Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
A friend posted this on her FB wall. I thought about not posting, it's the holidays after all, we don't need sadness. But the awful truth is this could happen by February to some unsuspecting family and worse, some adorable, helpless little puppy. This place is after all a place to come for knowledge.
My biggest wish this year is that no dog, not just doodles, finds a short lived home and ends up somewhere like this.
The shelter manager's letter:
"I am posting this (and it is long) because I think our society needs a huge wake-up call.
As a shelter manager, I am going to share a little insight with you all - a view from the inside, if you will.
Maybe
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Actually, in many shelters, it is not even as pleasant as described here. There are still places that use gas, and other places that use a method called a "heart stick", which I will not describe to spare you all the horror of it, and if you are smart, you will do yourself a big favor and don't look it up. Just trust me that anything would be kinder.
As F said, the main difference I see in the procedure described here and my experience (which has sadly been four times now) is that a sedative is administered first intravenously, and they are peacefully asleep when the "pink stuff" is administered.
What everyone says is absolutely true. I had to go to the vet with my Beloved Golden, Chloe, last March. I honestly think she felt relieved. She had bone cancer and a broken front leg. Instead of waiting for us to help her out of the car, she jumped out and practically ran to the door. It's almost like she knew they were going to help her. It was the hardest thing I have ever done! I have heard some people say that you should just drop them off and go to make it easier on yourself. But that's not what its all about. I think that without her family who loved her, she would have been very afraid at the end and I did not want her to think we had abandoned her when she needed us most! She gave us everything she had and she deserved nothing less than for us to hold her and speak gentle sweet words to her.
My husband says that those frightened animals give off pheromones at the end and that is why all the other dogs "hit the brakes" when taken to the room. In the room where the family goes, The sole purpose of that room is not the same.
I would talk ahead of time with your vet, but my experience with both of my two previous dogs has been a peaceful passing. Everyone was gentle and caring. Teddy showed no distress at his surroundings as long as I was there. First a mild sedative and then I held him as he peacefully fell asleep in my arms. Then he was given an IV, which I must admit I didn't really notice as I was so focused on just being close to him and letting him know he was loved. There was no drama. No struggle. No added pain. Perhaps it speaks to how much they love us and we love them.
Thank you all so much for your responses. It is comforting to know that those of you who have faced this awful decision have felt that it was a peaceful event!
This sends chills down my spine, the truth really is frightening.
Well said Camilla. I don't blame the shelters. They are overwhelmed. I blame the stupid selfish people who don't fix their pets. The rural "hunters" who let that old lab breed and breed again hoping to get another good hunting dog and disposing of all the puppies that don't work out. Those pups come in packed transports to be dumped here, up north. I've been there to pick up foster pups...it's not pretty. The greedy puppy mills that breed pups by the dozen. And the irresponsible people who buy a dog on a whim without understanding what it means. There should be a crime in here somewhere.
The real crime is that people think of puppies as objects and dogs as things.
We all live in a happy place with our doodles, they are "beings" that we love and cherish. The key is to make the others realize what a joy our fur babies are. This forum helps but we all have to take that extra few minutes and opportunity to enlighten people whenever we can.
Yesterday a young woman was walking by my store and saw Daisy, she just had to come in...her first thought was to go out and get her child from the car so she could meet Daisy which she did. During the excitement the Mom said "you really take good care of your dog, I want to take her home, can I have her", before I had a second to answer her little girl said "Mommy, you can't just take some ladies dog, she loves her" I said "yep, just like your Mommy loves you" and the lady said "maybe we can get you a puppy" and I kid you not the little one who was about 7 said. Mom, you don't have the time, dogs are a lotta work. Out of the mouth of babes.
Sign this child up as a DRC volunteer immediately!
Smart little girl! Lisa, I like the word "enlighten." You're so right. Each of us can be "ambassadors,"especially since so many people ask about our dogs. It always starts with "Ohhh he's so beautiful and he doesn't shed right? Where did you get him? I'd love a dog like that! He seems so smart and well behaved!" Alarm bells! I try to give a gentle but honest response. " Thank you, he is wonderful but what you're seeing takes a lot of work and love. No shedding means lots of grooming. Easy to train means smart enough to drive you crazy. Especially during puppy madness. People-oriented means this dog needs to be an active part of your life. Always. Too many end up in shelters. Still interested?" :) Yay for the few who truly are! Finnegan has enriched my life. He sees things I don't, he celebrates things I'd miss, we meet people I would never have met without him, he makes everybody laugh, and his devotion and trust in me are pure grace. I thought I was buying a puppy but what I was given was a "gift." And when I come on DK, I see this multiplied by a thousand dogs/doodles! My Christmas "wish" is that more people say "this is for life" before they buy that puppy or rehome that dog.
You've made so many good points.
What a brilliant kid!
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