Sentences with phrase «unfortunately dogs in shelters»

Not exact matches

Unfortunately a dog which has been kept in a shelter even for a few days will have learned to relieve itself on a hard floor, so he may well need some house training.
Unfortunately, many shelter dogs exhibit unwanted behaviors that interfere with their adoption prospects — often stemming from a lack in confidence or socialization.
Unfortunately, right now, millions of dogs are in shelters and foster care still waiting to find a family.
Just like you can't judge a book by it's cover, every dog that unfortunately ends up in a shelter, should not be judged by what breed the dog is, especially if the shelter employees assume that the dog in question is a certain breed, their chances of being adopted may be lessened.
Unfortunately, too many dogs are in shelters, and people are scared to adopt them because they think there must be some bad reason that they were sent to the shelter.
«Unfortunately, many dogs that wind up in shelters have never received training or guidance when in reality their behavioral problems are correctable,» said Steven Appelbaum, president and CEO of Animal Behavior College.
Unfortunately many of the pit bulls and pit bull mixes you would come across in city shelters or similar locations, have been bred, kept and trained as fighting dogs, or were kept as guard dogs by drug dealers to be aggressive to any humans other than their owners.
We all know many dogs sadly end up in shelters; unfortunately this is often because the owner didn't make a responsible decision, or chose the wrong breed or dog.
Unfortunately, we are living in a time when many dogs are re-homed or given to shelters due to behavior problems.
They are commonly found in... MORE sheltersunfortunately, mixed breed dogs make up a large portion of abandoned and unwanted pets.
«Unfortunately, despite being a model student, Macy was the only dog at the end of the program scheduled to return to a kill shelter instead of an adoptive home or no - kill rescue,» according to RockySpot Rescue in Newcastle.
Unfortunately, senior dogs and pit bulls are often the most overlooked dogs in shelters, arguably making us elderbulls the most difficult dogs to be saved.
Unfortunately, during these times, people lose their jobs, have to move in with family members, can't take their dogs and then you have a 5 - year - old family member in the shelter — depressed, sad and you see the difference when that dog gets adopted.
This results, unfortunately, in dogs not being properly trained and socialized and then dumped into shelters.
Unfortunately, in the days immediately following the rescue in Guangzhou, rescued dogs had had to be relocated to a secret location when angry villagers stormed the temporary shelter where they were being housed.
Unfortunately, guessing can often result in mislabeling, which, due to wrongful stereotypes surrounding Pit Bull - type dogs, can influence how long a dog is at the shelter before being adopted.
Unfortunately, un-owned dogs do not get this protection, and heartworm infections are a big problem in shelter animals.
Unfortunately, too many dogs are in shelters, and people are scared to adopt them because they think there must be some reason that they were sent to the shelter to begin with.
Unfortunately for the dogs sitting in kennels, their true personalities will not shine through when you come to visit them at the shelter.
Unfortunately most of the dogs of any breed that are in the shelters today are not there because of their own problems but because of the problems of their previous owner.
Unfortunately, «black dog bias» is particularly prevalent in the south, and black dogs are the most commonly killed in southern shelters.
Unfortunately, at our shelter, the president would not allow us to implement our ideas for keeping the animals calmer... things like playing calming music like «Through a Dog's Ear» through the speaker system in the kennels, which would also keep the people calmer, or using Rescue Remedy in the dogs» water bowl or on the dogs themselves.
Unfortunately, a huge number of these dogs will be destroyed in shelters or killed in the streets.
Unfortunately for most shelters, humane societies and animal rescue groups, the dogs that they take in are generally too stressed out to focus on a game of fetch and too hyperactive from being cooped up most of the day to be on their best behavior when a potential adopting family happens along.
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