Posts Tagged ‘shelter’

We Will Soon Be Homeless…

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

 

The temporary building we use to house our larger dogs is being torn down, so donations (and/or a building/shelter/land) are urgently needed in order for Bobbi & the Strays to find a permanent home. This space currently houses many amazing larger dogs all waiting to be adopted.

 

Bobbi & the Strays operates out of two facilities, a TEMPORARY donated retail space at the Atlas Mall in Queens that houses our cats and smaller dogs, and the building that will be torn down which currently houses our larger dogs.

 

Do you know someone that would be willing to donate a building or land to us? Do you know of a reasonably priced building or land for sale or lease? We don’t need much – essentially plumbing & heating. Outdoor space is essential. We will consider all communities in Queens (and even close surrounding areas) that are easily accessible to the public, by subway/bus, car, and/or foot.

 

The destruction of the space we use for our larger dogs will cripple our rescue operation if our large dogs have nowhere to go. We are relying on your generous support, help, and donations to get Bobbi & the Strays a “forever” home where we can continue to do the important work that saves the lives of so many animals each year.

 

We were originally told that we have until this coming January - now it looks like it will be much, MUCH, sooner…  Please Help!

 

To donate directly to Bobbi and the Strays’ Building Fund please click here - “Donate to the Building Fund”.

 

To help find a new home for Bobbi and the Strays, please email building@bobbicares.org or call (718) 326-6070 or visit our website.

Hiking With the Hounds

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

We have 23 large dogs at our Vetport shelter right now not including Sadies’s five puppies. Our Vetport shelter is actually a small room in a boarding facility. It isnt really equipped to handle so many dogs.  However with more people surrendering their animals recently and Animal Care and Control being grossly overcrowded and pleading with rescues to help, we are trying to do our part to help as many as we can. Sometimes that means stretching yourself a little bit thin.

The staff works tirelessly day and night to keep the shelter clean and the animals exercised and well fed. All of our animals have beds and toys and go out for walks at least four times a day.  But no matter how hard to you try to make a dog comfortable and happy in a shelter, its still a shelter. To reduce stress and help keep the dogs socialized and balanced we try to take them off site as much as possible. One of our favorite places to take the dogs is hiking in Alley Pond Park early in the mornings.

We get to the shelter at 7am. Usually its me and a couple of dedicated volunteers who often give up sleeping in on the weekends to help out a shelter dog and bring him or her to the park.  All of the dogs go crazy with excitment when we walk in the room. And when we take our dogs and walk them out the front door they know they are going somewhere special. The only hard part is deciding which dog to take.  We never have enough volunteers to take all the dogs (though I dream of that happening one day!) I usually end up taking the dog that is the most frustrated at the shelter or the most depressed. There is nothing like a morning hike through the woods to lift your spirits!

We caravan to the Alley Pond Park and meet up with Bill Bokowski, the dog trainer from Pawsative and Kristie, a Bobbi and the Strays volunteer and trainer-in-training.  Bill always has a pack of dogs and people with him who help socialize our shelter dogs.  Before 9am is off leash hours. Most of the dogs who go to the park everyday are off leash and travel through the trails as a pack. Bill evaluates each shelter dog individually  to see if they are ready to go off leash. They must be pack oriented and come back to you when called. We usually put a dog on a long leash before they go off leash and test how they will be.

This particular time the dogs we brought were Lennox, Bella and Penny. All dogs that would stay on leash though Lennox is working his way towards being off leash. It was his second or third time to the park. Lennox is a 10 month old puppy who is very frustrated at the shelter. Puppies are supposed to run and play and have fun. Its understandable why Lennox is unhappy spending time in a cage. Bella is a one year old Weimeraner/Pit mix who has tons of energy. I took Bella and Lennox in my car with one other volunteer. Penny is a two year old Staffie mix who is very timid. We rescued her from ACC awhile back. They put out a special plea for Penny because her former owner was arrested and put in jail for animal cruelty. Though there are no physical scars on Penny, she is afraid of new people and new things.  She is never aggressive, just scared. This Saturday her Buddies, Alex and Jenna brought her to the park.

