Pets
Clear The Shelters Day: Help Dogs Find New Homes Near Norwood
Animal shelters across the country, including one in Norwood, are participating in Clear the Shelters Day Saturday, Aug. 17.
NORWOOD, MA — Hundreds of animal shelters across the country are participating in Clear the Shelters pet adoption events on Saturday, Aug. 17, to help find loving homes for animals that have been abandoned or surrendered to shelters. In Norwood, the Schultz's Guest House is participating.
Dog lovers can pick up their new best friend at the shelter or even meet some of them at the Craft Brew 5k run. The run starts at Percival Brewing Company, and all the proceeds go to the shelter.
Among the dogs the Schultz's Guest House hopes to find a home for are Sydney, Chase, Coral, Wave, Breaker, Reef and Zinnia.
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"They have been here the longest and really need to find forever homes," Deni Goldman, a volunteer at the shelter said. All are amazing dogs. They just get overlooked when the little baby puppies come in."
Sydney is a five-month old mixed breed and is the only one remaining after a someone dropped off five newborn pups.
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"He just loves to play," Goldman said. "Sometimes he is so wrapped up with play that he doesn’t even realize that we are trying to get his attention! But as they say, 'a tired dog is a good dog', so we let him play until their little heart’s content! Then we snuggle with him! He loves to snuggle!"
Zinnia is a 15-pound, one-year-old terrier, that was part of a group of fifteen dogs that was left alone for three months after her owner died. Besides the daughter coming by to feed the dogs, they didn't have much other human interaction. Goldman said Zinnia has been fearful of humans since, especially men, so the shelter is only accepting women for meet and greets.
"We are hopeful that with some more love and affection, new coats of fur/hair and knew trust in the world, that these dogs will soon forget any fear or sadness and will welcome a happy, loving family into their lives," Goldman said.
Chase is a three-month old, 12-pound heeler/border collie mix. Goldman said Chase is a "playful little pup" who loved to wrestle and run with his brothers and sisters before they were adopted. Coral, Wave, Reef and Breaker are 25-pound, five-month-old mixed breeds that were born together and nicknamed the "beach bums."
Clear the Shelters is sponsored by NBC- and Telemundo-owned stations, which are teaming up with shelters nationwide in the pet adoption drive. Since 2015, more than 250,000 pets have found forever homes as a result of the effort.
It’s not just dogs that are filling up shelters. The ASPCA — or American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals — estimates that in addition to 3.3 million dogs in shelters at any given time, there are 3.2 million cats.
About 1.5 million of them — 670,000 dogs and 860,000 cats — are euthanized before they can be adopted, though the ASPCA says those numbers are declining, in large part because a greater percentage of them are adopted. About 1.6 million dogs and 1.6 million cats are adopted every year.
The ASPCA also says that about 620,000 dogs and 90,000 cats that enter shelters every year are strays that are eventually returned to their owners.
Adopting a pet has multiple benefits. Some of them include:
1. You’ll save an animal’s life. The Humane Society of the United States says the number of animals that are put down every year could be reduced even more if more people adopted pets.
2. Most pets in shelters are already house-trained and used to living with families. The Humane Society says most pets end up in shelters “because of a human problem like a move or a divroce, not because they did anything wrong.”
3. You’ll save money. Often, the costs of spay/neuter surgeries and first vaccinations, and in some cases, microchipping, are included in the adoption fee. That alone will save upfront costs, but breeders can charge much more than the cost of adoption.
4. You’ll help fight puppy mills. If you buy a dog at a pet store, flea market, or from an online seller, chances are you’re unwittingly supporting puppy mills, factory-style breeding facilities where dogs often live in squalid conditions, don’t get adequate medical care, and can have health and behavior problems as a result.
5. You’ll help break the cycle of companion-animal overpopulation. There aren’t enough homes for all the pets that are born every year, and adopting from a shelter helps weaken the pet overpopulation cycle.
6. Adoption helps more than just one animal. When you provide a shelter animal a home, you’ll be making room for other unwanted pets. Also, the adoption fee helps shelters provide better care for the animals they take in.
7. You can get an adult pet. Puppies and kittens are bouncing balls of energy given to biting, clawing and chewing. Many adult dogs in shelters already know basic commands like “sit” and “stay,” and cats are litter-trained. The personality of the adult pet also shines through, and you’ll know what kind of pet you’re getting.
8. Shelters offer a lifetime of resources. When you adopt, shelter employees who work with pets every day will provide resources on many different issues.
9. You’re supporting a valuable community charity. Shelters are nonprofit groups that help improve community life and reduce pet overpopulation with a requirement that all animals be spayed or neutered. That reduces the chances that more unwanted animals will be born.
10. You’ll feel great and you’ll encourage others to adopt. Pets give unconditional love, and research shows them to be psychologically, emotionally and physically beneficial to their companions. Caring for an animal provides a sense of purpose and can lessen feelings of loneliness. When someone asks you where you got your pet, tell them “at the shelter.” That may encourage others to do the same.
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