Thank you for this. Our kids want to be helpful to dogs in need and want to see if training/owning a dog is something they think they(we)can handle. We are up for a puppy/young dog. This set ~3weeks seems to be good for us to start and try a few times. We fully understand that training and possible behavior issues is involved in fostering as we’ve been researching quite a bit what it entails.Anonymous wrote:Wolf Trap has a little different program, and it works well for us. The foster period is always three weeks. It’s almost always young puppies (under 12 weeks). You know in advance the day you will get the puppy and the day you will transfer it to the new owner. Occasionally the puppies aren’t adopted and you can agree to foster for the next period, or you can say no. There is good support and a vet on their staff (the founder).
Other rescues we’ve used are less organized and more uncertain - you may have the dog two days or two months. I also at this stage in life prefer young puppies because I have a toddler and I don’t want older dogs with unknown histories up at face level. Puppies though also mean more accidents. We keep them in a crate at night or have a large playpen area with hard floor.
Good luck! It can be very rewarding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.lostdogrescue.org/
We had a good experience with them fostering a little puppy from Texas.
Me again. When you foster a dog off transport, you have to be ready for anything, because available info will be very limited. I don't think the premise of your post, and that of some replies, gets to what fostering is really all about. If you want a known quantity, then you can foster a dog who is already in a long-term foster situation: however those dogs tend be seniors or have medical or behavioral issues, which are already KNOWN. So people generally tend not to want to foster them, or they do but then the dogs have a harder time getting adopted. The puppies shipped from southern/midwestern states and needing urgent fostering are pretty much a lottery, but the advantage is that they're generally cute, trainable and rapidly adoptable.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.lostdogrescue.org/
We had a good experience with them fostering a little puppy from Texas.
Anonymous wrote:Homeward Trails!