Happy Tails Publishing Searching for Submissions

Happy Tails Books publishes compilations of stories from people who have adopted dogs. Their breed-specific “Lost Souls: Found!” series showcases the love and joy these adopted dogs bring to their new homes in an effort to raise awareness of, and funding for dog rescue organizations.

Happy Tails Books is currently working on books about Chihuahuas, German Shepherds, Pugs, Boxers and mixes thereof, and they’ve asked me to share their information in case you’d like to submit a story about your adopted dog(s). Guidelines and a submission form are located at http://happytailsbooks.com/submit.htm. You can send in a complete story about your dog (600-1200 words), a paragraph about something sweet or funny he/she did, a training/health challenge and how it was solved, a poem, or a recipe. They are also looking for high resolution, professional-quality photos for the front and back covers. Be sure to list the rescue you are associated with in the submission form (if applicable – dog don’t need to be from a rescue, they just can’t be purchased from a pet store or breeder), as rescues earn points from each story submitted or book purchased, and then the points turn into a donation at the end of the year.

Contact Info: Kyla Duffy, Happy Tails Books, Editor In Chief. 303-807-0412, kyla@happytailsbooks.com Boulder, CO

Locked up for weeks with kitten and Chihuahua, huge dog now ready for adoption

Source: MercuryNews.com, December 30, 2009

Only Leonardo knows what he’s been through. And the 108-pound mastiff isn’t talking.

He’s now up for adoption in Walnut Creek after having been locked in a bathroom for weeks with only a kitten and a Chihuahua for company.

In the other rooms of the vacant Central Valley house, there were two crates full of other Chihuahuas. None of them survived.

But Leonardo and his kitten and Chihuahua companions made it, likely drinking toilet water until being rescued by Kings County animal control officers. They had no food.

Their owners had moved to Las Vegas. Eventually, at the end of September, neighbors called animal control after seeing the driveway sit empty.

When Leonardo was found, he was so malnourished and underweight that he could not even be given his shots.

He had formed special bonds with the kitten and the Chihuahua, said Elena Bicker, executive director of Tony LaRussa’s Animal Rescue Foundation, where Leonardo is now.

When Leonardo was in pet therapy, they would bring in the kitten and he would immediately cheer up, Bicker said.

The kitten and Chihuahua were adopted in Kings County. But Leonardo’s time there had expired — he was to be put down until ARF brought him to Walnut Creek earlier this month.

His adoption sheet says he is mellow and “likes to snuggle.”

“He’s just such a big lug,” Bicker said, adding that she hopes whoever adopts him has a big couch. “He’s a couch potato.”

The Animal Rescue Foundation, 2890 Mitchell Drive in Walnut Creek, will be open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday and will be closed Friday for New Year’s Day. Call 925-256-1273.

Pet shelter offering foster program during holidays

Source: mywebtimes.com, Dec 4, 2009

Brenda Leake wants to find a heartwarming and loving home for her “kids.”

Leake, the shelter director of Just Animals in Seneca, is partnering with Petfinder.com, hoping to foster some of its dogs this Christmas season.

“We’ve been talking about how great it would be to get our pets into homes for Christmas,” Leake told The Times. “This is the first time we’ve fostered for the holidays. We probably have about 20 dogs right now.”

The current dog population ranges in age from five months to four years.

The program runs from Wednesday, Dec. 23, through Saturday, Jan. 2. There is a $25 fostering charge to cover licensing fees, and if the family decides to adopt, there is a $195 to $250 adoption fee, but the $25 fostering charge would be deducted from that fee.

Those interested must fill out application papers as if they were going to adopt so the shelter can verify the animal is going to a good home.

Leake said people choose to foster for various reasons.

“Some of them are not allowed to have pets on a long-term basis, some people can find out a lot more about a dog by fostering,” Leake said. “It’s a great opportunity to give back. A lot of people aren’t quite sure if they’re ready for a pet and this helps them make that decision.”

Leake said the fostering process normally works well.

“It works out wonderful for people,” she said. “We try to pair up animals that will fit into the home. We have a lot of great dogs right now.”

Interest in the program has been growing.

“I have been getting calls for a few weeks,” Leake said. “People are very interested in this and are hoping to get their family interested as well.”

Leake said the shelter does get stray animals, but the hardest part has been getting animals through house foreclosures, leading to a family that cannot support the dog or cat anymore.

“It’s heartbreaking,” she said. “So many of them are great animals and it just rips your heart out. It’s very hard to see a dog with a good loving home and lose it. It’s very hard on the families and they cry along with us when they have to give up a part of their family to us.”

Pet Project, which is moving from Grand Ridge to Marseilles, is not currently offering fostering services.

“We’ve done it in the past, but it’s difficult because folks who want to foster often have other animals, and they don’t always get along,” said Sue Tonielli, president of the Pet Project board.

