If you read yesterday’s post, you know that USA Today recently published the results of a survey showing where people pick up their pets. Now it’s your turn – where did you get your dog?
Continue reading Saturday Survey: Where did you get your dog?
If you read yesterday’s post, you know that USA Today recently published the results of a survey showing where people pick up their pets. Now it’s your turn – where did you get your dog?
Continue reading Saturday Survey: Where did you get your dog?
Do you ever watch the Ion Television Network? I’m addicted to Criminal Minds, and I love Boston Legal, so I often find myself there in the evenings. They are running a contest on their web site whereby you can win a $1000 gift card for yourself and a $500 donation to a shelter.
What do you give the dog lover on your list who already has everything? Why not make a donation to a pet charity in their name. And how do you know if the charity is a good one or simply a scam? We’ve done all the work for you! The following ten charities are listed as 4-star organizations by Charity Navigator, based on their efficiency at using your money wisely and on their ability for future growth. (More details on their methodology here.)
Katherine Heigl, Dr. Izzie Stevens of Grey’s Anatomy fame, has proven herself to be a true canine-atarian, with her recent actions.
Continue reading A Wag of the Doggies.com Tail to Katherine Heigl
This e-mail came from a friend of a friend. Her products are absolutely excellent!
Continue reading Buy Pretzels to Benefit Carroll County (Ohio) Dog Pound
Didn’t get your fill of holiday shopping today? Here are two places you can go to shop for your entire gift list, while helping out animals in need:
Continue reading Want to do some good while shopping for your dog?
Steven Sable has designed a photography exhibit called “The Rez Dog Biographies” to highlight the plight of desert strays. What got Sable interested in the topic? On a landscape photography trip in the desert Southwest, he stopped to take a picture of a deserted highway in Arizona. Along came a stray to see him, and Sable, an animal lover, adopted the dog on sight. Although the sheltie/corgie mix was only about 3 years old, her teeth looked like they belonged to a senior citizen.
Happening upon a stray running the highway in Tennessee, Kathy Wilkes-Myers coaxed the emaciated Rottweiler into her car. Kathy, a member of Love Me Tender Animal Rescue, didn’t think the dog acted like a typical stray, so she set about trying to find her family.
I posted last Friday about Black Dog Syndrome: the lower adoption rate shelters see for black dogs than for lightered-colored ones. Here (reprinted from Black Pearl Dogs) is a list of 10 ways you can help.
1) Spay and neuter your pets. Urge those around you to do the same.
2) If you can adopt, please consider adopting a black dog who is waiting just for you. *”Many beautiful black dogs are overlooked—and, sadly, euthanized in disproportionate numbers”.
3) Sponsor a black dog or open your heart and home to foster care for a black dog (if you can’t adopt), in a rescue or shelter so they can open their doors to another black dog on death row without worry of finances.
4) If you can’t sponsor or foster, make posters for a black dog you find in a shelter or rescue to **advertise** their need of a home on community bulletin boards, vet offices, pet stores, your work office board, the company newsletter, the school paper. Gain permission from the sponsoring rescue or shelter first. Include the Blackpearldogs webpage address as part of the advertisement so interested people can understand more fully the plight this waiting BlackPearl faces. See one womans brilliant work
5) Go past your apprehensions and stretch yourself: walk a black-dog-in-waiting in a park and advertise to all that s/he needs a home. They will appreciate that you left your comfort zone so they could (hopefully) enter into one.
6) Volunteer to take them to obedience classes to attain skills that will make them more adoptable to the average family or teach them an endearing human greeting (like sit and shake).
7) Share this webpage address to let all dog lovers know how wonderful and in need a black dog is in today’s’ canine adoption community. We at Contrary to Ordinary are not a rescue facility. We know there are many cogs to make the wheel turn and we are fullfilling our niche of being an educational platform to get the word out so those gifted with other talents (ie foster care, transportation, fund raising, placement and adoption matching) can fulfill their niches to help the waiting black dogs out there.
8) Start your own rescue…just for black dogs rescued off euthanasia row. They can be found easily and it can be done just one dog at a time. Be inspired by the Starfish Story and Stop the Killing .
9) Click on “Free To A Good Home” and read Brutus’s story. Help a black dog (or any dog for that matter ) avoid this fate. Prepare your own rescue aids using the tools found here at Sun Bears Squad.
10) For those with savvy or flair: coordinate a “Tux and Tails” event for your local shelters or rescues. Gather up all the black coated critters waiting to find their forever heart and “do the bubbles” to make all fresh and clean. Add a tux (red or white) bow tie or a snappy collar (Bison Designs has brillant ones) and provide these waiting pearlies the opportunity to “run way” their stuff and become available for folks to appreciate them out of a dimly lit kennel run. You could even go as elaborate as every hour have a “walk” set to music with cards read that share what they already know: sit, down, off, fetch. I am guessing some of the pearlies would even do a demonstration of what they have to offer. Have a table set up to take applications or to donate financially to support these waiting pearls.
**The image that you make….i.e. the picture that you take….. may be the key to his or her being adopted by the right person. Black dogs are in desperate need of great photos in shelter listings. Practice using tips from “Photographing a Black Dog” to get your technique down before applying to help all the shelter animals have a better photographic chance to meet their future forever person.
Typically in October, shelters begin worrying about the black cats under their care, with many shelters refusing to place black cats up for adoption until after Halloween. Did you know black dogs are also at risk in shelters? Check out this article from Helium.com telling why black dogs are so hard to place.
If you work in a shelter, the article linked above will give you some ideas to help market your black dogs. Other resources are http://startseeingblackdogs.com/ and http://blackpearldogs.com/, which are dedicated to just this issue.
Until next time,
Good day, and good dog!