As the early morning sun filters through the late summer leaves, the dogs parade, run, hop and play through the trails along with their human friends. Its such a great feeling to see the dogs relaxed, playing with other dogs, running through the woods, sniffing all the smells and exploring new things!  This is what the dogs really need!  And to be honest, though I loathe waking up early, the hike through the park is thereputic for me too! There is a freshness to the morning air, a tranquilty in the woods… it gives me good energy for the rest of the day.

Penny didn’t seem afraid at all at the park. Perhaps being with the other relaxed and well socialized doggies put her at ease. Also going out with her Buddies weekly has really helped Penny come out of her shell. (to read more about our Buddy Program please see go to our volunteer page our our website) Lennox and Bella wanted to just play. They were so ecstatic to be away from the shelter. There was no frustration or stress.  All three of the dogs met many new people  and other dogs. We had a chance to spread the word about shelter dogs and how great dogs like these end up in shelters for no fault of their own. People were amazed that such beautiful animals could have been discarded and end up in the shelter system.

After they hike we end up in a big field where there are even more dogs running around and playing. Our shelter dogs are relaxed and happy!  It was so rewarding to see Lennox and Bella stretched out on the cool grass.

On the ride back to the shelter, Lennox and Bella took a nap curled up together in the back seat. Awwwwwww!  Bringing  them back to the shelter is always hard. But they return in much more balanced state of mind. They are a good tired.  The volunteers also feel good. You can see the difference it makes right away.

Bella and Lennox at Alley Pond Park

Bella and Lennox at Alley Pond Park

Bella and Lennox stretch out on the grass after the hike

Bella and Lennox stretch out on the grass after the hike

 Last week thanks to three great volunteers (Brian, Deanna and Audrey) we were able to take four shelter dogs to the park.  Lennox and Bella went again and this time brought along a 7 month old puppy, Bamboo and Mia, a white bulldog/boxer mix. All four dogs were excellent with canines and people alike. You can see from their faces that they are just happy to be out at the park!

Laura and Lennox, Deanna with Bamboo and Mia, Audrey and Bella

Laura and Lennox, Deanna with Bamboo and Mia, Audrey and Bella

If you are interested in volunteering for a morning hike with the dogs please email Laura@bobbicares.org for more info. Hikes are planned a couple of times a week (weekdays and weekends.) You can sign up for as many or as little as you like, but even if you can only do it one time, it makes a huge difference for our dogs =)

Maggie’s Story

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

About four or five years ago we had a beautiful purebred American Bulldog at our shelter. Her name was Maggie. She was with us many months while we searched for her perfect forever home. One day a couple came to the shelter that had another American Bulldog. They met Maggie and fell in love. The couple was experienced with the breed, compassionate and loving. It seemed like a perfect match.

Bobbi and a volunteer drove Maggie down to her new home n South Jersey. She took a video of Maggie, the other bulldog and the couple walking into the woods for a hike together. It seemed like a happy ending and we were all teary eyed with joy.

Fast forward to 2009. We received an email that the couple would have to return Maggie to the shelter. They had a new baby and ever since Maggie and the other bulldog have been getting into bad fights. They returned Maggie because they had the other dog first.  We never want people to give up their pets. They are apart of the family. However we’d rather the animal come back to us than be put in another shelter or dumped somewhere. That is why Bobbi and the Strays always takes back our animals if the home doesn’t work out. They always have a place with us.

Maggie was now a senior dog with sad eyes. She didn’t fare well at the shelter. A cage is no place for any dog, but especially a senior.  She seemed to grow more and more depressed and some days she would have trouble getting up to go out. It was heartbreaking to watch Maggie deteriorate. She was a sweet, loving dog. She didn’t bother any of the other dogs at the shelter and never gave the volunteers or staff a problem. She walked nicely on a leash. She deserved a nice, quiet home to live out her life.  The stress of the shelter was too much for her.

