Adopt

My name is Oreo!

Posted over 2 weeks ago

Adoption process
1

Submit Application

2

Approve Application

3

Meet the Pet

4

Sign Adoption Contract

5

Pay Fee

6

Take the Pet Home

My basic info

Breed
Bichon Frise/Shih Tzu
Color
Black - with White
Age
3 months old, Puppy
Size
Med. 26-60 lbs (12-27 kg) (when grown)
Weight
Sex
Female
Pet ID

My details

Checkmark in teal circle Good with kids
Checkmark in teal circle Good with dogs
Checkmark in teal circle Shots current

My personality

My story

Here's what the humans have to say about me:

Oreo is a silly and friendly little girl! She bounced around the yard like a bunny! She has received a health check, DHLPP vaccine, Bordetella vaccine, a dose of ivermectin, and we had her wormed. She's ready for her forever home and she hopes it will find her soon! She should do well in most homes and should be in the small/medium sized range when fully grown. If you're interested in her please email rescuepups411@gmail.com and if you don't receive a response within 24 hours text 330-219-4514. Thanks
Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
Contact
Phone
Website
Address
Warren, OH 44483
Donation

Their adoption process

1.

Submit Application

They will email me about the pet they seen listed to get an application for adoption. I can provide a copy of this for review.

2.

Approve Application

After reviewing the application and doing a backround/vet check I can then approve the application.

3.

Meet the Pet

After they're approved they can then schedule to meet the pet in the fosters home and determine if the pet is right for them.

4.

Sign Adoption Contract

They will then be required to sign a legally binding contract for adoption of the animal. I can send a copy of this as well.

5.

Pay Fee

They will be required to then pay the adoption fee in full. This would be discussed and agreed upon before they set up to meet the pet.

6.

Take the Pet Home

They can then take their new forever bff. They will be provided with all paperwork the animal has and be offered support if needed.

Additional adoption info

All animals are properly vetted prior to leaving. This includes proper vaccines, health check, meds and preventatives. This could be more depending on the condition of the animal. If they aren't spayed and neutered by us before adoption, they will leave on a spay/neuter contract or have an appointment setup for return to our vet for spay and neuter. All puppies must be fixed by one year of age unless specified by their qualified vet, proof will be needed either way. Any older dogs will have an appointment scheduled for sterilization and the adopter will agree to transport said animal back for that procedure. The adopter can opt out only if they have a verified appointment for spay/neuter with their own vet. Once a puppy is fixed, as long as it is within the time-frame given, they will be reimbursed $150 of their adoption fee to help cover the expense incurred. Proper proof is required and protocol must be followed. We take in a wide range of dogs (age, breed, health conditions) from various places, owner surrender, hoarder cases, abandoned, transferred from other organizations, etc. We are foster based so we can only take in what we have the space and abilities to handle at any given time. All animals will leave with their paperwork, contract, first month of preventative meds, and a welcome home bag with items like a new collar and leash, blanket that smells like home, toy/chew, dog tag, bandana, etc. This just depends on what we have on hand at that time. If you have any questions please let me know.

Go meet their pets

All animals are in foster homes until they find their new forever homes. You can meet the animal you're interested in, once approved, at the foster home they're being housed in. I will send the fosters information when needed.

More about this rescue

I have been working with animals and doing rescue work ever since I was about 9 years old. I was the kid who always brought home sick and injured animals to heal and find new homes. I first volunteered at my local animal shelter at about that same age. I have been doing dog rescue work such as this for about 13 years. It started when I was looking to get a puppy for myself. I couldn't find exactly what I wanted at that time so I decided to foster until I found the right one. I have been fostering off and on ever since! While it's not for everyone and it certainly has its ups and downs, I just don't feel like I'm complete when I'm not helping animals find their forever homes and families. Most people ask me "How do you do this? Isn't it super hard and sad?" and the answer is yes. It's loud, messy, sad, heartbreaking, draining, and gross sometimes but the rewards of seeing a sad, dirty, sick, scared animal change into the beautiful, loving, amazing pets they always deserved to be makes everything else seem well worth it. The joy from this is literally what keeps me going, it's the only thing other than my children/family that gets me out of bed and gives me purpose.

Other pets at this rescue