About admin

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far admin has created 422 blog entries.

DONORS & PARTNERS SPOTLIGHT: ANGEL’S HEART DOG RESCUE

Janet with Luther and Dominoe at Angel’s Heart Dog Rescue


One of the wonderful partnerships that remain strong with Downtown Dog Rescue is the collaborative work we do with Janet Cook’s Angel’s Heart Dog Rescue based in Yorba Linda. Janet helps us network the small to medium sized dogs that come through DDR’s doors. She is a welcome addition to many of our larger adoption events and she also holds all wielding power of updating DDR’s PETFINDER Page! YAY Janet!

Angel Heart’s Dog Rescue has finally launched their website and what a wonderful looking one it is…it has all the bells and whistles that rescue websites should have including, available dogs for adoption, videos, dog of the week, dog ownership 101 page and the heart of rescue happy endings, a HAPPY TAILS page! Take a visit and check out this wonderful rescue to see what good rescue work looks like:


Addison gets hydro therapy. Angel’s Heart Dog Rescue is dedicated to
the proper care and rehabilitation of their pets.


LORI’S CORNER: “Get Your Pet Bull Spayed” Compton Spay/Neuter Clinic


“Lori, I want to get my Pet Bull fixed,” yells out Shortie, riding his bike across the parking lot towards me at 6:30 in the morning at East Rancho Dominguez Park in Compton. One of the cast of characters who call the park home, Shortie is a long time friend of DDR. When I write Pet Bull, no, that’s not a typo, he really did have a Pet Bull named Sherry, a 5 month old brindle sweetheart who we did spay + vaccinate + microchip but did not go back “home” with Shortie on his bike, since home is wherever he happens to land that night.

Chances are pretty good that he will never pick up Sherry because he will find another stray puppy who got too big for someone living in an apartment or maybe got too “hyper” and the former owner threw her away. People like Shortie are no different in many ways than people like us, who rescue dogs. For Sherry, Shortie was an important part of her chance for a stable home where she would never be sentenced to life in a back yard on a chain, being bred until she wasn’t worth anything. This way of life for many pit bulls in Compton is common but not for a Pet Bull like Sherry. I had to learn the difference between a Pet and a Pit and I guess you could say, I’m still learning. It’s sort of like yard dogs and house dogs, another theory about dogs that is something that leads to high numbers of dogs being euthanized at the shelters every day.


I originally met Shortie through David and Swanee, two men who drink too much for their own good and live in the park. All of the men are dog lovers and have helped me rescue countless dogs that have tried to live the street life and failed. Our feelings are all the same for dogs, we can agree that we don’t want to see a dogs fought, tortured, or man handled and disrespected, as these men call what we in the humane community might call animal cruelty. They, feel the same way that we do when it comes to dogs, we want to save them from the unspeakable harm that often awaits them in places like Compton as a street dog, dodging cars on Rosecrans Blvd, staying clear of the men who fight dogs on the weekends socially, or the gang members that spray paint and torture the street dogs just for fun. Taking a street dog to the shelter is sometimes the most humane option, compared to what the dog may face on the street.

After Sherry’s surgery, a young man […]

ACTIVATE: Our response to FOX 11 NEW PET POLICY- from KARMA RESCUE

Dear fellow rescuers, Pit Lovers, and Dog Lovers in general,

As many of you might have heard, Fox 11 News in Los Angeles has instituted a new policy banning specific breeds (Pit Bulls, Rottweilers and Dobermans) from its Adopt-A-Dog segments. This is particularly upsetting to us since we have a long history with Fox and have placed a great many dogs, especially Pit Bulls, due to our appearance on its shows. In fact, Tony McEwing, one of the morning anchors, adopted one of our Pit Puppies when the dog appeared on his show. In addition, Dorothy Lucey has a rescued Pit-Mix, and Jillian Reynolds is a huge animal activist. Furthermore, Nigel Lythgoe, judge and producer of the Fox show, So You Think You Can Dance, recently adopted a Pit Bull (and Dalmatian) from us and bragged about his new family on Fox News.

