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> Out of the Cage! > September
2006 > Senior Pets: Want to Get a Senior Pet a New Home?...
Lighten up!
Senior Pets
Want to Get a Senior Pet a New Home?... Lighten
up!
by Joan Antelman, Publisher, Senior
Pets Newsletter
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Some adopters prefer an older
pet's calm demeanor.
(Photo courtesy of Senior
Pets Newsletter and Posh Pets Rescue) |
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I can't tell you how many times I have heard these
words from a rescuer — "Oh, that dog is never going to
get a home!" Or, "A 13-year-old cat? No one will want
to adopt him." My response is always the same — with
that attitude, you are right, no one will! I try to keep my approach
more positive. Whenever I help an older dog or cat, I start off
by saying, oh, what a great dog, ooh, what a gorgeous cat. Someone
out there will want to adopt them! Why? Because I know I would!
And I am not the only one.
There is power in thinking positively when trying
to re-home senior animals. Of course it is easier to get a puppy
or a young dog adopted because younger animals are what most people
want. They may feel an older dog is too set in his ways, or he will
never bond with another family. But we know this is not true. My
new 13-year-old cat Boogie plopped himself down and decided he was
home. He slept on my bed the first night, and acted like he has
lived there his entire life. Animals are much better than humans
when it comes to living in the moment!
Realistically we know that re-homing a senior animal
just takes more time. Not every rescue group is willing to help
them. So is it worth rescuing them? Of course it is. Just ask the
rescuer who placed a 15-year-old blind Chihuahua! Or the rescue
group that placed a 15-year-old cat into a great home after months
of wondering if this cat would ever get a new home because of his
age! He got a new home in a big house.
Personally, the greatest feelings of joy I have
experienced happened when older dogs finally got new homes. An eight-year-old
German Shepherd I was helping got a perfect new home — it
took 15 months, but now she is sleeping on the couch on her blanket
like she has always lived there. A twelve-year-old Chihuahua with
a terrible skin condition who was looking so sad and forlorn in
his cage at a shelter just got adopted. And another 13-year-old
cat has finally received inquiries from not one but two potential
new homes.
So keep a positive outlook when looking for homes
for senior animals. Don't forget that many older adults, including
seniors, prefer an older pet for their calm demeanor. Share your
love of animals and help give an older pet a new chance.
There are numerous reasons why an older pet might
be the preferred choice for an adopter. For example:
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Older dogs settle in easily,
because they've learned what it takes to get along with others
and become part of a pack. |
| • |
Older dogs are instant companions -- ready
for hiking, car trips, and other things you like to do. |
| • |
Older dogs are good at giving love, once
they get into their new, loving home. They are grateful for
the second chance they've been given. |
| • |
What you see is what you get: Unlike puppies,
older dogs have grown into their shape and personality. Puppies
can grow up to be quite different from what they seemed at
first. |
For more good reasons to adopt an older pet, click
here. The article offers top ten reasons to adopt a senior dog,
but many of them apply to cats as well!
Joan
Antelman is the publisher of the Senior
Pets Newsletter, dedicated to finding homes for senior dogs
and cats in New York City and its surrounding area. Joan works full-time
for the New York City Department of Probation and spends much of
her spare time helping animals and walking rescue dogs.
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