Yorkie and papion mix

Would these be safe for a dog’s water bowl?

2024.05.15 09:03 SeonaidMacSaicais Would these be safe for a dog’s water bowl?

Would these be safe for a dog’s water bowl?
Hey, y’all. My Schnauzer-Yorkie mix has a problem of drinking so fast, he starts coughing. A regular slow-feeder bowl helps slow him down, but then he finds a way to get water out fast enough that he starts coughing again. I know Yorkies can have esophagus issues, so I’m doing my best to avoid those. I already have a water fountain. If I have a couple of these in the fountain’s bowl to help act like the ridges in a slow-feed bowl, maybe that’ll be enough of a deterrent to make him slow down? And if he licked the cubes, could that cause him harm in any way?
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2024.05.14 18:05 smolgreeneyes Help please!!!

Help please!!!
So for some background I’ve always been a dog person (I love all animals tbh but growing up I was around dogs only as pets, my moms allergic to cats so it was never an option).
I have a 5yo maltese yorkie mix and we live in an apartment complex with lots of strays around. Mostly feral they don’t come up to people unless you have food and they’ll wait for you to leave to eat. My dog doesn’t mind them at all lol if anything he’s curious.
About 3 weeks ago the cutest girl popped up out of nowhere. Extremely friendly and her ear is clipped (she’s spayed).
I started feeding her and now’s she’s at a point where it seems she completely trusts me, she even attempts to come into my apartment. It really seems like she hates it outside and wants to be in a home.
I’ve given her a flea treatment and I am looking into getting a kennel so I can take her to get checked at the vet. My goal is to keep her.
Like I mentioned I already have a 5yo dog. He’s a tiny guy, 10lbs and he’s very friendly but hyper. He’s tried to come up to the cat several times, the cat meows (no hiss from what i can tell) and then she’ll swat at him if he gets too close (no claws). This has happened a few times and now my dog is very cautious around her but still curious. Now that he’s more cautious around her he’s more calm and it seems like the cat now goes after him and wants to sniff his face. At one point she even head butted him.
I am looking for info and advice as to how to introduce the cat to my home and to living with my dog as smoothly as possible. I wouldn’t want to make either animal uncomfortable.
Adding pics of both cuties.
Thank you!
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2024.05.13 20:58 New-Diamond-1887 Dogs like people more than other dogs: is that a problem?

We have 2 dogs that are both ~3 years old. They’ve been together almost 2 years. 1 small mixed breed 1 Yorkie/min pin mix.
Every place we take them for daycare, they don’t really play with or interact with the other dogs. They just sit togethesnuggle together and watch the other dogs. Sometimes they beg the attendants for pets. People from the daycare have said it’s calm/cute/sweet but is there anything wrong with that? Do I need to intervene in any way? Some places have cameras and you can see the other dogs running around and playing while mine just sit together doing nothing. Thanks in advance for your thoughts
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2024.05.13 16:23 Wool_Lace_Knit Best Buds

Best Buds
This is Bailey and Hugo. Bailey, a rescued Chihuahua-Yorkie-Pomeranian mix who was found tied outside, abandoned after her owners moved. Hugo the Tuxedo cat came to us via CDS. They both crossed the Rainbow Bridge in 2020. I know they are together.
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2024.05.13 13:20 conn-man007 Flea problem on a budget

So basically wee bit of background, about a year ago me and my mum were to look after this wee chihuahua yorkie mix (we think) called pepper who we believe is around 20 (again, we have no idea) and the guy who gave us him sent him to us with fleas and then went NO CONTACT. He's ours now of course lol but we haven't been able to get rid of the fleas.
So now we've been fighting this for a year and it's summer again so im assuming all the fleas that were dormant or puppae or whatever have came out with the heat and things are really bad. We can't afford an exterminator for inside the house, we can't afford to have to washing machine on consistently to clean clothes and bedding, we aren't dirt poor but its more we do what we can to get by, dont go nuts on using gas and power, etc. We're going to get flea bombs next time I get paid but other than that I don't know what else to do. This problem is totally kicking mine and my mums ass (luckily peppers doing ok especially for his age! and is given daily baths and flea treatment so the fleas dont make him ill) but what else can be done that we haven't already?
I'm only concerned about the inside of the house because I live in a flat so we don't have the power to do any treatment to the back garden as it's the councils and when we take him on a walk in the circle we live in he just comes back with more fleas, probably from the amount of outdoor cats and foxes we get here. As much as I would love to get every pet owner in my street to make the effort with fleas on their pets there's too many to go through lol. I dont think there's any way we're gonna solve that.
Any advice to make our house a bit less of a nightmare would help, obviously if there's things and treatments we need to buy we will but as I already said an exterminator or taking him to a vet for professional treatments is out of our budget currently.
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2024.05.13 02:15 nomorelandfills No, You Beg - 2021 article from The Cut about the difficulty in adopting in the COVID era