Frankly, due to a lack of rules or supervision at their studio, it is surprising that an incident hasn’t happened sooner. Consequently, we sent Fox a list of safe-guards that they could implement to make the rescue segments much safer. We also sent the station statistics, supporting our contention that Pit Bulls are actually a very safe breed. However, we received an email back saying that they would not reverse the policy.

Since the breeds of dogs on their list are the ones that need the most help, it seems incomprehensible that they would simply ban those three breeds without discussing their decision with the rescue community, experts, etc. As a result, we will no longer be participating in those segments.

Although we would never ask other rescues not to appear on Fox News, since those appearances provide great exposure for dogs-in-need, we are asking that you express your shock and outrage to Fox for implementing such a narrow-minded ban. Please write letters, Tweet, Email, Call, – whatever you can do, so that Fox and other organizations don’t get away with this sort of bias and prejudice. After all, it is a fact that BSL does NOT work.

Below we have listed the names and contact information for the Fox brass, as well as that of the news anchors. It goes without saying that we should not be rude or threatening in our messages. These aren’t bad people, just sadly misinformed.

Thank you for your support.

Karma Rescue

Erica.Rios@FOXTV.COM
Lisa.Kridos@FOXTV.COM
Tom.Searson@FOXTV.COM
Josh.Kaplan@FOXTV.COM
Jose.Rios@FOXTV.COM
Carol.Fracassa@FOXTV.COM
dorothy.lucey@foxtv.com
mark.thompson@foxtv.com
jillian.reynolds@foxtv.com

Create Karma…Its a Dogs Life
KARMA RESCUE’S WEBSITE

ACTIVATE: 61st DOGS OUTREACH FOR SENIOR DOG IN HARBOR SHELTER


This DOG’s ID#: A1119486

I am a spayed female, brown and white American Staffordshire Terrier mix.
The shelter thinks I am about 8 years old.
I weigh approximately 55 pounds.

I have been at the shelter since May 29, 2010.

Adoption fees include spay/neuter surgery, all animals will be sterilized prior to release.

For more information about this animal, call:
Harbor Animal Care and Control Center at (888) 452-7381
957 N. Gaffey Street, San Pedro, CA 90731
Ask for information about animal ID number A1119486

NOTE FROM LORI WEISE – Downtown Dog Rescue:

Please cross post this older female English Bull dog -Staff TerrierX. She was one of 21 dogs that came into to LA Animal Services as Evidence Dogs. When she was taken by the animal cruelty task force, she was badly injured, her body covered in bite wounds, presumably from being attacked by the other dogs. The owner signed her and the rest of the dogs in this pending case over to the Dept of Animal Services. Now they are all up for adoption. The other 20 dogs are being held at North East shelter. I met this dog on several occasions (before the owner was arrested) and she is social with people and other dogs.

Here is a link to the CBS report about the arrest:
WATCH VIDEO

I will personally donate $250 to any qualified rescue that saves this old girl. Join the Facebook group “61st Dogs” to help network the dogs from this case

WHERE ARE THEY NOW DDR Dog Alum Spotlight : Reilly!

REILLY
by KATE ROBINSON

This is our beautiful dog, Reilly, whom we adopted from DDR 2 years ago after she was found abandoned wandering the streets of Compton. She is the sweetest, gentlest dog imaginable and rules the family roost of humans and canines. She loves hiking in the mountains, swimming and, at the end of a long, strenuous day, sleeping on her down comforter.

We have given her the best life a dog could wish for, but she has given us so much more in return – unswerving loyalty, endless love and devotion and constant free entertainment as we watch her play with our other dogs and lovingly tend the many foster puppies we have had since her arrival.

Thank you, DDR, for the amazing job you do.

