Check out our sister brand, Kinship, for vet chat, a nutrition calculator, basic obedience training, and (much) more. So you're never flying solo in this pet parenting thing.
Wall-E was brought into a North Carolina animal control as a stray who was not claimed. This poor little guy was not doing well in the shelter environment and was shutting down. Since the shelter was at capacity, he was scheduled for euthanasia if a rescue partner could not be found. So we stepped in and Wall-E is now in foster care.
Wall-E has been coming out of his shell in foster care and we are starting to see his personality peeping out now and then! He is likely less than a year old, and is looking to his foster brother and sister for cues in how to deal with the world around him.
As we learn more about Wall-E, we will update his profile. For now, he is a scared baby who is trying to figure out what is happening to him and who he can trust.
If you would like to meet Wall-E, please fill out our adoption application!
Wall-E was brought into a North Carolina animal control as a stray who was not claimed. This poor little guy was not doing well in the shelter environment and was shutting down. Since the shelter was at capacity, he was scheduled for euthanasia if a rescue partner could not be found. So we stepped in and Wall-E is now in foster care.
Wall-E has been coming out of his shell in foster care and we are starting to see his personality peeping out now and then! He is likely less than a year old, and is looking to his foster brother and sister for cues in how to deal with the world around him.
As we learn more about Wall-E, we will update his profile. For now, he is a scared baby who is trying to figure out what is happening to him and who he can trust.
If you would like to meet Wall-E, please fill out our adoption application!
Our dogs are located at the Roxbury Correctional Facility and are enrolled in the Happy Hounds Prison Dog Program. Meet and greets with the dogs are through appointment only.
Our dogs are located at the Roxbury Correctional Facility and are enrolled in the Happy Hounds Prison Dog Program. Meet and greets with the dogs are through appointment only.
Our dogs are located at the Roxbury Correctional Facility and are enrolled in the Happy Hounds Prison Dog Program. Meet and greets with the dogs are through appointment only.
Our dogs are located at the Roxbury Correctional Facility and are enrolled in the Happy Hounds Prison Dog Program. Meet and greets with the dogs are through appointment only.
More about this rescue
OUR HISTORY
In 2010, Eileen Gideon’s family gave her the gift of an adorable bloodhound puppy for her birthday. She named him Jethro. When Jethro had his first vet appointment, Eileen discovered that he had some hereditary health issues. Jethro, it turned out, like many puppies, had come from a pet store that purchased their puppies from an Amish puppy mill. This discovery led Eileen to begin researching puppy mills, breeders, and the overwhelming number of pets in shelters and rescues in need of homes.
The more Eileen learned the more she realized she needed to become actively involved. Eileen founded Uniting 2 Save Animals (U2SA), a 501(3)c organization dedicated to decreasing the number of unwanted, homeless pets in our area. Between 2011 and 2022, U2SA provided over 3000 free and low-cost spay and neuters to those in need, as well as assisting with dozens of veterinary bills for local rescues. In 2017, U2SA began funding the Happy Hounds Prison Dog Program in Hagerstown, MD. This organization provides positive-based reinforcement training and behavior modification for dogs at risk of euthanasia as well as dog handling skills and training for Inmates they can use to obtain employment post-incarceration. In early 2022, Jethro passed away and U2SA was renamed Jethro’s Happy Hounds House in memory of Jethro. Jethro’s changed focus to providing more direct assistance placing homeless dogs in adoptive and foster homes as well as supporting our rescue partners with food and veterinary expenses.
OUR HISTORY
In 2010, Eileen Gideon’s family gave her the gift of an adorable bloodhound puppy for her birthday. She named him Jethro. When Jethro had his first vet appointment, Eileen discovered that he had some hereditary health issues. Jethro, it turned out, like many puppies, had come from a pet store that purchased their puppies from an Amish puppy mill. This discovery led Eileen to begin researching puppy mills, breeders, and the overwhelming number of pets in shelters and rescues in need of homes.
The more Eileen learned the more she realized she needed to become actively involved. Eileen founded Uniting 2 Save Animals (U2SA), a 501(3)c organization dedicated to decreasing the number of unwanted, homeless pets in our area. Between 2011 and 2022, U2SA provided over 3000 free and low-cost spay and neuters to those in need, as well as assisting with dozens of veterinary bills for local rescues. In 2017, U2SA began funding the Happy Hounds Prison Dog Program in Hagerstown, MD. This organization provides positive-based reinforcement training and behavior modification for dogs at risk of euthanasia as well as dog handling skills and training for Inmates they can use to obtain employment post-incarceration. In early 2022, Jethro passed away and U2SA was renamed Jethro’s Happy Hounds House in memory of Jethro. Jethro’s changed focus to providing more direct assistance placing homeless dogs in adoptive and foster homes as well as supporting our rescue partners with food and veterinary expenses.
Other pets at this
rescue
We'll also keep you updated on Max's adoption status with email updates.