No, You Beg - 2021 article from The Cut about the difficulty in adopting in the COVID era
Another copied article to keep in reserve. It's an odd article from the pandemic, recounting the boom in rescue adoptions. It is a fairly pointless article in that it uses some really shifty rescuers, including Pixies and Paws, as sources, brightly highlights a bioethicist who uses her own foolish adoption of two pit bull mixes as evidence that most people shouldn't own dogs, and chronicles but fails to understand the loathing rescuers have for adopters. It does, however, wonderfully illustrate how rapidly the good times ended in rescue. Anyone reading the the current "we've never been so overwhelmed with dogs" rescue laments should know that there's a link between today's problems and yesterday's reckless opportunism.
The "bioethicist"
“I think it’s probably true that the majority of people who want to adopt a dog should not,” Jessica Pierce, a bioethicist who studies human-animal relationships, tells me. “They don’t have the wherewithal and don’t have what they need to give the animal a good life.” She herself ended up with two pets that didn’t get along at all — a herding mix and a pointer mix whose constant fighting made the idea of hosting a dinner party both perhaps “bloody” and definitely “scary and miserable.” She says shelters shouldn’t “drive away potentially loving and appropriate adopters because they don’t meet predetermined criteria,” but she also sees the importance of a thorough application process that prepares humans for the pitfalls of pet parenthood. “You need to be ready to have a dog who doesn’t like people very much,” says Pierce. When Bella, the 11-year-old she got from the Humane Society, dies, she’s not sure she will get a replacement, noting that the pandemic puppy boom is “driven by a reflection of human narcissism and neurosis.”
However, this is a fantastic truth long overdue for the telling.
“I started to talk to shelter leaders across the country,” Cushing says. “And one by one, they said any adoptable dog without a medical issue is gone by noon on Saturday. But the public didn’t know that. Only the dog seekers and the experts did.”
https://preview.redd.it/v2owlquz230d1.png?width=1139&format=png&auto=webp&s=a95a7983b4f018f043125a0819a16941cec1e6aa
Jack, adopted by Tori and Paris through In Our Hands Rescue.
It was a rainy Sunday in June, and Danielle had fallen in love.
The 23-year-old paralegal spent the first part of her afternoon in McCarren Park, envying the happy dog owners with their furry companions. Then she stumbled upon an adoption event in a North Brooklyn beer garden, where a beagle mix being paraded out of the rescue van reminded her of the dog she grew up with, Snickers. It all felt like fate, so she filled out an application on the spot. She was then joined by her best friend and roommate, Alexa, in sitting across from a serious-looking young woman with a ponytail who was searching for a reason to break her heart.
Danielle and Alexa were confident they would be leaving with Millie that day: After all, they had a 1,000-square-foot apartment within blocks of McCarren and full-time employment with the ability to work from home for the foreseeable future. But the volunteer kept posing questions that they hadn’t prepared for. What if they stopped living together? What if Danielle’s girlfriend’s collie mix didn’t get along with her new family member? What would be the solution if the dog needed expensive training for behavioral issues? Which vet were they planning to use?
All of which, upon reflection, were reasonable questions. But when it came to the diet they planned for the dog, they realized they were out of their depth. Danielle recalled that Snickers had lived to 16 and a half on a diet of Blue Buffalo Wilderness, the most expensive stuff that was available at her parents’ Bay Area pet store. “Would you want to live on the best version of Lean Cuisine for the rest of your life?” sniffed the volunteer with a frown. She would instead recommend a small-batch, raw-food brand that cost, when they looked it up later, up to $240 a bag. “If you were approved, you’d need to get the necessary supplies and take time off from work starting now,” the dog gatekeeper said. “And the first 120 days would be considered a trial period, meaning we would reserve the right to take your dog back at any time.” The would-be adopters nodded solemnly.
The friends rose from the bench and thanked the volunteer for her time. Believing they were out of earshot, the volunteer summed up the interview to a colleague: “You just walked by, and you’re fixated on this one dog, and it’s because you had a beagle growing up, but you want to make your roommate the legal adopter?”
When Danielle and Alexa were young, one could still show up at a shelter, pick out an unhoused dog that just wanted to have someone to love, and take it home that same day. Today, much of the process has moved online — to Petfinder, a.k.a. Tinder for dogs, and various animal-shelter Instagram accounts that send cute puppy pics with heartrending stories of need into your feed and compel you to fill out an adoption application as you sit on the toilet. Posts describing the dogs drip with euphemisms: A dog that might freak out and tear your house up if left alone is a “Velcro dog”; one that might knock down your children is “overly exuberant”; a skittish, neglected dog with trust issues is just a “shy party girl.” Certain shelters have become influencers in their own right, like the L.A.-based Labelle Foundation, which has almost 250,000 Instagram followers and counts Dua Lipa and Cara Delevingne among its A-list clients. Rescue agencies abound, many with missions so specific that you could theoretically find one that deals in any niche breed you desire, from affenpinschers to Yorkshire terriers.
This deluge of rescue-puppy content has arrived, not coincidentally, during a time of growing awareness of puppy mills as so morally indefensible that even Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez could draw fire for seemingly buying a purebred French bulldog in early 2020. Then came the pandemic puppy boom, a lonely, claustrophobic year in which thousands of white-collar workers, sitting at home scrolling through their phones, seemed simultaneously to decide they were finally ready to adopt a dog. The corresponding demand spike in certain markets has simply overwhelmed the agencies: New York shelters that were used to receiving 20 applications a week were now receiving hundreds, with as many as 50 people vying for a single pup.
The rescue dog is now, indisputably, a luxury good, without a market pricing system at work to manage demand. A better analogy might be an Ivy League admissions office. But even Harvard isn’t forced to be as picky as, say, Korean K9 Rescue, whose average monthly applications tripled in 2020.
And yet someone has to pick the winners — often an unpaid millennial Miss Hannigan doling out a precious number of wet-nosed Orphan Annies to wannabe Daddy Warbuckses and thus empowered to judge the intentions and poop-scooping abilities of otherwise accomplished urban professionals, some of whom actually did go to Harvard.
This has led to some hard feelings. Every once in a while, someone will complain on Twitter about being rejected by a rescue agency, and it will reliably set off a cascade of attacks on “entitled rich white millennials assuming they can have whatever they want,” followed by counter-attacks on those who “appoint themselves the holy sainted guardian of all animals.” Danielle was ultimately deemed unworthy, not even receiving a generic rejection letter over email. After all, there isn’t really that much incentive for the rescue agencies to be polite these days.
The modern animal-rescue movement grew alongside the child-welfare movement in the mid-19th century. It got another boost in the years following World War II, when Americans were moving out to the suburbs in droves, according to Stephen Zawistowski, a professor of animal behavior at Hunter College. Suddenly, there were highways, yards, and space. Walt Disney was making movies about children and dogs that promoted the idea that no new home was complete without a loyal animal companion. (Zawistowski said that one might call this the Old Yeller Effect, but there were various riffs on the same theme over the ensuing decades. Essentially, Flipper was “Let’s put Lassie in the water.”)
In the early ’80s, University of Pennsylvania researchers confirmed the effects that animal companionship has on everything from blood pressure to heart conditions to anxiety. Pets were no longer just how you taught Junior to be responsible; they might be critical to maintaining adults’ physical and mental health. The way people spoke about animals started changing. The idea that “homeless” dogs were sent to the “pound” because they were “bad” went out of fashion. “Suddenly, you had ‘rescue’ dogs brightly lit in the mall,” says Ed Sayres, a former president of the ASPCA who now works as a pet-industry consultant. “Basically, we gave animals a promotion.” Meanwhile, in the late ’80s, spay and neuter procedures had been streamlined and were being recommended by vets as well as by Bob Barker on The Price Is Right.
Then came The Ad. Released in 2007, it featured close-ups of three-legged dogs and one-eyed cats rescued by the ASPCA over a wrenching rendition of Sarah McLachlan’s “Angel.” The commercial warned that “for hundreds of others, help came too late.” In just a year, the ad raised 60 percent of the ASPCA’s annual $50 million budget. The organization was reportedly able to increase the grant money it gave to other animal-welfare organizations by 900 percent in ten years. It is difficult to overstate the emotional hangover The Ad inflicted on millennials and members of Gen Z. Janet M. Davis is a historian at the University of Texas at Austin, where she lectures on animal rights to a demographically diverse body of students — everyone from cattle ranchers to vegan punks — most of whom cry when she shows The Ad in class. “It absolutely brings down the house,” she says. “Every time.”
