PLEASE Please, help if you can.....

Miss Chopper

New Member
I hope someone in the Connecticut area is able to help...please, if you know someone that might be able to make a difference....pass this on to them.
I have put this out to every forum I visit...(Which is three)



I don't normally post stuff like this, so feel free to delete it...

The greyhound track in Plainfield, CT voted on April 26th that they would discontinue greyhound racing. Unfortunately - and heartbreakingly - they've also decided that rescuers have only two weeks to get the dogs out, and any dogs remaining at the track on May 14th will be euthanized. This is a monumental task because there are at least 500 dogs currently at the track. These are all young, healthy dogs, 2-4 years of age, who would make great family pets.

Why is the track doing this? Greyhound racing is a business and because the track is no longer profitable, they're getting out. To us, dogs are cherished companions. To the greyhound racing industry, dogs are expendable commodities to be disposed of in whatever way is least expensive and most convenient when they aren't making money.

We've committed to saving as many dogs as we possibly can in the next two weeks. We'll be working with an experienced greyhound rescuer who has been placing retired greyhounds for many years. She will be going to the track and bringing us dogs. As soon as we have more room, we'll do it again. We will repeat as many times as we can before May 14th. After May 14th, there will be no dogs left alive at the track.

In order to save as many dogs as we can, we are going to try something we've never done before; sending as many as possible out into foster care by May 14th. Every time we send a dog into an adoptive home or a foster home, we can take another dog off the track. We will take the fostered dogs back into the Dakin Animal Shelter for adoption over the next few months as spaces open up for them - as long as they're off the track by May 14th, they'll be safe.

How can you help?

* Adopt a greyhound They're wonderful dogs - gentle, quiet, sweet, and graceful. The ones we'll be getting will be good companions with other dogs and with cats. Surprisingly, they're couch potatoes. They do need to be in a fenced area or leash walked; they aren't dogs to let run loose. For information on what it's like to take a greyhound home, visit www.greyhoundgang.com. To find out what greys we have available for adoption, call us at 413-548-9898 or visit our dog adoption page.
* Foster a greyhound If we can send greys into foster care and out of our Shelter, we can pull more from the track before May 14. We'll get them back into the Shelter over the next few months. We will provide all their medical care and a crate to make their transition easier. You provide your time & love and together we will give them a new life! For information on what it's like to take a greyhound home, visit www.greyhoundgang.com. If you can help, or are interested in more information, contact us at 413-548-9898.
* Donate money. We are going to need extra funds to help these dogs. We'll be buying crates and other supplies as well as paying all their medical bills. You can send a check to: Dakin Animal Shelter, 163 Montague Road, Leverett MA 01054, or donate online. Please mark your donation "Save the Greys".
* Donate a large dog crate. We need these to send with the dogs going into foster care.
* Spread the word! The more people who know about this tragedy, the more help the dogs will get.

Many of you have seen greyhounds in the community - they're lovely, gentle dogs. When we started working with greyhounds, we discovered that there are a lot of misconceptions about them.

* Greys are not hyper - they're actually couch potatoes!
* They love to run - for about 5 minutes - in a safe, fenced area.
* Greys spend most of their day snoozing and adore soft sleeping places and all the comforts in life.
* They are actually very good dogs for apartments or small homes because of their low activity level.
* They are very clean dogs, and in some ways are very catlike in their cleanliness and love of comfort.
* Most greyhounds - including all the ones we'll be getting - can live with other dogs and cats, once they've been introduced, and actually love living with other animals.
* They rarely bark and shed little.
* In their life on the track, they live in crates for 22 hours per day, so most things in the 'real world' are a surprise to them.
* They've never seen simple things such as: slippery floors (wood, tile); stairs; television; windows; cats; dogs who are not greyhounds!
* They generally housebreak very easily because they're completely crate trained (they aren't housebroken because they've never been in a house, so they have to learn what a house is!).
* They walk very, very politely on leash - they learn that at the track.
* Greyhounds are very good companions for homes with gentle children because of their own gentle nature.

This is a tragedy of enormous proportions, and we've decided to throw everything we've got into doing as much as we can. It's easy to get overwhelmed thinking about the scope of the problem - and do nothing. If we instead work together as a community, we CAN make a difference. The Dakin Animal Shelter has always relied upon our community for our support, and we're counting on you now. With your help, we WILL make a difference.

Please, before it's too late...Thank-you from the ones without a voice.
 
I'd like to help by adopting, but I live in a small apartment. Maybe when I get a house, I can talk the significant-other into letting me get one. She likes those annoying small yapping dogs. :nono:
 
I read about this somewhere else too. It is really really sad and Erik and I have already sent a little bit of money to the cause. I know a lot of orginizations that are helping these puppies out. I think that my school (vet tech school) is raising money to send and even thinking about bringing one of the dogs to the school although we usualy get our greyhounds (3 a semester) from a track out here.
 
Well, thanks for reading it...if there is anyone you can sent this to that lives in the Connecticut area please do so.
 
I'd help if I could, but I suspect the shipping etc would cost me an arm and a leg and by the time the pocchies got here my current dog would probably rip it to shreds.
 
Rescue organizations abound for greyhounds, they're on it and these dogs won't be arbitrarily euthanized. The racetrack itself has committed to keeping the kennels open "until the greyhounds are suitably placed". So. It's a bit of hyped up media and uses some not-so-subtle scare tactics, but it's still a lovely charity any time of year, these items are always needed, and a greyhound is a wonderful pet if someone feels they can give one a home, one from anywhere, not just Conneticut. Dalmatians also need a good deal of rescue, help and placement because of stupid selfish people.
 
What does it cost to adopt a greyhound?

The adoption fee covers the veterinary expenses incurred in the US. The fee covers the spaying/neutering, vaccinations for rabies and distemper, teeth cleaning with a fluoride treatment, blood test for heartworm and a veterinary exam. New adoptive families are expected to reimburse the veterinary expense in the amount of 350.00$

That's a little more than I'm prepared to pay for a used dog.
 
I just had to take 1 full "brown&tan" hound, and 2 of her partial puppies (8mo old)
To the pound because of my neighbor. :crying4:
 
they all do that. Rescue organizations do tend to expect a larger "donation" than than does the Humane Society though.
 
I'd love to adopt one, but I have two problems. Number 1, I'm in Missouri.

Number 2, 350 vet bill? Um, wtf did they do to these dogs? I find it interesting that "rescue" groups always tend to charge exhorbant fees when the local shelter charges 40 bucks.
 
i'd adopt a couple but i doubt the current dog would be all that pleased about it.
last thing we need is dogs fighting.
 
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