Below is a photo of Maggie at the shelter

Maggie in the cage at the shelter

Below is a photo of Bobbi and Maggie hanging out in the hallway (we have no indoor space to just hang out with the animals) of the shelter on a cold winters night.

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Our hearts grew heavier each day. We posted for a foster home for Maggie. No one seemed to want an older dog. Then an angel came to the rescue. A wonderful volunteer named Diedre said she would love to foster Maggie. We were overjoyed. Diedre was wonderful with all the animals. She was gentle and compassionate.  Any animal would be lucky to have a home with her!

Bobbi drove Maggie out to Diedre’s house in the Rockaways. It was quiet and peaceful by the sea. A perfect place for Maggie to live and relax! Below is a photo of Maggie in the car.

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And Maggie on her first walk on the beach

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When an animal goes to a foster or forever home, we always wait a couple of days to make sure everything goes okay. Sometimes unforeseen problems arise that the home can’t handle and the animal has to come back. But the first update couldn’t have been better. Maggie was adjusted already and she was even feeling better physically. She had no problems getting up in the morning and was even able to walk up and down the steps without a problem!

Then we received these beautiful photos of Maggie!

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Its been months since Maggie went to her foster home and all continues to go well. Diedre just sent us some more updated photos of the beautiful Maggie! We are very grateful to Diedre for fostering Maggie. She saved her from depression and gave her new hope, a new life. Not only did Diedre save Maggie, she saved another dog. By taking Maggie, she opened up a space at the shelter for us to save another dog who needed help.

If you are interested in fostering a dog or cat, please email Adopt@bobbicares.org  We have many, many more dogs and many kitties that are longing for that special someone to take them out of the shelter and give them a temporary home where they can relax and love and be loved.

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In Memory of Sammy

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Even though its been over five years, I remember very clearly the day Sammy came into our shelter. A little boy walked in holding this 20 lb white fluffball in his arms. He was followed by his brother and his mom.

“They just left him out in the yard all day,” the mother said with tears in his eyes. “This dog is the sweetest thing. Only a year old and he is out in the elements 24 hours a day with no companionship, no shelter.” She was talking about Sammy’s previous owners who no longer wanted Sammy because he wasn’t a “tea-cup” size.

Bobbi was at the shelter at the time and agreed to take Sammy in to find him a better home, a home that he deserved.  I remember the little boy put Sammy down in the runs and Sammy ran around in happiness, tail wagging.  I remember thinking, this dog shouldn’t be hard to find a home for. He was adorable, very friendly and young.

Sadly a couple days later, Sammy fell sick and had to be taken to the vet.  He was kept there for five days on IV fluids. After the five days, he was well enough to leave the vet, but shouldn’t go back to the shelter where recovery is difficult for sick animals. Plus there is a risk of spreading the disease.

Bobbi called me and asked me if I would be able to foster Sammy. I didn’t have any other animals at the time. I had recently lost my beloved pit mix Sox a couple of months before.

When I brought Sammy home, he was coughing a lot. He didn’t have much energy and just wanted to rest. Bobbi gave me a little blue sweater for him to wear to keep him warm when I had to take him out.  He had a bit of an appetite and ate the chicken that we made for him. I made a bed for him in each room so he would have some place to rest and would never have to be alone. When I worked on the computer, he rested under the desk surrounded by pillows and blankets.

Sammy had to be nebulized three times a day to help break up the phlegm so he could cough it up and get it out of his system.  I had to mix the medicine with sterile water and place is in a humidifier like machine that would turn it into a mist for Sammy to breathe in. He gave me no problem with it. He was so good.

