Pets

Rosita Up For Adoption In Boulder: 'Total Sweetheart'

Rosita is up for adoption through the nonprofit RezDawg Rescue.

BOULDER, CO — A dog named Rosita is up for adoption in Boulder through the animal welfare organization RezDawg Rescue. The nonprofit rescues stray, feral and abandoned dogs who are struggling to survive on Native Reservations in the Four Corners Region. The rescued animals are then vaccinated, spayed/neutered, treated for any medical issues and placed into a foster home.

In Rosita's bio, RezDawg volunteer Jackie Vlcek wrote that she's "a total sweetheart and a goofball."

"I was rescued from New Mexico after giving birth to puppies outside in the cold. Although I have had a litter, I am a young dog and very much a puppy at heart myself," Vlcek wrote. "I am a small-med size dog at 25 lbs - big enough to handle any adventure, but small enough to pick up and carry."

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Rosita is currently being fostered in Boulder. For more information about how to adopt her, visit RezDawg's partner website. You can also support dogs like Rosita through a donation, or by becoming a foster home.

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Steven Sable, RezDawg Rescue's communications director, said many dogs and cats are in danger on reservations, and there are simply not enough resources to help those animals.

"Some of these animals have just horrific backstories," Sable said. "There was a dog named Jack not too long ago that came in that had a horribly broken hind leg, and when we x-rayed it we found out he also had shotgun pellets near his spine."

As RezDawgs has become better known on reservations, many are taking newborn puppies — that in some cases would've been left for dead — directly to volunteers at the organization's local clinics.

"We focus primarily on relieving the animals' suffering by taking them off the [reservations] and finding them loving homes, but we're also involved in ending the problem completely, so we do regular spay and neuter clinics," Sable said.

He said the clinics at the reservations are low cost, or in many cases, no cost.

Thanks to donors, foster homes and volunteers, RezDawgs rescued more than 1,600 animals last year.

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