Anonymous wrote:Rescue organizations need to rethink they’re processes for adopting out animals. We tired once to adopt a dog and we’re turned down because we don’t have a fence yard.
If I can buy an AR15, a car, or a house quicker than I can adopt a pet, something needs to change.
We got our awesome dog from Craigslist. Screw crazy rescue places.
Anonymous wrote: Good luck OP - I hope you and your family have a wonderful time with your new dog. Thank you for adopting over buying from a breeder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rescue organizations need to rethink they’re processes for adopting out animals. We tired once to adopt a dog and we’re turned down because we don’t have a fence yard.
If I can buy an AR15, a car, or a house quicker than I can adopt a pet, something needs to change.
We got our awesome dog from Craigslist. Screw crazy rescue places.
So....stricter gun control?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's ridiculous. My friend was turned down because she had never had a dog before, and because she worked out of the home. She wasn't trying to adopt a puppy and she would have been a good pet owner, and it's just life that most people have to work during the day.
Meh, I didn't get a dog until I could afford a dog walker. It's really not fair to leave a dog home along all day.
Yeah much better that they get put down at a kill shelter, right?
It's not an either-or, but look. It's not fair to get an animal you don't take care of and then say, well, it's okay because it would have died anyway. That's terrible logic.
PP animal welfare person - unfortunately it is a little bit either/or. We can look for perfect homes, and let more pets be euthanized, or we can look for good homes, and not let the perfect be the enemy of the good. We have to draw lines about what we think is good v not good enough - and that's art, not science. But you have to be aware that every time you make it harder to adopt, more shelter pets will be euthanized for lack of a home. That's just how it is, given our current situation.
At the same time, it's good for you to think hard about when you think you are ready for a pet. For you, it sounds like you felt you didn't have enough financial stability to do it - until you did. That's great.
Anonymous wrote:Rescue organizations need to rethink they’re processes for adopting out animals. We tired once to adopt a dog and we’re turned down because we don’t have a fence yard.
If I can buy an AR15, a car, or a house quicker than I can adopt a pet, something needs to change.
We got our awesome dog from Craigslist. Screw crazy rescue places.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I am looking for a 2-4 year old (40-60 lbs). While we are open to a mix, I would prefer it to favor the sporting group with short hair. Think, English Pointer, Weimaraner, Vizsla.
These are awesome breeds. IF you have 3-5 hours per day for them to run and preferably a job for them to do. I grew up in the South and knew tons of gun dogs like this. Once they were tired out from chasing birds all day they were great family dogs. On the days they weren't hunting they were running free on the back 40.
These arent breeds for your average suburban home where the family is gone for 8-10 hrs per day. Maybe for a distance runner who can do 7 miles in the AM before work. They can be very destructive if not given enough activity and prancing in the postage stamp behind a house in Arlington and two 10 minute walks won't cut it.
So if you don't have 30 minutes for a home visit....how are you going to exercise a dog like this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - thank you to the posters with substantive information. I was able to call and set up appointments at several shelters in southern VA that have large inventories of surrendered hunting dogs. I was assured that if the shots are up to date, we can expect to take home the new member of our family that day.
Thanks again! I was looking at shelters in the wrong geographic location for what we required.
Anonymous wrote:There is so much romance attached to getting a dog from a shelter. Most of them have real problems and they are not the expensive breeds like a wiemeraner or sport hunting dog. Mostly they are beagles or mixes. And the hoops are just crazy. Some of the shelter people will put you through anything and then give you a dog that is part “some very popular breed” like corgi.
Corgis are hard to find and expensive just to give one example. The breed rescue groups are the same. Many animals that are very old or have significant medical needs
OP you will need to contact a Breeder. And they have LOTS of paperwork.