Theoretically, the point of dog adoption is that there are more dogs born into the world than there are humans lined up to care for them. But as interest grew, the supply problem became less acute. Thanks to widespread spay and neuter policies, there are simply too few unwanted litters for what the adoption market wants.
National chains like PetSmart partnered with local shelters to supply its animals for sale. Savvy rescues in dog deserts like New York hooked up with shelters in the Deep South, where cultural attitudes toward spaying and neutering pets are much more lax. While there is no official registry of how many shelter dogs are available in the U.S., in 2017, researchers at the College of Veterinary Medicine for Mississippi State University published a study reporting that the availability of dogs in animal shelters was at an all-time low. “That is,” says Sayres, “an environment that leads to a kind of irrational, competitive behavior.” The rescue mutt had become not just a virtue signal but a virtue test. Who was a good enough human being to deserve a dog in need of rescuing?
Heather remembers the old easy days. “I went on Craigslist and an hour later, I had a puggle,” she says of her first dog-getting experience with her boyfriend in college. George the puggle humped everything in sight, shed everywhere, and chewed through furniture until the end of his life, but she loved him all the same.
Flash-forward 16 years: She and that boyfriend are married, have two kids, and can’t seem to get a new dog no matter what they try. Yes, she could find a breeder easily online (currently for sale on Craigslist: a Yorkie-poo puppy from a breeder asking $350 and just a few screening questions). But instead, in the middle of the pandemic, “I was sending ten to 12 emails a night and willing to travel anywhere, and no one would give us any sort of animal,” she remembers. Shelters would send snappy emails about how her family wasn’t suited for a puppy, even though they made good money and had clearly cared for their dearly departed George — they once drove three hours to get the dog a specially made knee brace. “I was trying to be really up front with people and would say that my daughter has autism and that I have a 3-year-old, and they would say no. It felt like they were saying, ‘We don’t give dogs to people who have disabilities.’ ”
It didn’t matter what kind of dog she applied for — older, younger, bigger, smaller — there was always an official-sounding excuse as to why her family wasn’t suitable. (“Pups this age bite and jump and scratch and while they are cute to look at, they are worse than a bratty ADHD toddler, without diapers,” one rescue wrote. “Sorry.”) She considered looking at emotional-support animals that work specifically with autistic youth but found out they could cost 18 grand and require a two-year waiting period. She couldn’t stomach the idea of setting up a GoFundMe, as other people in the community had. “It got to the point of me wondering, Okay, so what dogs do children get?” she recalls. “I always thought that dogs and children go together.” By the fall of 2020, Heather had turned back to breeders. “People get a little spicy when you say you paid for a dog. You want to scream that you tried your hardest, but it wasn’t possible,” she says.
Others, like Zainab, figured out ways to work the system. She blanketed agencies with applications in the early months of the pandemic, applying for 60 dogs. (The ease of applying online might also explain the statistics.) She thought the fact that she had a leadership role in public education would demonstrate that she was both successful and nurturing. “I’m a professional, I make good money, and I have a master’s degree,” she tells me. She was rejected all the same. Finally, a co-worker suggested Zainab make a résumé in order to stand out. The multipage document — which features testimonials from high-powered friends, including local elected officials — is what got her an exclusive meeting with Penny the pug in a parking lot. She was handed over with a leash tied around her neck and vomited in the front seat of Zainab’s car about three blocks later. Success!
Or take Lauren, who’d had dogs all her life and found living solo during COVID lonely. “You can’t be without an animal at this particular time,” she told herself. So she started applying for dogs on Petfinder and boutique-rescue websites. “I would look up at my clock, and it would be two in the morning,” she says. Her hopes were high when she got a meeting with a Chihuahua mix in the suburbs named Mary Shelley. Lauren thought the meeting went well, but it ultimately didn’t result in the interviewer granting the adoption. “Then I was in conspiracy-theory mode, thinking she doesn’t like gay people, or single people, or people who live in the city,” she says. “It was a crazy-making experience. It’s a pandemic, so your world is already turned upside down, but I became psychotic.
“The people who run rescue organizations — this was their moment to shine,” she adds. “Even though they were totally bogged down with requests, they got to feel the power. They got to make someone’s dreams come true or smash them to the ground.”
The inquiries can get extremely personal. “I found the questions very offensive,” says Joanna, a Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center nurse who tried to adopt last year with her architect husband. “I was like, ‘What does this have to do with getting a dog?’ ” Her husband didn’t even want to put the thought out into the universe, but he was forced to admit that he’d probably be the one to take a shared pet in the event of a divorce. The two also had to grapple with what would happen if one or both of them died of COVID during the pandemic. And would both of them be able to take three days off at a moment’s notice to help the dog acclimate to its new home? “I was frank with her and said, ‘I take care of cancer patients,’ ” says Joanna. “She was very unsatisfied with our answer.”
“The more popular the rescue is on the internet, the more clout they have,” says Molly, a writer in New York. “If you have a really good social-media presence, you can throw your weight around.” (The clout goes both ways: Posting about your rescue dog on Instagram is an indirect way of broadcasting that someone out there deemed you morally worthy enough to be chosen.) She inquired about eight dogs in six weeks from about five different rescues, only to be continually rejected. She finally got an interview with a rescue agency whose cute dogs she had seen on social media. They asked to tour her apartment over Zoom. Fine. They asked for her references. Great. But then they asked if she would pay for an expensive trainer. She asked if she could wait — not only was it during the height of COVID, but the cost of the sessions with the trainer could be close to $1,000. The person she was dealing with said over email that dogs were investments and suggested she look elsewhere. “I was like, This is so Brooklyn,” she says.
Still, others wished the warning about trainers had been more explicit. At the height of the pandemic, Steven remembers scrolling through social-media post after social-media post saying things like “URGENT: NEED TO FIND THIS GUY A HOME” while “picturing this dog on a conveyor belt going toward this whirring saw. And meanwhile I am screaming at my phone, ‘I applied and you turned me down!’ ”
But after securing a dog, he came to believe the process, while tough on the human applicants, wasn’t tough enough when it came to the dog’s needs. Right off the bat, Cooper was very hyper and mouthy when playing. “We were doing the thing that everyone does, like, posting pics: ‘We’re at the park, isn’t this fun, hahaha,’ ” he says. But the reality was much less Instagram-worthy. Cooper became difficult to handle, especially in a small New York apartment; mouthiness escalated to gnashing his teeth and guarding food. “It’s embarrassing, and I hate having to tell people we had to give the dog back,” he says. (So much so that Steven requested a pseudonym for himself and for Cooper.) “To be frank, the experience we had with the dog was pretty traumatic. If this volunteer had felt so powerful, I wish that they had said we wouldn’t be able to handle this dog.” Although Steven’sInstagram is replete with photos of other friends’ dogs, evidence of Cooper’s existence has disappeared from the account.
The rescue-dog demand has also been stressful for the overwhelmed (and overwhelmingly volunteer) workforce that keeps the supply chain running. On a recent Saturday, Jason was speeding toward JFK airport in a windowless white van covered in graffiti. Though he was on his way to help rescue dogs, he is the first to admit he’s not the biggest fan of the animals. “I just need something to do,” he says. “I was going crazy sitting around the house.” His friend, who was employed at a rescue, recommended him for an unpaid gig. Prior to the pandemic, he managed an Off Broadway play in the city. The 34-year-old, who is athletically built with a shaved head, has a compulsive need to be coordinating a production, and getting dogs to New York City from a different continent is definitely that.
Many of the city’s rescue dogs come from other parts of the world these days, brought over by volunteers who take them through a complicated Customs process. This is part of what Pet Nation author Mark Cushing calls the “canine freedom train.” A former corporate trial attorney, Cushing had thought that American shelters were filled with dogs with a figurative hatchet outside their kennel; that was until his daughter, a shelter volunteer, said that, in fact, scores of people were lined up around the block every weekend in hopes of adopting a handful of dogs. “I started to talk to shelter leaders across the country,” Cushing says. “And one by one, they said any adoptable dog without a medical issue is gone by noon on Saturday. But the public didn’t know that. Only the dog seekers and the experts did.”
