What You Should Know Before Adopting a Shelter Dog

Are you thinking about adopting a shelter dog? Congratulations — you are a life saver! Just be sure to read the following tips so you’re well prepared for your new family member.

Choosing the Right Pet for Your Lifestyle

Like people, pets have different temperaments and activity levels. If you’re basically a couch potato, a working dog like a border collie would not be the right pet for you. Although you may fall in love with a dog you see on the shelter’s website, consider your lifestyle before making a commitment.

This is the most important thing you should consider when adopting a shelter animal, according to Madeline Bernstein, president of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles (spcaLA), an independent animal organization.

“The best type of pet for you and your family—age, breed appearance, species, activity level—is dependent on you,” she told me. “Shelter pets, like people, have different needs and personalities. Do you have kids? Are you active? Do you want to spend a lot of time training? Ask yourself these questions and discuss as a family. Most importantly, come to the shelter with an open mind. Personality and compatibility are really the important things to factor into a decision.”

Finding a Perfect Match at the Shelter

Adopting a dog from a shelter has some benefits over adopting one from a rescue. For example, there are many more dogs to choose from and lower adoption fees.

“In our community, there are too many wonderful, sweet and healthy pets and too few owners,” Bernstein said. “By choosing to adopt, you are helping to end the pet overpopulation crisis. Any adoption is a win, but when you adopt from a shelter, that kennel space is opened for the next needy pet.”

  • Be sure to bring a photo ID. If you’re a renter, it’s a good idea to bring a copy of your rental agreement or a letter from your landlord indicating that dogs are allowed in your home.

  • If possible, you should bring all family members, including your other pets if the shelter allows it, to see how the dog reacts to them and vice versa.

  • Unless you’ve already selected a dog from the shelter’s website, let the shelter staff know what kind of dog and personality you’re looking for, and if you’d prefer a certain breed.

  • Shelters are very stressful environments for animals, so don’t dismiss a dog just because she seems scared and unfriendly in her kennel.

  • Many animal shelters have “meet-and-greet” areas where potential adopters can interact with dogs. Just remember that because of their circumstances, many shelter animals may be skittish and apprehensive at first.

  • Don’t be disappointed if you can’t immediately take your new family member home with you. Many shelters require pets to be microchipped and spayed or neutered before being released to their forever homes.

This video, which is played in the lobbies of Salt Lake County animal shelters, has additional helpful tips about finding the right shelter dog for you.

Preparing Your Children for a Dog

If your children, especially little ones, have never been around a dog before, you can prevent injuries by teaching them how to respectfully treat your potential new family member.

  • Tell your children not to yell at or run toward the dog, which will frighten him. Explain that pets are not toys and must not be treated roughly.

  • Decide who will be responsible for various tasks like walking and feeding your new dog— but don’t give your child too much responsibility right away. The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) recommends that until you know what tasks your children can handle on their own, always supervise them when they are caring for your dog.

Additional helpful tips can be found on the AVMA website.

Preparing Other Pets for Your New Dog

Some shelters have play areas where you can bring your dog to meet the pet you want to adopt so you can see if they get along. If this isn’t available, be prepared to gradually introduce your pet to your new family member. And be sure to give your existing pet just as much, if not more, attention as you do to the newcomer.

It’s important to introduce your new dog on neutral turf – never inside your house. With both dogs leashed, take them for a relaxed walk, side by side and a safe distance apart. Let them meet and sniff each other. If they’re getting along, take them to an enclosed area and remove their leashes. The Best Friends Animal Society has detailed instructions for introducing dogs successfully.

Preparing Your House for Your New Pet

Before going to the shelter to adopt a dog, make sure your house is prepared.

  • Buy pet supplies including food, bowls, toys, bedding, and a collar and leash.

  • Many adult shelter animals have already been housetrained, but be prepared with potty-training pads just in case.

  • Put anything you don’t want your dog to chew or eat out of their reach.

  • Inspect your house from a dog’s-eye view. Hide or tape down any hazards such as electrical and mini-blind cords.

  • Put childproof latches on low cupboard doors. Install baby gates or keep the doors closed to block areas that are off-limits to your new dog.

  • Make sure all trash cans have secure lids or can’t be accessed by your dog.

Check out more pet-proofing tips from the American Humane Association.

Additional Resources

For more information about adopting shelter dogs, visit these websites.

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

This story was originally published on Care2.com.

Virtual ‘Indoguration’ Planned for First Dog Major Biden

For the first time ever, a former shelter dog will soon make the White House his home. And, for the first time ever, a special “Indoguration” is planned to mark this momentous occasion.

Major, a German Shepherd, was initially fostered by the Bidens from the Delaware Humane Association (DHA) in 2018 after their daughter, Ashley, sent them his photo. Like so many so-called “foster fails,” the Bidens fell in love with Major and he became their forever dog.

Today is Major’s lucky day! Not only did Major find his forever home, but he got adopted by Vice President Joe Biden &…

Posted by Delaware Humane Association on Saturday, November 17, 2018

To celebrate Major’s move to his new home, the DHA and Pumpkin Pet Insurance are holding a fundraising “Indoguration” on Zoom that they say is the “largest virtual party for dogs.” The event is on Jan. 17 at 3 p.m. Eastern Time, three days before Major’s dog dad is inaugurated. It will be hosted by Jill Martin of the “Today” show on NBC, with special guest Sir Darius Brown, a 14-year-old animal advocate.

You can RSVP for the Indoguration online. A donation of at least $10 to DHA is required to attend. The DHA is a nonprofit, no-kill animal care and adoption center that also offers affordable spay/neuter services, low-cost vaccination clinics and a pet food pantry.

