
What do we do at Diana’s Grove Dog Rescue We are one of many places and groups that are a part of what I call the grass roots animal rescue movement. We don’t have a facility. We aren’t funded or paid by the city or the county. No buildings, no vet on staff, no employees, no office staff, kennel staff or even a kennel - and still, we save lives, lots of lives. We placed 217 dogs last year. The year ended with 45 dogs in our care. We saved 263 lives in 2005. We will save a lot more this year.
If we don’t have a facility or even a kennel, what do we do? Each grass roots group is different. Some are networks of foster families, some are individuals who take in one litter of pups at a time, but most are similar to us - just people opening their homes to abandoned pets. And, at times, great kindness and good fortune enable us to pour concrete and make pens that are safe because they can be sanitized. Good fortune and a generous donation enable us to build a sheltered area for housing or put in a fenced play yard. Good fortune enables us to care more effectively for the animals that we rescue. Adoption fees enable us to spay, neuter, vaccinate and feed the dogs in our care, and provide medical care and long term rehabilitation for the less fortunate dogs. They live in our cabins and the main house. They go in and out through the dog door. They curl up under the dining room table. They sit on the couch - oh, yes, they do - and watch television with the family at night. They hang out in the office and nest under my desk. My small two-room cabin houses 15 to 19 dogs each night. The living room has 5 crates. The bedroom has 5 more crates and a king-sized bed that holds 2 people and 4 to 6 dogs. That is a peek into one home at the Grove, where every household has a dog...or two. I am often asked where and how we get our dogs. Years ago, we found most of our dogs sitting on the side of the road waiting to die, or in the woods waiting to be saved by a passing humanitarian. We still find lost or dumped dogs on the side of the road, but not as often. Now, we get calls. People are referred to us by the county sheriff, or a local veterinarian. People who care seek help for a dog they found or who finds them. They find us. We take in and place about 25 dogs a month.
It is a grass roots movement, just people responding with compassion to the face waiting there on the side of road. Petfinder, that internet adoption service that lets groups like ours find homes as well as dogs, began by setting up a website for a cluster of East Coast shelters. They said if their service placed one dog a month, it would be worth the effort. Now, we are one of over 8,000 shelters and grass roots groups listed on Petfinder. Petfinder just celebrated their 10,000,000 th - yes, their ten millionth - adoption. One in ten dogs in American homes found their family through Petfinder. Together, we do make a difference.
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