Jason waited in arrivals, ready to stop anyone who walked by with dog crates. When he saw some, he swooped in. It turned out that he had ended up with an extra animal — one that was yowling like it needed to get out and pee. He couldn’t figure out to whom it belonged, and after about 40 minutes of drama in the pickup area, two large men jumped out of a truck with out-of-state plates. They handed Jason $20 before he knew what was happening, loaded the dog into their Silverado, and sped off toward North Carolina. It was unclear if they were adopters themselves or worked for a shelter.
With that out of the way, Jason tried to carefully maneuver a luggage cart full of the remaining dog crates to the lot where he was parked. When one fell, the animal inside didn’t make a sound, presumably zonked from its long journey across the ocean. More volunteers were waiting at the shelter with food, water, and an enormous number of puppy pads when he arrived. After the animals decompressed from their long flight, they would be taken to an adoption event, where they would hopefully meet their new humans.
Emily Wells hasn’t taken a vacation in years. She works full time on Wall Street but is also the coordinator for Pixies & Paws Rescue — a job that she does in between calls and meetings and emails. That means responding to DMs on Instagram about available dogs, attending adoption events on weekends, and getting on the phone with a vet at 10 p.m. because one of her fosters got sick. That also means screening applications, which more than doubled during the height of the pandemic. Typically, she denies about one-third. This part of her job might not be the most physically demanding, but it does take a psychic toll.
“What I’ve found is a lot of people are very entitled,” she says. “They send nasty emails. I’ve been called every name in the book. But there are reasons we deny. We are entrusted with placing a living, breathing thing in someone’s home for the rest of its life.” She wishes people would understand that the rescue is just her and one other person trying their best to deal with off-the-charts levels of demand. “I know rescues that don’t even reply,” she says. “So the fact that we do and still get shit for that is annoying.” And explaining why someone was rejected can create its own problems: What if they use that information to fib on their next application?
Rescues like Wells’s are largely dependent on foster parents to house the dogs they import. Foster-to-adopt is one way that people adopt pets, a means of testing out compatibility and increasing one’s chances of adopting in a hypercompetitive city. But demand for dogs was so high last year that even proven volunteers couldn’t get their hands on a foster. Take Suchita, an animal lover who moved from India to New Jersey for her husband’s VP job with a big bank in 2019. Unable to work owing to visa issues, she became a prolific dog fosterer for a rescue in Queens. She also worked with a program that pairs volunteers with elderly animal owners who need help taking their pets out on walks. That program was suspended during COVID, which left Suchita desperate for more dog time.
Figuring that online volunteer work might fill the void, she started helping another organization wade through its massive backlog of applications by calling references. She offered to foster more dogs but didn’t hear back, nor did her attempts to adopt pan out. When she went ahead and adopted Sasha, a Pomeranian, through another rescue agency, the first organization was not happy. “After I posted Sasha on Instagram, they called me saying it was a conflict of interest to have worked with another agency,” Suchita says. “I was not at all prepared for that. Then they unfollowed me. It really hurt, but no hard feelings.” She is humbly aware of the fact that in New York, there is always someone who has a nicer apartment, a better job, and more experience than you. If everything else is equal, why shouldn’t a shelter try to give a dog to someone who can afford to give it the best life possible?
“They don’t treat humans nicely, but at least they treat dogs nicely,” she says.
In some corners of the rescue world, a reckoning is taking place. Rachael Ziering, the executive director of Muddy Paws Rescue, which found homes for around 1,000 dogs last year, got her start volunteering at other nonprofits whose adoption processes she found abhorrent. She saw, for instance, people look at adoption applications and say, “Oh, that’s a terrible Zip Code. I’m not adopting to them.” Or they would judge people based on their appearance. “I know a lot of groups that will ask for your firstborn along with your application,” she says. “I think it’s well intentioned, but I think it just took a turn at some point. It’s morphed into sort of an unhealthy view that no one’s ever gonna be good enough. Nobody’s ever perfect — the dog or the person.” Muddy Paws is instead embracing what is known as “open adoption,” a philosophy that allows for rescue volunteers to be more open-minded about what a good dog home might look like. It has started gaining traction among groups like the ASPCA in recent years, in part because the organization’s current president was denied a dog — twice. Instead of rejecting applicants outright based on their giving the “wrong” answers, Ziering’s team speaks with hopeful dog owners at length, learning about their lifestyles and histories to match them with the pet best for their family. Still, even a more inclusive philosophy toward profiling adoption applicants comes up against the intractable math: There are only so many dogs that need homes. Though Muddy Paws rejects less than one percent of applicants, some decide to adopt elsewhere if it means getting a dog faster.
Is any of this good for the dogs? Depends on whom you ask. If the intense questions involved in securing the dog cause someone to reflect before making a decision they’ll regret — sure. Others note that the average dog’s life span has hovered around 11 years for decades. “I think it’s probably true that the majority of people who want to adopt a dog should not,” Jessica Pierce, a bioethicist who studies human-animal relationships, tells me. “They don’t have the wherewithal and don’t have what they need to give the animal a good life.” She herself ended up with two pets that didn’t get along at all — a herding mix and a pointer mix whose constant fighting made the idea of hosting a dinner party both perhaps “bloody” and definitely “scary and miserable.” She says shelters shouldn’t “drive away potentially loving and appropriate adopters because they don’t meet predetermined criteria,” but she also sees the importance of a thorough application process that prepares humans for the pitfalls of pet parenthood. “You need to be ready to have a dog who doesn’t like people very much,” says Pierce. When Bella, the 11-year-old she got from the Humane Society, dies, she’s not sure she will get a replacement, noting that the pandemic puppy boom is “driven by a reflection of human narcissism and neurosis.”
“A lot of this is driven by Instagram,” she says. “We have this expectation that dogs are not really dogs; they’re toys or fashion accessories.”
I’m not pushing you, but it seems like you want to bring him home,” the Badass Animal Rescue volunteer said with the controlled energy of a used-car salesperson. Bill and Sherrie, a middle-aged couple who had lost their English bulldog three years ago, were looking for a replacement. The dog with a bright-red boner jumped on Bill, and everyone pretended not to notice. “He definitely has energy,” Bill said brightly. The couple were on the fence, and the volunteer could sense the close slipping away.
Although this organization saw applications rise 200 percent during the pandemic, things are now recalibrating back to normalcy. We are, it seems, witnessing the cooling of the puppy boom. The unbearable loneliness of the pandemic has abated, replaced with anxiety about how to possibly do all the things all of us used to do every day. New Yorkers are being summoned back to the office or planning vacations. Many young professionals are finding that, when given the option between scrolling through rescue websites until 2 a.m. or doing drunken karaoke in a room full of friends, Dog Tinder is losing its appeal. Local shelters are seeing application numbers slip — many say they have returned to pre-COVID levels — which, in turn, has made it slightly more of an adopter’s market.
Bill and Sherrie went to the hallway to talk it over. He was definitely a puller like their old dog, Xena. And he was also a hell of a shedder. The volunteer kept talking about something called a “love match,” but was this really one? “We’re just gonna need a little more time,” Sherrie confessed when they came back inside. No one was making eye contact. As they prepared to leave, the dog jumped up on Bill again, his tongue flopping sideways and his wagging tail spraying white fur. He was clearly not aware that the tenor of the room had shifted. “We might be back,” Bill said with an obvious twinge of guilt. “Don’t worry!”
We will probably look back on the class of pandemic dogs adopted in 2020 as the most desirable unwanted dogs of all time — the ultimate market-scarcity score for a slice of virtuous, privileged New York City. People like Danielle will see them paraded around places like McCarren Park, the living, breathing trophies for self-satisfied owners who made it through the gauntlet. At least for the next 11 years or so.
submitted by nomorelandfills to PetRescueExposed [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 21:48 xiventi Mixed breed Yorkie? Need to confirm.

