Anonymous wrote:We adopted our dog when she was 2-3 years old from the Mineral County Humane Society and had a great experience - she is a wonderful dog, the perfect pet.
The MCHS is not a physical place; it is a group of about five women who rescue adoptable dogs (and cats I think) from the local high-kill shelter/pound, and place them via Petfinder.com and Facebook:
https://www.petfinder.com/pet-search?shelterid=WV85
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mineral-County-Humane-Society/247873228623352
Since they foster the dogs in their homes, they get a very good sense of the dogs' temperaments, how they are with cats, other dogs and children, how much exercise they need, etc.
If you follow them on Facebook, you will see adoptable animals come up in real-time.
Anonymous wrote:
Just wanted to chime in that with a rescue, you are taking on a certain amount of risk. Even if you do everything perfectly training-wise, rescue dogs sometimes come with certain hang-ups that might compel them to act aggressively, which is why some shelters/rescues do not let families with young children adopt their animals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you for the replies. I'll check out the links.
I actually want to keep the invisible fence if at all possible.
Two things about invisible fences:
1. Dogs with strong prey instincts (this includes all terriers and, I would think, hounds?) will not be deterred by an invisible fence. They will take the hit to get out - but will not take it to get back in. Some breed-specific rescue groups don't view invisible fences as real fences for this reason.
2. Invisible fences keep your dog in, but do not keep other dogs (or predators) out. So, for example, a very small dog (Yorkie or the like) could be preyed on by a coyote or fox coming in from outside, or by a larger dog as well.
Also: If you work full-time, you will need a mid-day dog walker.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you for the replies. I'll check out the links.
I actually want to keep the invisible fence if at all possible.
Two things about invisible fences:
1. Dogs with strong prey instincts (this includes all terriers and, I would think, hounds?) will not be deterred by an invisible fence. They will take the hit to get out - but will not take it to get back in. Some breed-specific rescue groups don't view invisible fences as real fences for this reason.
2. Invisible fences keep your dog in, but do not keep other dogs (or predators) out. So, for example, a very small dog (Yorkie or the like) could be preyed on by a coyote or fox coming in from outside, or by a larger dog as well.
Also: If you work full-time, you will need a mid-day dog walker.
Anonymous wrote:
Just wanted to chime in that with a rescue, you are taking on a certain amount of risk. Even if you do everything perfectly training-wise, rescue dogs sometimes come with certain hang-ups that might compel them to act aggressively, which is why some shelters/rescues do not let families with young children adopt their animals.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you for the replies. I'll check out the links.
I actually want to keep the invisible fence if at all possible.