Anonymous wrote:I love dogs. My own dog is really well trained. I can't deal with peeing indoors or tearing up anything.
But I would be a foster for my breeds. I have a shih tsu and a Maltese. I think most people think of foster dogs as being pit bulls who have trouble being adopted. My breeder would take my dogs back in an instant if something was wrong and I couldn't care for them any longer. The breeder didn't want them going to the pound.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, what holds us back is the attachment to the dog. We don't feel we would be able to open our home and hearts then turn it over to its adoptive family. Even though we would be thrilled that it is going to a good home, it would be hard on us every time one left us.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love dogs. I have 3 dogs already and I have teenagers. I would happily volunteer my time at a kennel type setting but trying to add more dogs into my own house, especially introducing new/strange dogs into my home, seems daunting at this point in time.
How do your dogs get their mid-day walk/pee break? Are you at home to walk them?
Would you be willing to help someone who lives near you be a foster by also walking their foster dog?
Anonymous wrote:It's a lot of work, OP. Some of these foster dogs have major issues which would need to be remedied by much time and effort.
For people who can barely keep their head above water with their own pets, their work, their kids and the kids' activities, the housework, let alone their own leisure, it's a non-starter.
Anonymous wrote:I love dogs. I have 3 dogs already and I have teenagers. I would happily volunteer my time at a kennel type setting but trying to add more dogs into my own house, especially introducing new/strange dogs into my home, seems daunting at this point in time.
Anonymous wrote:I have a dog and thought about it, but with work and travel, I have to board my dog several times, and that wouldn't work with fostering a dog. Even if they take the dog back for a few days while you travel, I think it would be traumatic for a dog to be taken back and forth like that. Whereas my own dog loves people where he boards and they adore him. I looked at applications and they ask if you are available to be there a lot more than for your own dog, there are demands, crating, training, separate room, many issues as well. Once your own dog is house trained and fine, you can leave him alone for more hours per day than you could a foster dog. At least, that was my observation from the strict process for fostering.