Mixed breed Yorkie? Need to confirm.
So my aunt just got this puppy from a breeder who told her that she is a Yorkie, but it wasn’t until she got a bit older (She’s 5 months now) that she’s actually mixed… Now we’re trying to figure out what breed is she actually mixed with. Her hair has the same texture has a Yorkie’s, but she has a longer body and bigger head. We thinking that she could be a terriemaltese mix. If anyone has any idea, let me know! She’s a cutie either way.
submitted by xiventi to IDmydog [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 02:40 Significant-Visit-68 Fights me on harness

My darling yorkie mix seems to have all the yorkie qualities mentioned on this sub. She’s about 13 months old, I adopted her around 8 months and she’s a great companion. The only thing I can’t figure out is when I go to put her harness on her, she starts wildly biting me and fighting it. Then when it’s on she so happy and ready to go walking. I’ve tried a bunch of redirections but no luck. It’s the weirdest thing. Any thoughts or suggestions? Thanks a bunch!
submitted by Significant-Visit-68 to Yorkies [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 02:34 idiotica8 Yorkie/Chihuahua mix and dental problems? Is something wrong with her back teeth that are shortened?

submitted by idiotica8 to Yorkies [link] [comments]


2024.05.09 22:15 Ok_Disaster207 Prey Drive.