While Major is the first pound pup to live in the White House, he’s not actually the first rescue pet to make it their home, according to CNN. President Lyndon B. Johnson’s mixed-breed dog Yuki had been abandoned at a Texas gas station when he was rescued by LBJ’s daughter, Luci. The Clintons’ cat, Socks, was also a rescue pet.

Major will also be sharing his new home with the Bidens’ other dog, Champ. The German Shepherd was purchased by Joe from a breeder as a gift to Jill after the 2008 election. Here’s hoping that all the Bidens’ future dogs, and all future first dogs, will be shelter or rescue dogs.

Photo: @DrBiden/Twitter

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)!

George Clooney Adopts Unwanted Rescue Pup for His Parents

Just three months ago, George and Amal Clooney made news headlines for adopting a 4-year-old Basset Hound named Millie from the San Gabriel Valley Humane Society in Southern California. The couple didn’t even send one of their people to pick up Millie after they fell in love with her picture and story on Petfinder — they went to the shelter in person (bringing along their rescue dog Louie), much to the delight of employees and visitors.

“It definitely added to the excitement on one of our busiest afternoons when we do vaccinations for the public,” shelter spokeswoman Lynn Collmann told the Huffington Post.

Now another lucky shelter dog is in a forever home, thanks to George Clooney.

Nate, a scruffy terrier with birth defects who was rescued from a hoarding situation, was having a really difficult time getting adopted from LuvFurMutts Animal Rescue in Fairfield, Ohio.

“When we took Nate to adoption events, people would stare and kids would point,” the rescue wrote on its website. “Several people applied to adopt him but then said no when they met him. … The lowest point came when an adopter cried when she met him and said she would be depressed the rest of her life if she had to look at him every day.”

LuvFurMutts saw Nate as “a handsome, charming, sweet and normal little boy” — and so did Clooney.

A beloved 10-year-old terrier belonging to his parents, Nick and Nina Clooney, died last year. After viewing Nate’s video, Clooney thought the dog would make a perfect Christmas present for the couple.

“What is impressive is the fact that George picked Nate out, and Nick and Nina accepted Nate just the way he is,” wrote LuvFurMutts. “They could have any dog in the world, but they chose to adopt a dog who was crippled and could have been with LuvFurMutts for life.”

Not only did Clooney adopt Nate, but he also made a donation to LuvFurMutts to cover the cost of the dog’s previous surgeries.

Nate was delivered to Clooney’s parents on Christmas Eve by Carol Roberts, founder of LuvFurMutts.

“To say we were startled would be an understatement,” Nick Clooney told radio station WCPO, adding that it seemed more like Nate adopted them rather than vice versa.

“A wonderful way to find a certain part of your life completed in a way that cannot be touched in any other fashion,” said Nate’s new dog dad.

Nate “will be spoiled to death for the rest of his life,” LuvFurMutts wrote. “From fighting to get food in his belly each day to being the only fur baby of two of the most wonderful people in Augusta, Ky.

“It’s truly a fairy tale ending for Prince Nate…or should we say, a perfect Hollywood movie ending!”

To make a donation to help LuvFurMutts save more dogs, click here.

Photo via Facebook

Viral ‘Poetic Dogs’ Photo Series Transforms Shelter Pups into Authors

Photographer Dan Bannino, dog dad of a former pound pup, wanted to do something to help get more homeless dogs adopted. In June 2014, he came up with the inspired idea of transforming shelter dogs into his favorite authors, photographing them and then posting the pictures on social media.

His project, “Poetic Dogs,” has gone viral since it debuted in late November.

“I’ve realized how dogs are similar to writers: speaking through their expressions, sounds and movements, they’re telling you everything while saying nothing, just like an author would do with their fine words in a poem,” Bannino, who lives in Italy, wrote on his website

Early last year, Bannino adopted his dog, Rothko, from a shelter. “From that day my life has changed,” Bannino wrote. “When I adopted him, I realized how many dogs are in the same condition all around the world, and how a single adoption could change their lives and help support the situation in a dog shelter.”

Bannino is raising funds online to take more photos and publish them in a book.

Here’s hoping the stories of all these “authors” have happy endings.

Nespola as Mark Twain

“Nespola gave us a smile from the first moment we saw him,” Bannino writes. “With his white tousled fur and his incredibly funny yet elegant ways we couldn’t associate him to anyone else than the ‘greatest American humorist.'”

Aky as Leo Tolsky

Aky, a Golden Retriever mix, was dumped at a shelter when he became too old to work as a search dog. “Since his arrival, everyone at the shelter is taking good care of him and now he’s patrolling the area, solving cases of missing cookies,” Bannino writes.

Biscuit and Crumb as the Brothers Grimm

“Like Hansel and Gretel in the Brothers Grimm’s tale, Biscuit and Crumb are two little clever puppies,” Bannino writes. “The only survivors of a litter of eight, they were found under a bridge on a very cold day.”

Wall Street as Charles Bukowski

The oldest pup in Banino’s photo series, 14-year-old Wall Street was brought to a shelter after his owner passed away. “When I saw him he suddenly reminded me of the famous writer Charles Bukowski,” Bannino writes. “He didn’t like staying too much with the other dogs, he always looks drunk since he’s very old and not standing a lot on his feet, but as soon as you establish even the smallest contact with him, it looks like he’s telling you all his incredible stories.”

A Few More Author Doggie Dopplegängers

Ernest Hemingway

 Emily Dickinson

 Edgar Allen Poe

William S. Burroughs

Charles Dickens

Photos via Instagram

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