The Times was unable to reach Illinois Valley Animal Rescue in Peru by press time to see if they offer similar programs.

In Streator, PAWS to the Rescue, a canine rescue group, offers a foster program year-round. The group was founded in 2008 in response to a growing need for animal control assistance in La Salle County. For more information on PAWS or to donate, go online to www.pawsttr.org.

“I imagine coming in Christmas morning to do chores at the shelter and having the entire ‘Dog Room’ empty, all our ‘kids’ with a human to love, a soft place to sleep and a cuddle just for a bit,” said Leake. “Now that would be my perfect Christmas dream.”

Interested in fostering a dog or cat during the holidays?

Contact Brenda Leake, shelter director at Just Animals in Seneca.
Address: 2996 26th Road (E. Union St.)
Phone: 815-357-1223
e-mail: adopt@justanimals.org

~ Featured Adoptable Pet ~ Molly

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Molly is a wonderful energetic high powered GWP puppy that is 6-7 months old. She is needing a new home that will channel her energy into running, hiking, training, dockdiving, or agility! She is smart, and needs a home that is not gone ling hours as a puppy needs constant care and mental stimulation. She attends puppy Daycare, loves people, doesn’t know a stranger. She is very dog social, NO CATS please….GWP’s and cats do not mix!…unless you have a cat problem and want an expert exterminator.

She is spayed, current on all vaccinations. She is a wonderful, wonderful puppy wanting a forever home of her own that will put her first! Email us if you think Molly would be a great character for your home. We try NOT to do long distance adoptions. You are responsible for meeting and picking up your doggie from us, and we can meet you too! We are rescue and do not ship our family members.

German Wirehaired Pointer Rescue is an organization made up of rescue foster homes. We provide total vet care including rabies, distemper/parvo, bordetella, hw check/preventative and frontline. We pull and help the German Wirehair pointers in need. We are not of unlimited resources.

If you are interesting in adoption Molly please contact GWP Rescue

Memphis Animal Shelter Raided After Three Dogs Die

Source: WREG.com, Oct 27, 2009

The City of Memphis Animal Shelter was the scene of a early morning raid by Shelby County deputies Tuesday morning.

Shelby County District Attorney Bill Gibbons and Shelby County Sheriff Mark Luttrell say deputies with the Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at the shelter located at 3456 Tchulahoma Road and temporarily secured the facility as part of an investigation into alleged animal abuse and cruelty.

District Attorney Gibbons requested the Sheriff’s Office investigation of the City of Memphis Animal Shelter earlier this month after receiving a tip from a citizen on the conditions at the shelter.

Sheriff Mark Luttrell told us, “We are finding that some of the allegations that we have heard are true. That will just take a more through investigation to determine just how bad the situation is but on its face, we can definitely see that there are some problems here.”

According to the search warrant, “detectives have learned that some animals have been deprived of food and water while at the Memphis Animal Shelter…” and while in the shelter’s care, “some dogs have been starved to the point of requiring euthanasia.”

According to the search warrant, some of the dogs “are involved in court cases involving dog fighting and have been marked ‘Hold for Court.’”

Additionally, the warrant says that shelter employees keep “…dogs that are to be quarantined for rabies with dogs that are not required to be quarantined in the same kennel.”

“The information we received about the conditions of the Memphis Animal Shelter clearly warranted a criminal investigation, and it is very possible that one or more individuals could face criminal charges based on the outcome of the investigation,” said District Attorney Gibbons.

Janet Hooks, Director of The Division Of Public Services and Neighborhoods, suspended 12 employees to allow investigators unfettered access to the shelter and the animals. No one has been charged.

While deputies are executing the search warrant, the facility will not be open to the public, and deputies will supervise limited employees inside the shelter. Animals brought to the facility during this time will be transferred to another shelter in Shelby County.

Trained investigators with ASPCA and emergency responders with the American Humane Association are at the shelter assisting the deputies.

Schaumburg couple killed in crash, left behind quartet of pooches, WA

Source: DailyHerald.com, September 16, 2009

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Though a Schaumburg couple killed on their motorcycle on Labor Day had no children, a search is on to find adopters for the four dependents they left behind.

Mike Kelm, 55, and his wife Sue, 54, had taken advantage of the beautiful summer weather to go for a ride a couple days before Sue’s scheduled cancer surgery. They were struck by a car exiting a gas station just outside Palatine.

While family and friends grieve the loss of the much-loved couple, they’re also searching for a new home for the dogs the Kelms adored.

“They had no children of their own,” the Kelms’ niece Kim Mayer of Joliet said. “These were their children. And as much as people could spoil animals, they did.”

The family wants to honor the Kelms’ wishes that the four dogs stay together, while recognizing that might not be possible.

