Adopt

My name is
Sapphire!

Posted 21 hours ago | Updated 16 hours ago

Adoption process
1

Submit Application

2

Interview

3

Meet the Pet

4

Sign Adoption Contract

5

Pay Fee

6

Take the Pet Home

Adoption fee: $90

This helps Humane Society of Harris County with pet care costs.

My basic info

Breed
Domestic Shorthair
Color
Black (All)
Age
3 months old, Kitten
Sex
Female
Pet ID
4679
Hair Length

My story

This pet has no story. Click the “Ask About Me” button to view the contact information for the organization caring for me.
Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
4679
Contact
Email
Address
3938 Barnes Mill Rd., Hamilton, GA 31811
Donation

Their adoption process

1.

Submit Application

2.

Interview

3.

Meet the Pet

4.

Sign Adoption Contract

5.

Pay Fee

6.

Take the Pet Home

Additional adoption info

All animals are spayed or neutered before adoption, are microchipped, have all age appropriate vaccinations, are disease tested, dogs are heartworm free and are on heartworm preventative. In addition each animal comes with a 30 day gift health insurance policy from Shelter Care.

An adoption application is required. Home visits may be required for bully breeds.

Adoption fees:

In residence to 6 weeks - Dogs $125 / Cats $90
In residence 6 weeks to 6 months Dogs and Cats $75
In residence over 6 months Dogs and Cats $40

Adoption application

Go meet their pets

Adoption and Education Center Hours:

Noon to 5:30 pm Monday thrugh Friday
Noon to 4 pm Saturdays
Closed Sundays

More about this rescue

The Humane Society of Harris County was founded in 1991 and has continually serviced Harris County and the surrounding area for 24 years. HSHC currently provides shelter and adoption opportunities for homeless dogs and cats though a small network of foster homes and a small kennel on loan to us by a Harris County resident. Just over 600 animals have found new, permanent homes since 2008. In addition, we provide numerous outreach programs including:
• HSHC Pet Food Pantry, which is run in coordination with the Harris County Meals-on-Wheels program. The program has distributed over 4,000 pounds of food since its inception.
• “Tag You’re It”, a pet identification initiative that encourages residents to properly identify their pets by offering low cost microchips and tags. Over 200 resident dogs and cats have been identified through this program.
• Dog Obedience Classes to help local residents train their dogs and overcome behavior problems that cause owners to relinquish their animals to shelters.
• “Helping Hounds” a program run in cooperation with the Muscogee County Youth Development Campus pairing youth offenders with shelter dogs. The program is built on the premise that dogs and people together can become the catalyst for a positive change in each other’s lives.

Other pets at this rescue