Maybe, I was never offered this. My dog is also scared of other dogs, so this was actually the reason I was considering it, to get him socializing with another dog and help another dog. But, vet seemed to think it was a bad idea, and that we should be careful about introducing him to another unknown dog, as it might cause fearful aggression. |
If you are interested, I've noticed this group seems to do a number of shih tsus: http://www.caringheartsrescue.org/foster |
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I have a senior dog and know from experience that adding a dog or a series of dogs would be very stressful for her.
I may foster someday, after she is no longer with us. |
| I love dogs. We have two German Shepherds now. One is a rescue. Our rescue can be dog aggressive. I could never trust her around a foster. When she dies, we may consider fostering with a GSD rescue. |
| The attachment is my problem too. My best pal fosters 2 pit bulls...she still has them 10 years later. We are so much alike I know I would do the same....and I have enough pets! Plus my little dog is scared of other dogs and would be really upset to share me. He doesn't mind sharing with our cats. |
| I don't really want more than one dog. I'm partial to specific breeds, and don't want more fur all over the house--and I spend a lot of time/energy training my dog(s), and don't really want to do that with a dog that I won't have for more than a few weeks. Also, my dog is a rescue herself, and she may or may not take well to a random dog in her space. |
| I love the hell out of dogs. What holds me back is living in a rent controlled apartment building that does not allow pets. Also, I live in a somewhat unsafe area, and taking a dog out to pee at 11pm is a bit dangerous. |
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We have two rescues and a toddler. I floated the idea of fostering to DH pre-kids, but he said no. For us, the reasons are:
1. DH can't handle the attachment issue. That made fostering a non-starter to him. 2. I wouldn't bring a strange dog into the house with small kids. Maybe with older children, but absolutely not while they're still learning impulse control. 3. We have two rescues already. One has a naturally shy temperament and is nervous around bigger dogs, and the other has an unknown past that makes her reactive around other dogs. We have a good balance now, and I'd worry about another dog messing up the existing dynamic. 4. Time and energy are at a premium already. Walking three dogs is harder than walking two, our schedules are VERY tight with daycare pickup and little kid bedtime. I just don't have the free time (especially time where I wouldn't have to bring a toddler along) to meet up with adopters, even if the schedule was flexible. |
| I have young children, so I want to be careful about the breeds and personalities of dogs that I allow in my home. I also wouldn't want my children to grow attached emotionally to a dog we would have to surrender to another family. I hope to do this sort of thing when they are grown and we are retired. |
NP here but your last sentence is very interesting to me. I need to reach out to my local rescues (not DC area) and see if I could do something like this. I would love to help out other fosters with dog care like walking etc! |
+10000! This is us. Plus we have one dog that does not get along well with strange dogs. |
Yay! this is great! |
Are you experienced with dogs? My dog holds his pee easily for 12 hours. I force him to go out and pee at night around 9 PM and force him to go out again when I wake up in the morning. He'd rather sleep in! Also, in a pinch he has a "pee pad" by the backdoor and probably only uses one once or twice a month but, he does know to use it. Just saying it's possible. - OP |
| I would never ever take a mature dog. I've always start with puppies. It requires a lot of time for training (and money, if you are using professional trainer). I am working full time and have children. I don't see how I can find any extra time to train a matured dog (that more likely has some issues). |
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I wanted to foster rather than adopt, but was put off by the requirement that we take the dog to adoption events on the weekends. Yes, some organizations will have a volunteer take the dog instead, but I got the strong impression it was my job as the foster parent to help find this dog a permanent home. I WOH all week and did not want to spend my weekends that way. We adopted instead.
The adopted dog is not dog-friendly, so no foster dogs for me. |