Post around your neighborhood (or put in your neighbor's mailboxes), at local veterinary offices and stores.
Make flyers with your pet's photograph to
post around your neighborhood.
Create flyers with a photo of the animal, the date and location it was found, and your contact information to
post around your neighborhood and with nearby businesses.
Step 3: Create flyers and
post them around your neighborhood, at veterinary offices, pet supply stores, and everywhere else!
Make flyers with your pet's picture and
post these around the neighborhood, in local pet stores and veterinary clinics, and around retail stores with high foot traffic, like grocery stores.
Post them around your neighborhood and in local grocery stores, vet offices, pet stores and community centers.
And print fliers (one site is at site.keepdoggiesafe.com/pdfprint/lost-dog-poster.php), then take them door to door and
post them around the neighborhood.
Not exact matches
Oh there is plenty of negativity
around, atheists don't have a corner on that; — RRB -... the loving, kind, altruistic atheists aren't
posting on discussion boards; they're reading to kids, planting trees, teaching classes, cleaning up litter, rescuing dogs and rivers and forests and bad
neighborhoods.
Plenty of them stuck
around, too — RSS subscriptions to e.politics spiked when the link was
posted, nosing over 1000 and staying in that
neighborhood ever since.
As we walked
around the
neighborhood (literally from coffee to the
post office and back
around to our cars), I saw so many cute things: fun restaurants, coffee shops I'd love to try, art installations, and enticing boutiques.
The days of
posting a flyer
around the
neighborhood are over.
Post this flyer with permission in as many places
around the
neighborhood as possible: pet shops, veterinarian and doctors offices, supermarkets, police precincts, bulletin boards, bus stops, taxi services, laundromats, delivery people, schools, etc..
In addition to microchipping your pet, contacting local veterinarians and animal shelters,
posting flyers
around your
neighborhood and / or near where the pet was lost, and
posting to social media, The Humane Society of Harford County (HSHC) now offers an additional tool to help lost dogs find their way back home: Finding Rover.
You can
post the cat's picture on craigslist's lost and found or make flyers to disperse
around your
neighborhood.
Over the past few months, I've noticed an increased number of
posts on our community forum about coyote sightings
around our
neighborhood in Smyrna, GA..
There are so many different ways you can sponsor your special cat, such as placing promotional posters
around your
neighborhood,
posting his or her story on your social media and wearing a t - shirt ($ 10 donation) that shows - off your cat.
Put up fliers
around your
neighborhood or areas where you know there are community cats, or
post on local listservs.
Post your pet's resume where allowed
around your
neighborhood, in pet supply stores, grocery stores, laundromats, etc..
Contact your local shelter or rescue group (you can search for groups near you on Petfinder) and ask if they have a donation wish list or other flyer they'd like to you to
post around your office or
neighborhood.
Seeing a poster boasting the words «lost dog» or «lost cat» accompanied by a photo of the adorable animal plastered
around a
neighborhood can be heartbreaking for community members, but for that pet's family,
posting those signs is even more devastating.
-
Post flyers
around the
neighborhood where your pet went missing.
PUBLIC ART March 9: Mark Bradford «s «Sexy Cash» mural, which reference flyers
posted around the artist's Los Angeles area studio advertising easy cash for properties during the housing market crash, is installed at 7540 Fay Avenue in the La Jolla
neighborhood of San Diego, Calif..
Some of it has happened sort of independently of what the lawyers have actually been doing, and more having to do with how Google's getting smarter, and when we talk about specifically in local search, that's definitely played a big role, that Google has evolved to give much more localized and personalized results than they used to, and that's caused the effect of people in your local area being able to find local lawyers, as opposed to if you wrote about a consumer law
post and somebody on the other side of the country finds it, now you're going to see Google serving results for consumer lawyers that are in the
neighborhood,
around the corner.
Putting up fliers and signs
around your
neighborhood can generate some calls, and there's a lot of free websites where you can
post information.
SF New Developments is starting a new series of blog
posts with a weekly update on properties sold in specific
neighborhoods and buildings
around the Bay Area.
Also, as a recent blog
post from Classic American Homes points out, getting out and walking
around the
neighborhood is also key in terms of assessing the noise and smell of a
neighborhood.