At night Sammy would sleep in his own bed next to mine.  My heart would ache as I listened to him cough all night. He would get up and turn circles, trying to get comfortable. I usually spent the night on the floor next to him, petting him, trying to help him relax so he could get some rest. Nights seemed to be particularly difficult for him.

There were times when Sammy seemed to be doing better and he would walk around a bit. But after a couple of days he took a turn for the worse. He stopped eating all together and wouldn’t take his pills even in the chicken. We brought him to Dr Baum in Lynbrook where he had to be hospitalized.

This is when we learned that Sammy had distemper. There was a 50% chance that he would make it. There was no cure for distemper. It’s a disease that affects the nervous system. We could treat the symptoms and pray. Even with this devastating news, I still had hope. I believed that Sammy would make it.

Every morning I would call Dr Baum and he woud get on the phone with me and tell me about Sammy’s progress, whether Sammy got up today, whether he was eating, if the temperature went up or down. Then around noon I would drive to the hospital for visiting hour. I would always bring Sammy some chicken to eat. When they carried Sammy out to see me, Sammy’s tail would wag in happiness. “Its good for you to come and visit everyday,” Dr Baum said. “It helps keep his spirits up.” Dr Baum said that Sammy was a fighter and that Sammy wanted to live. This was a good sign. I held him in my arms everyday for an hour, feeding him chicken and petting him till it was time for me to go. When they took Sammy back I kissed him and told him I would see him tomorrow. It broke my heart to leave him everyday but I knew it was for the best.

After about a week in the hospital, the Dr said Sammy could come home.  His fever was down and he was eating. I was delighted.  Dr Baum said to call him everyday to tell him how Sammy was doing.

I remember carrying Sammy from the hospital to the car and I drove with him curled up in the front seat wrapped in a fuzzy leopard print blanket.  I was so sure that Sammy would get better soon.

I don’t remember how many days Sammy was home before he started to twitch. It wasn’t long though, maybe only 24 hours. His head started to twitch and he made a clicking sound. I called Dr Baum and he was silent for a moment. “This is not good news. It means it has started to affect the brain.” It was then that Sammy stopped eating again and didn’t want to do much but lie on my lap and try to sleep.

We took him to a specialist in the city. I remember holding Sammy on my lap in the waiting room and tears were streaming down my face.  It was then the reality began to settle in. Sammy may not make it.

We had to leave him there. They were going to keep him in quarantine since he was contagious to other animals. I remember going home with such an empty feeling.

The next evening, they called to tell me Sammy had passed. I was at work at the time. When I came home, I just went to his bed- one of the many we had made from him around the house and cried.  I was sad but I was also angry.  It wasn’t fair. Sammy was only a year and a half.  He had been in a loving home for only a short time and in that short time he was too sick to enjoy it.

We had a service for Sammy the next day at Bide-a-Wee in Wantaugh. We buried him next to my pit bull Sox.  Many volunteers came to the service for Sammy. Its amazing how many lives he touched. How many people came to love him in the short time he was with us.

I have a couple of photographs of Sammy. My favorite is this one of him lying on our couch in his blue sweater. This was the first day we fostered him. We had just come in from outside.  He just was so easy going, always happy to be with us no matter how bad he felt. He was loving, appreciative, happy even in his sickest days.

I still think about Sammy often and am getting teary eyed as I write this. I know he is at the rainbow bridge, perhaps with Sox waiting. He is healthy and happy as he was always happy, running and playing, enjoying all the things he was deprived of on Earth. 

I love you, Sammy. Till we meet again…

Sammy

The Life You Can Save

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

The New York City shelters are full of pit bulls and pit mixes. Often it seems no matter how many we rescue or adopt out, they are just drops in the ocean. Rescues never seem to make  a dent.

Recently I heard of dogs being pulled off the euth list (which is always full of pit bulls and pit mixes) by rescues and then the rescue backing out because the dogs look “too pitty.” This breaks my heart. The animal’s last hope walked away because of how he looks, something the animal cannot help.

