Becka
Posted : 1/28/2007 8:34:18 AM
What I did was contact (via petfinder) several agencies. I usually wrote them in regard to a specific dog and usually chatted back and forth a bit. I wanted to find an agency that really knew their dogs and had the perfect match for my families. I told the agency just what we were looking for.
We needed a calm non barking dog because I have a child who is sensitive to audial stimulation. We needed a gentle patient dog because we have two children who are rambunctious and quite young. We needed a dog who had the skills to deal with our current dog who is playful and very powerful. I told them about our house, and I was honest about where they would sleep and how often they would get a walk.
We were turned down several times, and I was always thrilled that the agencies did not just try to place any dog in our home.
Both our dogs have come from shelters, because my children are so young (all under 10), I wanted the dog to have spent some time in Foster care. This was the case for both of them and we have been very pleased with our experience.
Some things to think about.
1. Be patient. Our first dog took several months to find. Our second was faster, but it still surprised us how long it took to find Sally.
2. Don't limit yourself geographically. Look closest to you first, but if you can't find that perfect dog in your own town or state, many shelters have a way to get homeless dogs to a good home. Sally was four hours away from us and they brought her to the nearest big city.
3. Consider a dog that is out of infancy. We adopted a 1 year old and a 9 mo old. Both were fully grown and past that "awwww, such a sweet puppy" faze. Both had been looked over because of that. BUT, both were housetrained and past the crazy baby behaviors that would have been too much for my family to handle.
4. Don't limit yourself by breed. We ended up with two breeds I was dead set against. We have a corgi mix and a full bred jack russel terrier. We wanted CALM dogs...which we got- in unexpected breeds. Mixed dogs especially are mostly a guess about breeds, and it is much safer to go by a known temperment learned from the foster family, that what you might guess the breed temperment is.
Good luck, I can't wait to see what you find. In fact, I miss petfinder so much, that if you tell me where you are and what you are looking for, I will browse doggies with you. I have to stay off there for myself because two is all we can handle. I would have a houseful otherwise.