LORI’S CORNER: End of Life Issues

Sinbad

Saying good bye to a beloved pet is one of the most difficult thing that I have ever had to do. Just because I’ve done it many times, for various reasons, mostly health reasons due to old age, it’s never easy and it’s always heart breaking, even when one knows, it’s really time. When I had to put my lead dog “Sinbad” down, at the age of 15 years, I couldn’t even go to work. He had been my constant companion, going to work with me, meetings, out in the dog pack, helping me get other dogs ready to be adopted, the best dog I ever owned. At the end, he couldn’t use his hind legs. For such a regal, elegant dog, it was the end. I still cry now about losing him as I write this paragraph.

There were many others who have come into Downtown Dog Rescue to live out their final years in retirement from the street. Over the years, we have taken in many old ex-road dogs, allowing them a safe place to just chill. When I founded Downtown Dog Rescue, 14 years ago, I often wondered, what would have happen to these dogs if we didn’t take them into our rescue and what happens to dogs that are old, truly need to be euthanized because of medical issues that are often painful when the dog owner is homeless or is so poor that they can’t afford to euthanize their dog?

My guess was that most people in this situation take their dog to the pound. Even though the shelter, humanely euthanizes dogs, is it humane for the dog to be taken away from the owner who he/she has lived with perhaps, an entire lifetime and then put down? What about the owner’s feelings of regret that he/she had to do this just because they couldn’t afford to euthanized at a local vet where they could have elected to stay with their dog until the end.

I have the ashes of most of my dogs, like “Negro”, an old deaf pit bull that lived in my home with all of my dogs for almost two quality years before his tumor got too big and he just didn’t have the strength to keep going. This is not the case for the homeless and very poor dog owners, they have nothing when they are forced to walk away from their dog at the shelter just because they can’t afford to euthanize and cremate their beloved pet.

Operation Safety Net is set up to keep dogs out of the shelter. Most of the time, we work with the dog owner who has a medical issue or a behavioral issue and […]

ANIMAL WELFARE COMMUNITY: WITNESS LA.COM & Celeste Freemon

RESCUING THE MIRACLE DOG PART 2

As posted on WitnessLA.com
June 17th, 2010 by Celeste Fremon

Milagro is the name that former public defender Elie Miller gave to the injured stray dog she was attempting to rescue. [PART 1 HERE] The dog is large-ish black and tan creature who is part German Shepherd, part Rottweiler, part who-knows-what?

When she first encountered Milagro at the end of December, 2009, he lived on a large vacant lot that is situated between the Homeboy Industries offices, where Elie now works, and Men’s Central Jail where she often goes to meet with clients. He caught Elie’s attention because he was so obviously sick and hurting. It turned out the source of the problem was the collar he was wearing that must have been strapped on him when he was puppy, before he was lost or abandoned. Now that he was an adult dog, the over-small collar remained on and had grown into his skin and was literally strangling him. It was also causing an open, infected wound that circled his neck.
Elie began coming to the lot twice a day— at first to feed the dog and then, once he began to trust her, to slip medication into his food.
Her unlikely partner in the rescue was BeeBee (BB), a dread-locked, 50-something homeless man who camped at the edge of the vacant lot and claimed he had long-ago served in the navy on a nuclear submarine.
Before Elie’s arrival, BeeBee never tried to touch Milagro. However, he shared his food with the dog, hoping at least to keep him alive.
Ideally, the animal needed to go to a vet, but Elie worried that any official agency would likely put the sick stray down.
As if to prove the point, shortly after Elie began visiting Milagro, a kindly woman postal inspector who worked nearby and often stopped to bring BeeBee food, had also taken an interest in the dog. Observing Milagro’s obvious distress she told BeeBee she thought the authorities should be called.
“He’s in such pain,” she said. “Maybe he should be euthanized.”
BeeBee shook his head when he told Elie about the exchange. “Don’t we all live our lives in some pain?” he said.
A few days later, Elie found at first one tiny metal cross, sans its chain, in the dirt where she fed Milagro. A couple of days after that, she found two more.
She chose to take the discoveries as a sign—or at the very least a friendly blessing.
“I decided that one was for me, one […]

Translate »