provide all adopters with free “Welcome to the Family” packets that include information and pet supply coupons.

To see if a shelter near you is participating, check the map on the Clear the Shelters website. For updates about this event, follow the #ClearTheShelters and #LoveMyPet hashtags on social media.

“Clear the Shelters,” a 30-minute TV special hosted by Katie Lee and Beth Stern, will start airing Aug. 25 on NBC stations.

And before you adopt, I have some important tips for you. Good luck!

Did you or do you plan to adopt a dog on Clear the Shelters Day? Please leave a comment below (and thank you so, so much)!

Police Dog Opens Gate to Save Partner from Attack

When a Colorado police dog named Lex saw his partner being brutally attacked on the other side of a fence by the trespassing suspect he was attempting to apprehend, the 3-year-old Belgian Malinois didn’t just sit there and do nothing.

During a foot pursuit of the male suspect in Shaw Heights early on Aug. 6, the deputy had jumped over the fence, leaving Lex behind. So Lex, who’s obviously a very smart as well as very heroic K-9 officer, quickly figured out how to use his paw to open the latch in a gate.

“Then Lex came to the assistance of the deputy and the suspect was apprehended,” the Adams County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement.

The injured deputy was taken to a hospital and treated for his injuries. He’s now recovering at home. The suspect was booked into the Adams County Detention Facility.

“Our deputies view canine Lex as a hero for saving the day,” said Adams County Undersheriff Harold Lawson in the statement. “We appreciate everyone in the K-9 Unit and their hard work to keep us safe.”

Lex has been a K-9 officer with the Adams County Sheriff’s Office since February 2015. The hero dog is certified in narcotics and police patrol through the Colorado Police Canine Association and National Police Canine Association.

Nice work, Lex!

Photo: Adams County Sheriff’s Department

2 Ways Dogs Are Helping Save the Lives of Elephants

Every year, about 35,000 elephants are killed by poachers for their ivory tusks. The popularity of ivory is skyrocketing, especially in China, where the price for it tripled between 2010 and 2014. Because of this, the elephant population has decreased 62 percent in just a decade, to only about 400,000 worldwide.

If poaching continues, in another 10 years, elephants could very well be extinct.

To help prevent this tragedy, dogs are being trained to use their incredible senses of smell to track poachers and sniff out ivory.

‘Supernatural’ Dogs Track Poachers

When it comes to keeping poachers away from an area, “there is no tool more effective than tracker dogs,” according to the conservation organization Big Life Tanzania.

“Our dogs have tracked elephant poachers for up to eight hours at a time or more, through extreme conditions—heat, rain, wetlands, mountains—and still turned up results,” Damien Bell, the organization’s director, told National Geographic. “They love their handlers, and they do a job until the job is done.”

Up to 24 hours after a poacher has killed an elephant, trained tracking dogs can sniff out the trail to the door of the killer’s house.

“This is a significant deterrent: the poacher knows that nothing he can do will be able to change this,” writes Big Life Tanzania’s co-founder, Richard Bonham, on the organization’s website. “The Maasai in particular are terrified of tracker dogs, regarding them as somehow supernatural in their ability to track them down.”

One of Big Life Tanzania’s rangers, Mutinda, happens to a former poacher himself. He’s especially helpful since he’s familiar with secret trails.

“The real long-term benefit may be the example he is showing to his community through the growing prosperity of his family,” Bonham writes.

“The challenge is to find work and employment for others in his old poaching fraternity, in order to get them to change.”

To make a donation to the Big Life Foundation, click here.

Sniffing Out Ivory

To train dogs how to sniff out ivory at airports, seaports and border crossings, in 2014 the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) launched the Conservation Canine Programme in Tanzania.

The dogs, who are purchased from breeders in Europe, spend several weeks being taught to detect illegal wildlife products hidden in cargo or luggage.

The training begins with a Kong toy (affiliate link), which serves as a “neutral” odor, according to the AWF. Next, the dogs sniff small pieces of ivory.

“Positive reinforcement remains at the core of the program’s dog-training philosophy, with all training and handling done with the dogs’ physical and mental health in mind,” the AWF notes.

The dogs are then paired up with their handlers. The teams practice searching buildings, seaports and airports.

Will Powell, director of the Conservation Canine Programme, told CNN it was easier training the dogs than their handlers, because many of the handlers have never been around dogs.

“The first lessons are as basic as learning to call a dog across a room and be nice,” Powell said. “The dogs don’t get a paycheck, so handlers have to provide love and encouragement.”

The program’s first graduating class this year included eight dogs and 14 handlers from the Kenya Wildlife Service and Tanzania’s Wildlife Division. The teams will be deployed to areas identified as export or transit hubs for smuggled ivory.

The AWF is working with other wildlife authorities in Africa to potentially provide conservation canines throughout the continent.

“If dogs are used and intelligently placed, we are going to stop some of the routes the ivory comes through,” Powell told CNN. “The aim is to keep (poachers) on their toes.”

To make a donation to the African Wildlife Foundation, click here.

Photos: katjaFacebook

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