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Placing the Older
Dog
By: Gary Wynn Kelly
CCNDR
gets many calls each month from people wanting to place their northern
dogs. Many of these dogs are older, and have been in the family for years.
Some were recently acquired--sometimes from a relative, or a friend,
or from a shelter. The reasons people give for needing to find the dog
a new home are as diverse as the population of California itself. I developed
this page of the website to help answer such inquiries. We hope the ideas
here are taken seriously by those with such needs.
The following is but one example of such a request:
Dear Mr. Kelly,
I am interested in trying to place a siberian husky.
We have an older husky that we want to find a home for. My employer is
moving my family across the country and we will not be able to take
our friend with us. I am looking for information on how to place
him.
Any information you can provide would be very helpful.
We regret the circumstances and really do not want
to have to turn our pet over to the local pound or shelter. We hope
you can assist us.
CCNDR rarely accepts older dogs into foster care as it can be many weeks
before they get a new home, and we have limited space and never enough
resources, even for younger dogs in rescue. We developed this list
of ideas to help those many families who have decided to try to place
their older dog themselves.
Placing an older dog can be easy if the dog has many
assets. Being
younger, healthier, female, small, well trained, attractive, well mannered,
quiet, and oriented to people are all good assets for placing the older
dog. Placing an older dog is like looking for a job when one is older--what
is on the resume that will impress the person who may provide the next
opportunity?
The first and best approach is to check with one's
friends and relatives to see if there are any takers among them--sweeten
the pot with an offer to help pay the dog's upkeep or vet expenses. That
is the most ideal opportunity for most older dogs.
If that is not an option--and think very carefully
before discarding it--try groups to which you may belong, such as church,
clubs, social groups, or about anywhere else that you, or your family,
may have connections. Older dogs are often "charity cases",
depending on what the age and health status of the dog may be, and what
assets the dog has acquired while in your care.
Siberians and Malamutes live, on the average, 12-14
years. If the dog is 9, and in less than ideal health, then it may be
perceived as a charity case. If the dog is 6 or 7, then it may have enough
great years, and be in good enough physical condition to be highly adoptable
to the right person--which will then depend on other assets.
At CCNDR, we say that a dog must have at least one
asset for every year it is older, after the first year. People do not
expect much of a 1 year old dog, or less. As the dog gets older, they
expect much, much more. By the time a dog is 5 years of age, it has to
be accomplished in order to place it through rescue. It may be easier
to make a private placement if one has good connections.
We recommend that those wishing to place older dogs
read our article
entitled: "The Art of Rescue" on our website, under the General
Information section. It will acquaint the reader with the constraints
of rescue.
If the dog is already over 10, and has any health issues,
it may be kinder to have it euthanized. The dog may never adjust well
to any potential home, unless it has always been a very social and outgoing
dog, and is used to changing locations. Few breeds adjust well to new
homes after this age. Even American Eskimo dogs, which often live far
longer than the larger breeds, do not adjust well to new homes after
age 10.
The reader is probably getting the idea that this is
not a simple issue--it is like human issues--fuzzy and with many variables.
One should look at various web-based opportunities to post and promote
the dog. It is best to plan on taking about one month for every year
the dog is over 4 years of age. Consulting with rescue groups who place
dogs can help, as they know well how fast dogs are currently placing.
It is best to ask for a fee if you are placing the
dog to the general public. $50 might be in order to demonstrate that
the person is a serious adopter, and not a front for an organization
wanting a test animal. Yes, there are such. Sometimes, surprisingly innocent
people are fronting for such organizations, and collecting dogs to sell
for money to the organization that requires them as test animals.
The options for an older dog are about the same as
for an older adult were she/he living with you, and not able to live
independently. If you had to move across the country, and live where
you could not have this hypothetical older adult, stay with you, then
you would have to find other options--none of which would ever be quite
as good as you would like. That is the problem with which you are now
faced. You might wish to review your situation, and see if the dog really
can remain housed with you. The chances are all too great that if the
dog is not placed with a relative, or close friend, or a person willing
to keep you in touch with the welfare of your dog, that it will soon
end
up at a shelter, or abandoned. It happens all the time.
One additional option is to discuss the dog with your
vet, assuming you have a good relationship with a vet. It might be that
the vet does know someone committed to dogs, who might take yours. Again,
offering a subsidy will help. The vet assumedly knows the health and
quality of your dog, and can best assess the opportunities for it in
terms of health issues and longevity--healthspan.
You should sit down, and make out a list of all the
assets your dog has--these include:
housebroken, leash trained, obedience trained, possibly
crate trained, good with people/strangers, good with small children or
infants, good with other dogs, good with cats, playful, great for jogging/hiking/water
sports, exceptional breeding and quality, exceptional temperament and
personality, exceptional health and energy for the age, exceptional intelligence
and ability to learn, and size--too big is harder, and small is desirable.
Compare this to major liabilities, such as:
escape artist, biter, back yard dog only, aggressive
with other dogs, cat or small animal predator, bad tempered with children,
or strangers, or has major health issues, such as diabetes.
Be absolutely honest. Your dog's life depends on it.
Check it over with your partner, if you have one, or with a close friend,
who also
knows the dog. Then take it to your vet, and ask if your vet can
give your dog a "report card" on your dog's health. Review
the list with your vet, and see if the vet feels the dog is a good prospect
for
adoption. If the assets are too few, or the liabilities too great,
the dog has little chance. If the dog has extraordinary assets, and no
major liabilities, then it has an excellent chance.
Your honesty is essential in rating the dog. Your dog
wins or loses according to the honesty of your answers to this evaluation.
As difficult as it can be, a death with dignity in your vet's office
with you present, may be preferable to a lonely and frightened abandonment
in a shelter, and a final death at the hands of a stranger, or worse--on
the streets alone. This last is too often the fate of animals that are "free
to a good home", and placed with no understanding of the issues
discussed in this paper.
We welcome additional ideas and comments. Please
write to:
Info@CCNDR.ORG
Copyright
1999 by Gary Wynn Kelly for the Central Coast Northern Dog Rescue.
This document may be reproduced so long as it is not modified or
altered, and credit is given to the Central Coast Northern Dog Rescue.
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