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Let's Get Spanish Dogs to Good Homes

Every 3 minutes an animal in Spain is abandoned...this blog os to share the unrelenting work of some people in Spain and outside Spain who are committed to helping the abandoned ones...together we can all make a positive difference and help Spain put an end to this unbelievable situation.
This blog will also help us raise the profile of dogs in need of homes - foster homes & forever homes, necessary medical care & help raise funds to help the dogs.

Luca, 10 mths gorgeous GSD fellow - needs a loving home
Monday, August 11, 2014

Let me introduce LUCA to you - Luca, a young GSD about 11mths, full of happiness and affection - will you offer him a loving & fun home, LUCA is such a relaxed and happy dog - all he wants to do is chase his tail, go for a walk here or there, play with his doggie friends and then come for a good cuddle.  LUCA will be a fantastic family dog, he just wants to know who is fis family or loving owner.  LUCA will give back lots of affection, fun and delight - he will be a very faithful dog for the person who says 'yes' to giving this lovely dog a good home.

      

I first saw Luca, just 2 days before he was due to be put to sleep - just a young, playful innocent pup dumped by a callous previous owner in the kill pound, beyond  Badajoz, just before the border with Portugal.  This pound has had a reputation for killing - either pts or slow starvation.  Neither is a good option as far as I am concerned, so I took him out and placed him with a great foster carer.  Luca quickly got an adoption offer when I posted him on our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/OlivenzaPerreraRescue/?fref=ts which is a page a friend of mine and I set up to help home the dogs at this remote pound.

As he got an adoption offer, I could afford to put Luca in paid foster care, as it would only take 1 month to prepare him for his trip to Northern England.  Dogs can travel 3 weeks after their rabies vaccination and Luca had a confirmed adoption.

Unfortunately, one of his adopters was taken sriously ill and rushed to hospital, with what as confirmed a long term, serious condition.  So Luca's adoption collapsed and he remains kind of lost in foster care, 85€ a month in the Albox Town area.

Can you help towards Luca's foster fees? Donations, marked 'Luca' to Paypal dogstohomes@gmail.com all amounts count!! :) :) 

If you would like to offer Luca a loving and responsible home, please contact me at dogstohomes@gmail.com or by whatsapp +336 59 74 75 57 Please provide your email address and phone number/whatsapp/fb link which ever is the best way to contact you and we'll proceed from there.  Luka has an adoption fee of 65€ which covers his chip, passport, rabies vaccination.  He will need to be speyed and I have a good vet who does this for 60€ Luca can also travel out of Spain - transport costs apply.

 

 



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One animal dumped in Spain every three minutes
Monday, August 11, 2014

One animal dumped in Spain every three minutes, reveals bestselling author and petition-starter 
By: thinkSPAIN , Tuesday, July 29, 2014 

 

SPAIN has the worst record in Europe for pets being abandoned, with one animal dumped every three minutes.

Author and journalist Rosa Montero has brought this to the public's attention and started a petition on campaign site Avaaz calling for tougher legislation on cruelty and neglect of animals, given that at present, pet protection laws are within the jurisdiction of regional governments, meaning there are 17 different ones in place and not all of them are suitably effective. 

Parliament has approved a motion to call for the central government to crack down on animal mistreatment, but Sra Montero says it is unlikely to come into effect very quickly. 

She says she and Avaaz will send the petition to the ministry of agriculture once it has reached 200,000 signatures, and hopes that the public voice will compel the government into urgent action 'in time to save the lives of thousands of pets'.

As well as stiffer criminal sentences for ill-treatment and neglect of animals, the new law is expected to cover population control – such as sterilising and neutering feral cats – and place a ban on any dog pounds or rescue centres putting animals down unless they are actually suffering incurably and it would be cruel to keep them alive. 

Sra Montero – author of bestselling novels such as History of a transparent king, Trembling, Beautiful and dark, Beloved master, The Tartar's heart andLovers and enemies, as well as being a regular columnist in national daily broadsheets – says July and August are the 'worst' months for pets being abandoned since this is the height of the breeding season and also a time when owners go on holiday, with some having few scruples about leaving their cats and dogs to fend for themselves and starve. 

Despite popular misconception, Spaniards in general are an animal-loving race and this is evidenced by the fact that every town and village is required to have a council-funded rescue centre for dogs and cats, run by volunteers, and very few of these will put a healthy animal to sleep or even a sick one if there is any chance of a cure, however expensive. 

Vets in Spain are generally much cheaper than in the UK, since their overall conviction is that if they charge too much, owners will not seek treatment for their animals when they need it. 

Most younger adults are against bull-fighting or any bull-related events at festivals where the animals may get hurt, and some say even their middle-aged or elderly parents are now starting to see that it is cruel and ceasing to support it. 

Bull-fighting is banned altogether in the regions of Catalunya and the Canary Islands.

And many Spanish people regularly feed colonies of feral cats living in their area. 

But at present, having pets neutered or spayed is not de rigueur as it is in northern European countries. 

Spaying and neutering: Key in the battle against pet neglect

As a general rule, Spanish pet-owners believe northern Europe's automatic sterilisation of dogs and cats as soon as they are old enough is a 'cultural' issue, because these nations 'consider it unsightly' when an animal's genitals are visible, as shown by reports in various media. 

And myths abound relating to neutering of dogs and cats, with many deciding not to do so based upon beliefs that they will 'become fat and lazy' or will be 'more prone to infections', neither of which are the case. 

Many Spanish vets and animal rescue centres have launched campaigns to convince pet owners to have their dogs and cats spayed or neutered, stressing that the operation is routine and low-risk, does not affect the animal's personality or body weight, and that they are less – not more – likely to suffer infections if they are sterilised. 

Failing to have animals sterilised is part of the problem which leads to pets being dumped – people who do not have the time, space or means to feed and care for large litters constantly being produced are more likely to be tempted to abandon them somewhere, or continually palm them off onto already-overstretched animal protection centres.

Please sign the petition and help bring change forward faster:

https://secure.avaaz.org/es/sos_mascotas_rosa_montero_7/



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