Permanent Fosters - What Are They?
Permanent Fosters are dogs who cannot be placed in adoptive homes and who live out their lives under MBR's care. Why can't they be placed? Usually its due to age. Sometimes a dog just adapts so well to the foster home that we feel rehoming it would do further damage. Maybe the dog has a behavior issue that we can control but are not comfortable entrusting its care to other people. Whatever the reason, these dogs are sometimes with MBR for years and that costs money for medical care & food. Please donate to help us continue caring for the special dogs.
Patch came to MBR in June of 2005 at the age of 9-1/2 years old. His original people developed allergy problems & could no longer keep him, so MBR stepped in to help. He was extremely overweight at that time & no one wanted to adopt a fat old lab. He has helped teach 2 childrenhow to stand up, had countless tractors & toy cars driven over him and he could not have enjoyed it more. The old boy can hardly walk anymore & his hearing is shot, but toss a piece of food and he'll still catch it 9 times out of 10! Patch will probably not be with us for much longer (he's almost 14 years old now!) and MBR has enjoyed every minute we've had with him.
Gramma OG (stands for Old Girl) came to MBR in August 2007 at the age of 6. She was pulled from a high kill shelter where she had been dumped at the end of her puppy-producing years. Gramma is probably close to the worst physical specimen of bloodhound breeding we've seen but her personality is top notch. She is missing the bottom 1/2 of one ear, she's short & blocky, & "cooper's droop" does not begin to describe her under-carriage. We had no one interested in her for over a year and, by that time, she had bonded well with her foster home. We decided that it would be unfair to Gramma to rehome her at this point. So, she will live out her life with MBR. We think she's beautiful!
Snoopy came to MBR in 2007 at the age of 8. He was a companion to a homeless man & had to go to a shelter when his owner took ill. Because of Snoopy's unique living circumstances, lack of proper socializaton & lack of proper training, MBr decided to keep Snoopy permanently. He's a good boy who has adapted well to life at his foster home - and they to his unique quirks. Rehoming Snoopy would be detrimental to his temperment.
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Rescuer's Humor (which is definately warped and not to be taken seriously):
A Rescuer's Answering Machine Message (we've heard all of them)
Hello, You have reached 123-4567, Tender Hearts Rescue. Due to the
high volume of calls we have been receiving, please listen closely to
the following options and choose the one that best describes you or
your situation:
Press 1 if you think we are veterinarians and want free medical
advice.
Press 2 if you know we are a rescue organization but want to save
money and have us give you free, untrained medical advice anyway.
Press 3 if you make $200,000 a year but still want us to pay to spay
the "stray" in your yard (house).
Press 4 if you have a 10-year-old dog and your 15-year-old son has
suddenly become allergic and you need to find the dog a new home
right away.
Press 5 if you have three dogs, had a baby and want to get rid of
your dogs because you are the only person in the world to have a baby
and dogs at the same time.
Press 6 if your dog is sick and needs a vet but you need the money
for your vacation.
Press 7 if you just got a brand new puppy and your old dog is having
problems adjusting so you want to get rid of the old one right away.
Press 8 if your little puppy has grown up and is no longer small and
cute and you want to trade it in for a new model.
Press 9 if you are elderly and want to adopt a cute puppy who is not
active and is going to outlive you.
Press 10 if your relative has died and you don't want to care for
their elderly dog because it doesn't fit your lifestyle.
Press 11 if you are moving today and need to immediately place your
150 pound, 8-year-old, unneutured, aggressive dog.
Press 12 if you want an unpaid volunteer to come to your home today
and pick up the dog you no longer want.
Press 13 if you have been feeding and caring for a "stray" for the
last three years, are moving and suddenly determine it's not your dog.
Press 14 if you are calling at 6 a.m. to make sure you wake me up
before I have to go to work so you can drop a dog off on your way to
work.
Press 15 to leave us an anonymous garbled message, letting us know
you have left a dog in our yard in the middle of January, which is in
fact, better than just leaving the dog with no message.
Press 16 if you are going to get angry because we are not going to
takeyour dog that you have had for fifteen years, because it is not
our responsibility.
Press 17 if you are going to threaten to take your ten year old dog
to be euthanized because we can't get to your house in the next hour.
Press 18 if you're going to get angry because the volunteers had the
audacity to go on vacation and leave the dogs in care of a trusted
volunteer who is not authorized to take your personal pet.
Press 19 if you want one of our perfectly trained, housebroken, kid
and cat friendly purebred tiny dogs that we have an abundance of.
Press 20 if you want us to take your dog that has a slight aggression
problem, i.e. has only bitten a few people and killed your neighbor's
cats.
Press 21 if you have already called once and been told we don't take
personal surrenders but thought you would get a different person this
time with a different answer.
Press 22 if you want us to use space that would go to a stray to
board your personal dog while you are on vacation, free of charge, of
course.
Press 23 if it is Christmas Eve or Easter morning and you want me to
deliver an eight week old puppy to your house by 6:30 am before your
kids wake up.
Press 24 if you have bought your children a duckling, chick or baby
bunny for Easter and it is now Christmas and no longer cute.
Press 25 if you want us to take your female dog who has already had
ten litters, but we can't spay her because she is pregnant again and
it is against your religion.
Press 26 if you're lying to make one of our younger volunteers feel
bad and take your personal pet off your hands.
Press 27 if your two year old male dog is marking all over your house
but you just haven't gotten around to having him neutered.
Press 28 if you previously had an outdoor only dog and are calling
because she is suddenly pregnant.
Press 29 if you have done "everything" to housebreak your dog and
have had no success but you don't want to crate the dog because it is
cruel.
Press 30 if you didn't listen to the message asking for an evening
phone number and you left your work number when all volunteers are
also working and you are angry because no one called you back.
Press 31 if you need a puppy immediately and cannot wait because
today is your daughter's birthday and you forgot when she was born.
Press 32 if your dog's coat doesn't match your new furniture and you
need a different color or breed.
Press 33 if your new love doesn't like your dog and you are too
stupid to get rid of the new friend (who will dump you in the next
month anyway) instead of the dog.
Press 34 if you went through all these 'presses' and didn't hear
enough. This press will connect you to the sounds of tears being shed
by one of our volunteers who is holding a discarded old dog while the
vet mercifully frees him from the grief of missing his family.
Author Unknown
Note to adopters: Lassie and Cleo and Rin Tin Tin and Toto don't show up in rescue. We don't get the elegantly coiffed, classically beautiful, completely trained, perfectly behaved dog. We get the leftovers. Dogs that other people have incompetently bred, inadequately socialized, ineffectively "trained," and badly treated. Most Rescue dogs have had it. They've been pushed from one lousy situation to another. They've never had proper veterinary care, kind and consistent training, or sufficient company. They've lived outside, in a crate, or in the basement. They're scared, depressed and anxious. Some are angry. Some are sick. Some have given up.
But we are Rescue and we don't give up. We never give up on a dog. We know that a dog is a living being, with a spirit and a heart and feelings. Our dogs are not commodities, things, or garbage. They are part of sacred creation and they deserve as much love and care and respect as the next Westminster champion. So please, please don't come to rescue in the hopes of getting a "bargain," or indeed of "getting" anything. Come to Rescue to give, to love, to save a life -- and to mend your own spirit. For Rescue will reward you in ways you never thought possible. I can promise you this -- a rescue dog will make you a better person. Diane writes, "After a couple of bad experiences with adopters (NOT the dog) in rescue lately -- I wrote the above paragraphs. Forgive the irritated tone. If anyone would like to place this on their own rescue page for any breed, you have my permission so long as the content is not altered." dcrocodile@aol.com |