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rehoming critters

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  • 01-14-2007, 04:39 PM
    joyful girl
    Re: rehoming critters
    I think the words 'rescue' and 'adopt' are used way to often by people

    in my opinion:

    if it came from a pet store and you paid for it you bought it not adopted not rescued no matter what the conditions where
    if you take a animal in that needs a home, treat it, and rehome it it's a foster
    if you take a animal in that needs a home and give it a loving forever home then it's a rescue
  • 01-14-2007, 04:47 PM
    Aric
    Re: rehoming critters
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by joyful girl
    I think the words 'rescue' and 'adopt' are used way to often by people

    in my opinion:

    if it came from a pet store and you paid for it you bought it not adopted not rescued no matter what the conditions where
    if you take a animal in that needs a home, treat it, and rehome it it's a foster
    if you take a animal in that needs a home and give it a loving forever home then it's a rescue

    very well said and I agree.
  • 01-14-2007, 04:47 PM
    joyful girl
    Re: rehoming critters
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by worldcupkeeper
    We know people who "rescue" an animal and something comes up health wise and decide they no longer want them anymore.

    that's what I mean by to many saying 'rescue'
  • 01-14-2007, 04:51 PM
    joyful girl
    Re: rehoming critters
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by worldcupkeeper
    very well said and I agree.

    I have a lot of respect for people that foster or run shelters.

    I tried it and I ended up keeping both of the ferrets. I can only take in what I intend to keep because it's too hard to let them go.
  • 01-14-2007, 04:59 PM
    Blu Mongoose
    Re: rehoming critters
    The only time I have rehomed my animals was due to a divorce. May not sound like a good reason, yet I couldn't afford to take care of my own basic needs. Over the yrs. I have rehomed many working thru rescue groups or on my own.


    One such case came into the shelter I was volunteering at. A 9 wk old spitz pup. The woman told us she had 600 dollars on her and saw the pup in a petshop. Upon bringing it home it soiled her carpet. The pet store was unwilling to return her money so she threw it into the backyard for a week. She fed it but the weather was well below freezing, she told us it had been living under a pile of leaves, her neighbor saw it and insisted she take it somewhere. The shelter was at full capacity so home she went with me. One couple fell in love with the pup but didn't have a fenced yard so no deal. 1 1/2 weeks later they were back inviting me to their home. When I arrived there was a newly installed cyclone fence on a quarter acre yard, she lives there till this day. The only reason I mention this particular story is it shows the extremes of mankind. The pup was a useless object to one person, while being a dream pup to another. Their previous spitz had been put down due to old age one hour after I had posted the pups pic.
    I am always talking with people about their animals. I first try to educate people on a particular animal before they even acquire one. If they truly wantone than I say go for it. There are never enough good homes.
    But as bad as it may sound, I would much rather see an animal put down than go to a very bad or abusive home.
    Sorry for the long post.:D
  • 01-14-2007, 05:05 PM
    joyful girl
    Re: rehoming critters
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Blu Mongoose
    One couple fell in love with the pup but didn't have a fenced yard so no deal. 1 1/2 weeks later they were back inviting me to their home. When I arrived there was a newly installed cyclone fence on a quarter acre yard, she lives there till this day.


    great story!
  • 01-14-2007, 07:47 PM
    Ginevive
    Re: rehoming critters
    Rehoming is a part of life for anyone who regularly takes in unwanted animals. I think of my friend as an example; she takes in, fixes up, and rehomes many dogs, cats and even horses each year. Now, if she kept every animal she rescued, she would have been run into the poor house by now! She is affiliated with Paws of Gold rescue. She is an angel for these animals; she takes in the poor dogs that regularly get left at her doorstep; the ones who are half dead that got hit by a car (if they are able to be saved.) And more kittens than I could ever keep track of, because everyone out here HAS to have barn cats that breed like rabbits.
    I have taken in a few BPs in the past few years, and rehomed them; I would never give an animal away for free. My friend brought up a point regarding this that I have never forgotten: if you give an animal away without charging some kind of fee, what value does that animal have with the person from the get-go?
    I can definately tell you, that for most rescues I have seen at least, the fees never offset veterinary expenses and it usually costs a ton to rescue/rehome.
  • 01-14-2007, 07:53 PM
    Ginevive
    Re: rehoming critters
    I do need to say though, that I despise it when someone gets a pet for novelty reasons and just decides to ignore, neglect or pawn it off on someone else; I would have zero respect for a person's doing this.
  • 01-14-2007, 08:52 PM
    slartibartfast
    Re: rehoming critters
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by joyful girl

    if it came from a pet store and you paid for it you bought it not adopted not rescued no matter what the conditions where
    if you take a animal in that needs a home, treat it, and rehome it it's a foster
    if you take a animal in that needs a home and give it a loving forever home then it's a rescue

    I disagree with part of this...If I take an animal from certain death, heal its wounds, socialize it, housebreak it, and then place it with a carefully screened adoptive home, then that is a rescue. I'm not sure what else you'd call it.

    For the rest of it and your previous post, I agree 100%!

    As far as rehoming pets...The vast majority of ones we get in are where people got an animal because it looked cute/cool/trendy/manly, then discovered that caring for animals requires *gasp* work.
    The first time Kitty (for Frith's sake, come up with a more original name) claws the new leather sofa or the puppy wees on the expensive carpet, they ditch them. I've had people bring puppies in less than 24 hours after purchasing them because they cried all night. I've had people buy spazzy high-energy working line dogs so they could wave the papers around, then dump the dog in the backyard for months and surrender it untrained and unsocialized because it barks too much and the neighbors complain.

    It all comes down to responsibility and understanding that this is a -life- you are taking on. Far too many people get animals they can't or won't care for appropriately, then blame the animal for the predictable negative results. All too often, they ditch the pet, then turn around and repeat the cycle all over again with a new one.
  • 01-14-2007, 09:40 PM
    joyful girl
    Re: rehoming critters
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by slartibartfast
    I disagree with part of this...If I take an animal from certain death, heal its wounds, socialize it, housebreak it, and then place it with a carefully screened adoptive home, then that is a rescue. I'm not sure what else you'd call it.

    I can see your point..

    To me a rescue is providing a forever home because even after you foster an animal you don't know what will happen in the future once adopted out.
    Screening adopters is very important and you'd hope they'd always keep the animal but I've seen posts on craig's list from people who adopted an animal from a rescue and are trying to rehome it even though they are suppose to take the animal back if they can no longer care for it.
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