Hi, all. I could really use some help. My 1 year old, Silky/Schnauzer mix has an awful prey drive. We have multiple other dogs, one of them including a 17 week old Yorkie Puppy.
He is incredibly sweet, has not gone after wild animals, and has an incredibly awful history. He was pulled him from an abusive owner that isolated for the first 5 months of his life. He was so scared when he got him that he couldn’t move, and would foam at the mouth. 10 months later; we’ve put him through training, and he’s been house broken. However; he is still one of the worst behaved dogs we’ve ever had.
Yesterday, our Yorkie Puppy got injured while playing (she was crying), and he attacked her. (She was seen by a vet! A torn vulva, some bleeding but internally she is ok 🤍). We couldn’t get him to let go. He didn’t care if he loved her at all. He only saw her as prey, and he was going to try and kill her if he could. At one point I had gotten away, and he grabbed my side. Tore a chunk of my skin off, and tore up my hand really bad. Although we love him so much, I think we’ve decided that he needs to be rehomed. This isn’t the first time he’s attacked, as he has attacked our 10 year old chihuahua before.
Some of my family wants to keep him, and try anxiety medications/ or a desensitization training. But from my understanding, you will never break prey habits. Like I said, i love him SO MUCH. He is the biggest sweetheart until it comes to food, counter surfing, and prey instincts. I could really use some advice on what to do. If we rehome, I will be heartbroken. I made a promise to make sure he would have better life and a forever home. I feel like I am letting him down by doing this, but can’t risk him killing any of my animals- or being the reason somebody gets hurt. I think a home where he would be the only dog, and he would get plenty of attention is a must for him. It just really hurts. We have a woman who offered- it is just her and her husband.
submitted by Ok_Disaster207 to reactivedogs [link] [comments]


2024.05.09 02:53 LeatherHog 'Think of all the free time I'll have', I said. I have that free time, and I'd give anything to lose it

Until two months ago tomorrow, we had a dog, Sabrina, usually called her Bri Bri, Hippo, etc
She looooved to get her butt (where her tail met her back) scratched. She'd rah! at you until you did. Would just turn around and look at you until you did
And I'd scratch her and tell her about all the free time I'd have, if I didn't have to scratch a dog's butt. If we didn't have to straighten up her blanket nests. All the complete meals we'd get to have
All said with love, if course. She got all the tucked in blankets, and sandwich crusts and butt scratches her little heart desired
She was a rescue pit/lab mix, those monsters left her with a burn mark the size of my palm.
And she was still an absolute sweetheart. Scared, but sweet.
I'll never forget our first meeting. I just moved down South, my mom and stepdad had a few months prior. When we got home it was past midnight, so I just went into my new room and collapsed
Crack of dawn rolls around, and I get woken up by the SLAM of a door being opened. Shed headbutt it to see who was in the room, the new smell
She liked to sleep with me, take up all the room. She lived getting under blankets and licking specifically only my left knee
We gave her the Bri Bri couch. In your house, you'd call it a loveseat. But we never did, it was the Bri Bri couch. It was hers. So she knew she always had a spot in a home that loved her
She adored cheese. Would come barreling in if she heard you pull of the paper
She got the zoomies to end all zoomies. She could move their queen sized bed
She also liked to roll on her back, we called it 'throwing a fit'. And wed rub her belly and ask her what her deal was
Adored socks. You could just tie up a pair of socks and she'd be thrilled
Her side eye game was legendary. Usually on the receiving end if you didn't want to scratch her or give 200% of your meal
Loved to sunbathe, even in the southern summer
Warning for her death here!
But two months ago, it all went wrong She was fine all day
I even didn't scratch her butt too long because I had to get back to what I was doing. Told her think of all the free time I'd have if I didn't have to scratch a dog's butt. Just like we did every day
We had supper, I gave her some bacon, of course. I was on my tablet, and she went in the Bri Bri couch
I looked over because I thought she was just throwing a fit, wanting belly rubs
But she wasn't. She wasn't doing the adorable little rolling she always was
This was a full blown, can't breathe seizure. It was indescribably awful. The fear in her eyes
I'll never forget the look in her eyes
There was no vet open. I called a regular hospital and they gave me some advice to make her more comfortable
But we couldn't do anything besides telling her over and over we loved her. That she was the best hippo ever
I couldn't even look at her couch for a week. It was HER couch
Thankfully they let me call off at work because I was having a panic attack while talking to my boss
For awhile I thought she didn't even have an actual burial, since we couldn't dig in the yard, and it was night
Thankfully, stepdad couldn't take that either, so it turns out that Saturday he went where he out her body and gave her an actual burial in the woods. I found out the following week
It makes me feel a little better
Her collar has been hung up on my bedframe since. I took it when he went to put her body somewhere. I think I needed it as proof, that this wasn't some bad dream
We still have my mom's Yorkie poo she got in November (and wouldn't trade her for the world)
I haven't scratched a dogs butt in months. I haven't been pawed at to get food. I haven't had to fill in holes. My left knee is dry as a bone
And it's the worst thing in the world
Scratch your dog's butt
Put down the phone and go play with them
Give them that rib bone
Don't grumble over the mess. Over how expensive they can be. How you don't want them to beg
Because that complaint is a monkey's paw
submitted by LeatherHog to TrueOffMyChest [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 18:02 Distinct-Forever642 "Fostering" senior dog and have some questions about care.

This dog was found in my city by a teenager, I offered to take him in until his owners are found since our shelters are currently over run with strays. Ive posted on 5 different pages that hes in my care. He's very obviously a senior and can't hear well or see. He's also overweight and coughs a lot. I can't take him to the vet for another 2 weeks since I don't have the funds to get him vetted. I've got a 4.5lb yorkie mix currently. My question is, what type of food should I get him and how much should I give him? Also, how long should I wait until I don't hear from the owner so I can claim him as my own? He's the sweetest old man ever! We've been calling him Gramps.
submitted by Distinct-Forever642 to DOG [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 17:23 brycemoneal The crossover episode of the century! my biggest and smallest!