That is why for us, its not about the breed. We are an all breed rescue. We believe they are all entitled to a happy, healthy life in a loving, responsible home. Senior animals, anmals that need surgeries, newborn kittens that need to be bottle fed, animals that need rehabilitation, small dogs, big dogs- if they need help, we will do our best to help them. For us, its about nothing more than the life we can save.

Recently one of our volunteers received a phonecall about a dog abandoned in an apartment building in Queens. The dog was taken to Animal Control by the police. I received the dog’s Animal Control ID number and looked him up on the website. I found a blurry photo of a white and brown pit bull huddled in the corner, staring at the camera like a deer in headlights.

There was nothing about the photo that would attract an adopter. This is why when I went to pick the dog up from Animal Control the next days I was so surprised. Here was this absolutley gorgeous animal with the softest white fur, beautiful reddish-tan markings including an adorable patch over one eye. He was around 55 lbs with a big block head and stunning hazel eyes.

I was handed his leash and took him outside for a walk. He seemed a little nervous, anxious, uncertain of his circumstances. He sniffed here and there and then did his business. When we put him in the car, he climbed gracefully into the backseat and curled up in the corner, resting his head on the cushion with a sigh.

How easy, I thought, it would have been for this dog to slip through the cracks of the city’s animal sheltering system. He was one of many, many, many beautiful pit bulls in need. If someone hadn’t called us to let us know about him, this dog’s chances of making it out of Animal Control alive would have been very slim.

 When we arrived at the Bobbi and the Strays shelter, we took the dog, now named Scotch, out for a long walk around the area. Scotch took his time sniffing and exploring, putting each paw gingerly down on the soft freshly cut grass.  He was a little nervous still, as most new dogs are when we bring them to our shelter. They don’t know where they are, why they are there and I think most of them wonder, especially the ones coming out of Animal Control, if they are truly safe now.

We fixed his cage up with a soft comforter, some food and fresh water.  Scotch was very skinny so we would have to feed him extra till he reached a healthy weight. He also had missing fur on his neck and chest as if someone had a harness on him that was too tight. I scheduled him for a vet appointment to make sure.

I sat petting Scotch for a long time till it was time to leave the shelter for the night. When I closed the cage door, he cried, staring up at me with big hazel eyes. I couldn’t resist and went to pet him again. Not only did his tail wag back and forth in delight, but his whole body did a happy dance. “What a nice dog,” I thought. Thinking of how he would have been overlooked if we didn’t receive the phone call made me shake my head. There has to be a better way to educate the public about all the great dogs that are dying in our city shelters, all the great dogs like Scotch that just need someone to give them a chance.

I felt extremely happy that were able to help Scotch. Though he has a way to go still. His rescue journey isn’t over yet.  There will be many photos and videos taken, vet visits, adoption visits from prospective families and then once a match is made, there will be a home check and reference check, lots of follow ups to make sure everything is going smoothly. A lot of work has to be done still before Scotch is truly home.  I looked over my shoulder at him one more time before I left. His tail was still wagging.

It will be worth it. There is no doubt.

It may not have seemed like we have done a lot. Saving this one big headed pit bull among hundreds of others.  But we saved a life. And you can’t look into Scotch’s eyes and say that it does not matter. His whole world has changed. The world of the family that is lucky enough to adopt him will change too. And once he is adopted, it will open up the space to save one more from euthanasia at our city shelters.

I close my eyes and think about all the animals we have adopted out and how we get  updates of the animals lying in beds, playing in the yard or at the park from the wonderful people who adopted them. I imagine getting an update about Scotch, a photo of him lying in the grass, chewing on his favorite bone, all the worries and weight that he carried in these times of uncertainty are long gone.

Each life matters. It is as simple as that.

Adopt a stray, save a life.

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To adopt or foster Scotch please email Adopt@bobbicares.org