“They are their own pack,” Mayer said. “They really take good care of each other.”

The dogs are Anacortes, 6, a female lab mix; Cedonia, 3, a female husky mix; Tacoma, 7, a male lab mix; and Everett, 4, a male Australian shepherd-lab mix.

All named for towns in Washington state because of their owners’ love of the Northwest, the dogs have clearly been mystified by the Kelms’ absence, Mayer said.

“You could just tell they knew something was off,” she said. “After a day, they didn’t bark when other people came to the door.”

Just after the crash, Mayer made twice-daily trips to Schaumburg to look after the dogs.

But as she and her husband live in a townhouse and are expecting a baby in a month, they can’t take on the responsibility long-term, she said.

The dogs are now being housed at the Chicago Canine Club in Burr Ridge while the search goes on for a new permanent home.

Both Mike and Sue were ardent dog lovers who kept the maximum number allowed in Schaumburg.

But with the uncertainty that hovered over them after Sue’s cancer diagnosis last year, they seemed to have quietly concluded these four would be their last, Mayer said.

Sue had tumors in her lungs, which were treated with medication and radiation. But when the cancer spread to her brain and began to affect her vision, she had to schedule the surgery she’d hoped to avoid.

That brain surgery was planned for two days after the crash. Even so, her prognosis was uncertain.

Mike had been a service technician at Lincoln Meadows Apartments in Schaumburg for 10 years. His unexpected death leaves behind devoted colleagues who are also helping in the search to place his dogs.

All in all, the past 10 days have been a very trying time for all who knew and loved the couple.

“My grandparents are still alive,” Mayer said. “They’re trying to cope, but parents should never have to bury their children. But we also have a baby on the way, so there’s a light at the end of the tunnel. We’re all people of faith, and I think that helps.”

Anyone interested in adopting the Kelms’ dogs should arrange an appointment by contacting Kathy Deets at the Chicago Canine Club at (708) 542-8969 or Kathy@chicagocanineclub.com, or Mayer at (815) 272-4583 or mayerdnk72@hotmail.com.

Dog used as bait for pit bulls up for adoption, AZ

Source: AZFamily.com, July 24, 2009

The public’s help is needed to save the victim of a dog fighting ring.

The people at Maricopa County Animal Care and Control are trying to find a home for a sweet dog with a horrible past.

From their east Valley shelter with the story of the vicious and cruel world of pit bull fighting, one of the ways the owners of these animals train their canine is with bait dogs.

A bait dog is typically smaller than his or her opponent and their teeth are filed down so they cannot attack back or hurt the prize fighter.

Basically, they live their entire life taking beating after beating so the other dogs can build up confidence.

To the experts at Maricopa County Animal Care and Control, it is pretty clear Jake lived the life of one of those bait dogs.

Like other bait dogs, Jake’s teeth have been filed down and the numerous bouts have left his body covered with scars.  Now he only has half a nose and his ears have been ripped to shreds so often that they have healed with a permanent gap down the middle.

Somehow, despite the life of torture from both animals and people, Jake is incredibly friendly. He has become a staff favorite here and it is rather obvious thanks to all the balloons on his cage.

He does not need any vet work because all of his injuries at this point are simply cosmetic and full of character.

The only noticeable difference between Jake and other dogs is that 3TV could not get Jake to play catch or even bark, probably because until recently, body has ever played with the dog.

If you want to be the one to teach Jake how to play catch, you can log onto Maricopa County Animal Care & Control.

17 dogs from warehouse get new homes, MI

Source: Freep.com, July 10, 2009

Officials at Oakland County’s animal shelter have new homes for 17 of 33 small dogs seized in June from a woman who penned them in a Royal Oak warehouse after Birmingham authorities charged her with keeping too many dogs.

Last week, Royal Oak police said the city would not file neglect charges against Traci Nelson, who operated Itsy Bitsy Dog Rescue from a Web site and her former home in Birmingham.

Nelson, 35, paid a $300 fine June 8 for keeping more dogs than Birmingham’s limit of three.

Nelson said she wanted only to rescue dogs.

Friends who helped with Itsy Bitsy Dog Rescue said she paid for pet food and care for animals she found suffering at puppy mills in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana.

She charged $200-$400 to adopt a dog. But animal-control authorities said Nelson profited by selling dogs.

The dogs — Chihuahuas, Pomeranians, miniature pinschers and Jack Russell terriers — are available for adoption.

The cost is $136.50 each, said Sgt. Joanie Toole, a supervisor at the Oakland Pet Adoption Center in Auburn Hills.

To adopt a dog, go to the center at 1700 Brown Road. Hours are 10 a.m.-6:15 p.m. Mondays and Fridays; 10 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturdays. Call 248-391-4100.

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