The crossover episode of the century! my biggest and smallest!
4lb yorkie and 95lb greyhound. temperament tested beforehand and get along fantastically. these dogs are frequent fliers around here so i know them as well. (not pictured is 85lb chow chow mix who lives w greyhound and also gets along perfectly with yorkie)
submitted by brycemoneal to RoverPetSitting [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 10:45 hellacrustydust Retained baby tooth coming loose super late?

My Yorkie mix is almost 2 years old and I noticed about a week ago that he has a retained puppy canine. We just recently got him and it seems his previous owners must not have noticed, or chose not to get it extracted when he was a puppy. Pretty much immediately after discovering it, it’s now super loose and on the verge of falling out. He doesn’t seem to be in any pain but he’s definitely trying to get it out using his paws & tongue. Is it normal for it to take almost 2 years to finally come out? Could it cause any problems other than misalignment? I plan on calling the vet in the morning— but curious if anyone else has experienced this with their pup.
submitted by hellacrustydust to AskVet [link] [comments]


2024.05.06 20:10 Loose_Candidate2409 activities for older dog

I have a Maltese and yorkie mix, he's about 11 years old but still pretty active! We used to go on runs all the time but now he gets tired pretty quickly and I don't want him to overextend himself! Are there any other ways we can spend time together or play? Open to all suggestions (:
submitted by Loose_Candidate2409 to dogs [link] [comments]


2024.05.06 09:35 Fabulous_Paramedic27 Extrahepatic shunt blood test results worse after presc diet

My 6 year old Yorkie mix was diagnosed with an extrahepatic shunt (EHPSS) last October 23’ after acting strange. She was always on a strict freeze dried/ home cooked died and seemed to be fine with minimum symptoms.
After a night at the ICU, a ct- scan and mri tests she was prescribed a strict diet of Royal Canine Hepatic canned food and 1ml of Lactulose post meals.
Her blood test results and markers:
Oct 2023: ALT 682U/L CHOL 102mg/dL AMYL 201U/L
Apr 2024: BUN 5mg/dL ALT 428U/L ALKP 246U/L GGT 19U/L CHOL 101mg/dL AMYL 333U/L
Does anyone have any idea why this might be? Could it be from the prescription food? Is she better off on a high quality freeze dried diet of chicken or turkey as she always has been before her diagnosis?I should also note, the vet had originally planned on going through with an op to close the valve but decided it was too risky to operate on her.
submitted by Fabulous_Paramedic27 to AskVet [link] [comments]


2024.05.06 01:31 spoopyskelies How to get over the guilt

My dog Chaos (3y, yorkie mix) was just put down due to her brain swelling in a traumatic accidental incident with my other dog. Cricket (11month, pitbull mix) and Chaos were playing roughly over a toy when she raced through my house, like they normally do playing. While I was cleaning I patted her on her bum with my broom to get her out of my dirt pile and she and Cricket raced back to my bedroom. Cricket tends to jump off of my bed to tackle Chaos, and when I arrived in my room, Chaos was twitching and becoming rigid. Her neck was stiff, and she wasn’t breathing normally. Cricket was laying beside her and whining, and I freaked out. I scopped her up, called my mom, and we rushed to the emergency vet.
I can’t help but feel that it is all my fault, because I was cleaning, and I swatted her with the broom bristles which made her run into the other room. From her injuries, we believe they were roughing around and Cricket jumped off the bed and hit her spine or neck on accident.
I feel so incredibly guilty and I don’t know how to deal this incredible amount of grief and guilt. The vet and my mom told me that it wasn’t my fault, but I still feel as if I’m just an awful pet parent. I feel like if I didn’t value the cleaniness of my home over my dog then this wouldn’t have happened.
submitted by spoopyskelies to Petloss [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 16:00 bottleblack Help needed with sleeping through the night!

Would love some advice or recommendations, because my sleep is suffering! We adopted our 2 y/o chi mix as a puppy and crate trained her to help with potty training, downtime, etc with the intent that someday she would sleep in bed with us. When she about a year & 3 months and starting to mature we adopted a yorkie puppy and continued crating them both at night until he was a bit older. Our yorkie turned 1 in January and both dogs have been doing pretty well with crate training. They are crated for naps, when we have to leave the house, and on intermittent days when we are working (although we come home to let them out for potty breaks). Overnight wasn't perfect as the younger one would sometimes wake up around 5am and start barking until we would come down and let him out for our normal 6am wakeup time, when they normally get their breakfast.
In March, our yorkie caught giardia and was having urgent intermittent diarrhea and crating overnight was resulting in immediate wake-up baths and cleaning up gross messes. We decided to accelerate the timing of having them sleep in bed with us so that we could spring into action if he felt the urge. This resulted in either dog immediately being let outside when they jumped out of bed to avoid accidents. As his illness passed, we continued to let them sleep in bed, however oftentimes after they had their initial pee, they would both wake up around 5am completely AWAKE - like time to chase and play, full energy awake. A few times I just stayed awake with them in our living room as it was too close to my normal waking time to go back to sleep (although with dim or no lights to try to keep them calm), I've tried sleeping on the couch to try to show them it was still time to sleep. They would bark, play with each other, scratch at the door to be let out (with no discernable purpose other than it seemed to be a reliable way to get me to 'wake up'), or whine for breakfast well ahead of schedule. After a few of these unsuccessful mornings, after letting them out to pee, I just started putting them back in their crate until 6am. Depending on their level of tired, they would either go back to sleep, but often bark/cry intermittently.
Now I think they are somehow conditioned to wake up at 4am, even if just "to go in their crate" and I would love some advice on how to course correct because the past few months have been rough on my sleep.
Observations - the best results are on nights after they have gone to doggie daycare (2 days/week), as the older one is less likely to be woken by the other shuffling around, and I can sometimes coax the younger back to sleeping in bed after he pees, but it's difficult to achieve that level of "worn-out" on typical weekdays. Also, often on days where they are at daycare or weekend days when we are interacting with them the majority of the day, they start getting sleepy around 7 or 8pm and we have to try to keep waking them up to keep from sleeping until we get in bed around 9pm.
At this point I'm stuck and not sure if we should just go back to crating at night until both dogs are regularly sleeping through the night, or suggestions on what to try next. Appreciate any advice!
submitted by bottleblack to Dogtraining [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 06:52 ndnd_of_omicron The concepts of lines and responsibility is alien, apparently.

Yesterday, my local animal shelter was doing a community event for discounted pet microchipping. I had been wanting to get our two younger cats microchipped for a while now as we are planning on selling our house and moving in the next year or so. Both of our cats are female and will henceforth be known as "the girls".
My husband and I pack the girls up in separate carriers and head on over to the animal shelter. We get there 10 minutes before the event starts and there is already a bit of a queue forming (yay! Responsible pet owners!). We get out and see everyone has dogs and they are of all sizes. We are the only folks there with cats. No big. We hang about 5 ft back from the queue so as to not make the girls anxious. It's obvious we are in line. We have a staff member greet us and let us know they are still getting set up and someone will bring us a clipboard to fill out the girls' info for the microchips.
A few minutes later two lady boomers show up behind us. One ambulates with a walker and has a Yorkie mix in a harness in the seat. Her friend is with her and doesn't need a walker. As the staff member is directly walking toward my husband and I with a clip board, boomer without the walker goes to snatch it out of her hand saying "we need a clipboard!".
Savvy staff member holds on to the clip board and let's the two boomer ladies know there is a line and we were in line first.
Bless her.
We put down the girls' info. Boomer with the walker wants to see the girls. We show off the kitties. By that time, the girls seem more curious and less anxious. They don't seem like they are gonna freak. One is a bit people shy and the other doesn't know a stranger. The people shy one was in a mesh carrier and the very extroverted one was in one that has the bars in the front where you can stick your fingers in and it has the two prongs you have to push in to trigger the release mechanism.
So, we scrunch in with everyone else. It comes time to pay and over zealous boomer jumps in line again! My husband was paying and we ended up getting separated for a good 7-8 minutes.
Boomer #3 comes in, along with a ~6-7 year old child that is her grandson who she was not doing a veru good job of supervising.
Now, this is partially my fault; I opened Pandora's box. The kid who was very sweet and energetic wanted to see the kitty. I showed him the extroverted one and he put his fingers in through the bars and she did what she does and rubbed her whole face all over him.... and then he wouldn't leave her alone and kept putting his face right in the carrier against the bars. Grandma would not stop him. Kitty didn't seem to mind the attention, but the kid was just everywhere and I ended up semi babysitting this child and my two cats (people shy being 8 lbs and in a carrier that has a shoulder strap and extroverted being 14 lbs... thats a lot of cat to be holding), while grandma was watching her dog and my husband was getting line jumped to pay by overzealous boomers.
When husband finally gets back to me, he has to get onto the little boy about the prongs on the front of the carrier (I honestly was a bit overwhelmed between two cats, small child, lots of dogs and people). It didn't even occur to me at the time that this kid could have injured himself on the prongs and grandma was occupied watching her dog and not grandson. Another part of me was kind of grateful he was bothering my very sweet cat and not pestering a dog with an unknown temperament who could have bit him while grandma wasn't paying attention.
She later played it off "he is very curious", "he has adhd", "he may be autistic."
Also, it's the south. It was 88 degrees and like 100% humidity. By the time we had the girls packed back up in the car I was soaked to the bone in sweat and just done.
Moral of the story for the boomers who are reading this - there is always a line. Always. For every service. And don't let strange people take care of/ warch out for your grandkids because you don't have the attention span to both watch your dog and a child (who may or may not have special needs).
submitted by ndnd_of_omicron to BoomersBeingFools [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 15:28 Less-Huckleberry1030 I’m giving my puppy her first haircut and need some advice.

I’m giving my puppy her first haircut and need some advice.
For context: I am a graduate of YouTube university and do all of the grooming for my 6 year old Yorkie mix. He is so chill and wonderful.
We got a morkie puppy in March. She’s about 11 weeks now, and she really needs a trim for hygienic reasons. I’m super intimidated to give her a haircut because she is a close relative of the Tasmanian Devil. Putting a ponytail in her hair is a two man job.
Anyway… I can’t take her to the groomer yet because she hasn’t had her last shot. I would like to give her a little trim but am terrified I’m going to butcher her cute little baby fur.
Advice needed for: A. Grooming a wild baby B. Grooming around female-bits (I’ve never don’t that before) C. How to do a general a puppy-cut
submitted by Less-Huckleberry1030 to grooming [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 00:54 princesskat92 I'm losing my little best friend

I'm losing my little best friend
My chi, Yorkie, dachshund mix has an aggressive bone cancer. There's no cure. If we did everything possible it'd only give her a year and her quality of life would be low. We made the hardest decision of our lives to put her to rest on Monday and I'm just absolutely broken. I can't believe that I'm losing my best friend. She's only 6.
submitted by princesskat92 to mutt [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 19:04 ismeniamontalvo progress with my grieving boy

this is my sweet old man goloso he’s a yorkie chihuahua mix. February 8th he lost his best friend that he grew up with (my other dog diva may she rest in paradise❤️) for months goloso became depressed i’ve never thought on getting another dog due to him being a bit reactive. a couple days ago i got my puppy gorda unexpectedly i was terrified how he’d react, but when i showed him his little sister he became a puppy himself he absolutely adores her. he absolutely refused to let her near him when sleeping or laying down when first getting her but recently he’s been getting closer and closer to her while she slept and he let her get closer and closer. my sweet boy just loves her and hasn’t been reactive he quickly lays on his back to let gorda win in their play fights. it brings tears to my eyes that he’s definitely improving and becoming himself again
submitted by ismeniamontalvo to Yorkies [link] [comments]


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