Browsing all articles tagged with cats

We’re doing well!

KEEP VOTING!

This race is about endurance, and we’re in for a virtual “Ironman”.

http://www.refresheverything.com/letsadopt

I believe this little video will “speak” to each and everyone of those who watch it…

We are in a long distance run…

Come run with us…

Please vote for Let’s Adopt at the Pepsi Project… and SHARE… :-)



Dear Friends Of Let’s Adopt!


Cheeta during initial critical treatment

Cheeta was rushed to our clinic last week with a totally destroyed leg.

The damage was so great that it had to be amputated.


Cheeta recovering- finally a safe place to cuddle and exhale

She is now a gorgeous three legged kitty.

Hairy Steak (named that way because Peke sees her as a potential lunch) had an equally tragic story.. she fell into a semi-empty pool and she was left there for two days.

By the time she arrived,  she was in a coma and blind.


Hairy Steak’s first steps recovering
Lots of care made her get out of her state and she is now an amazing kitty as you can see in the pictures.

snuggle time “zzZZzzzZZzzZZ”

Bearing in mind that they are very good friends and have gone through so much, we were keen on re-homing them together.

UPDATE: Cheeta + Hairy Steak have been adopted to TEXAS!!

and moved with the help of a flight volunteer!!!


kisses goodbye….

Thanks to all of you who are making our mission possible.
As you can see, we are all volunteers with no federal grants or deep pockets. We finance all of our rescue missions with kind contributions to our Simba Fund + out of pocket.
What’s unique about Let’s Adopt! is that we have zero overhead. Every single cent of your contribution (after PayPal fees) goes directly the care of our animals!
Chances are that most of the funds you see listed on the Simba Fund Chip In, have already been spent and put into action.

Thank You for your continuous support and making our global vision a reality.

BE The Change
Misha Dee


Dear Friends,
last month I asked whether, we as a community could save 100 animals this summer.

What has happened since…

I’ve met Mary Ann, a wonderful lady from NC.She saved several cats from a property, who’s owner threatened repeatedly

Using cats for target practice for procreating? An oxymoronic situation considering who's doing the shootin'

to just use the cats  for target practice.
Mary Ann and her patient husband set up traps, and over the course of a week were able to catch all of them.

trapped kitty - ready to be spayed

All have been altered, vaccinated and an older kitty is being treated for a couple of fighting wounds.
Stay tuned for Mary Ann’s story…..

a new lease on life instead of a never ending cycle of kittens

Then there is Daniela, who literally took us up on our challenge the very next day. She lives in Atlanta, went to a high kill shelter in Rome, GA and saved a beautiful English shepherd mix from death row.

Daniela named him Borgo, after a district in Rome.


Borgo on Death Row at the Rome, GA animal pound

Within days Borgo came down with the kennel cough. Daniela spent hours taking him to the vet, treating him, comforting him.

After several baths, a trip to the groomer, lots of love, vaccinations and finally getting neutered – Borgo is ready to move to his new home, which is already waiting for him in Indiana.
Unfortunately, Daniela is a poor student, with a minimum wage job on the side and has exhausted her resources.

She needs help with transport and/or shipping Borgo to Indiana. Please contact Daniela if you can help. dragomirovad@yahoo.com

What about the challenge?

We are a community of over 2000 members in the US. I think we can do better. Daniela, a student, with a minimum wage job, living in a small apartment has proven that there’s always a way to save a life.

Borgo and his personal angel, Daniela

Every life is worth saving. No matter how old or broken an animal is. We owe it to them to make things right.
If we don’t intervene, who will?
What can WE – as a community, as individuals do this coming month?

Step ONE: sign up as a volunteer with us.
if you can’t volunteer please consider supporting us via the Simba Fund.
100 cents of each dollar go to the care of our animals, and funding of special rescue operations. Let’s Adopt! does not have any overhead, because we are ALL volunteers.
This sets us apart from any other big organization.

  • Send me your stories and pictures of the animals you saved.
  • Sign up to volunteer for us. We are looking for volunteers in ALL 50 States and also in Canada RIGHT NOW.

Shoot me an email with your information:

  • Name
  • Location
  • Volunteer Interest

Let’s make this summer one to remember…

Let's Adopt! Summer Of Luuuuv 2010

The summer we saved 100 animals - TOGETHER!

BE The Change
~Misha



Most of you will remember the case of Gulumser:

http://animoto.com/play/XCOO0fTvdZOA8u654I94eA

Joy’s case is in a way, much worst. Whilst Gulumser condition was created by an infestation of worms, Joy’s case is different.

Joy’s condition is the result of torture.

We are taking up this case. Joy will be in treatment until she is ready to go to a loving home.
Please support our work by contributing to the Simba Fund http://bethechange.chipin.com/

I posted this earlier on my profile.
I’m in
shock and disbelief about how we as humans can do this to innocent
sentient beings – just because they trust us or are dependent on us.HOW? WHY? What causes a young man or woman to do this to a kitten, just a few weeks old? Is it evil – is it us? What is boredom, numbness?…Joy will live – we have promised her this.
I want to see her eyes shine again – the way my foster kittens’ eyes shine every day I when they crawl all over me, purring, playing, being mischievous.


I want Joy to have all that and more. Whoever took it from her will have to deal with  their own karma. Our mission is to give Joy back what she lost…. trust and love. Please help us and support our cause by contributing to the Simba Fund.100% of each Dollar goes straight to the care of our animals.
We have no overhead, because we are virtual.
Most of the money you see accumulated in the chip in, has likely been already spent…

BE The Change!
Misha Dee



You’re reading this because you’re probably a member of Let’s Adopt!
I applaud you for joining our networks.

Now I want to ask you to join our tribe, by becoming an active member of our operations, to join our tribe!
We are of course animal lovers, but we are activists first. Which means, that we love all the cute pictures of pups and kitties. However, there are too many cute pups and kitties dying in our so-called shelters and by the hands of abusers and breeders every single day.
We must act – NOW!

I am often disillusioned by what I see, especially on the web.
Horrendous abuse, crush videos, starved animals, scared animals going crazy in their kennels at the pound.
I have seen many of these cases in my work as an activist and rescuer. The 1-day-old kittens I raised with an eyedropper or feeding tube, just to see them succumb to a simple upper respiratory infection. The kittens that were exposed to FIP, and ultimately died because their intestines and organs literally liquefied inside of them.

However there were hundreds that were a joy to foster and raised to be strong enough to be adopted. There are many, many success stories, which by far outweigh the bad experiences.
Now I want YOU to experience the feeling of saving a life and what an impact you alone can make in your community.
I want YOU to reach out to your local pound and rescue a dog or a cat.

Rescue an animal from death row - TODAY!

Become its caretaker and angel.
We will then rally as a network to adopt the animal into a new home.

adopting an animal will complete any family

Our adoption criteria are strict, yet very simple.

  • the adopter has at least one other animal
  • the animal will live indoors only! Not in the yard, not on a tie-out, not in a garage, or a barn. It will live indoors as part of the adopters family.
  • the animal will be fed a raw diet only. Your animal will be healthier, you will be happier, and you’ll save money in the long run, on cost of food and vet bills. More info can be found at http://rawlearning.com
  • We do not apply an adoption fee. One can’t buy any Let’s Adopt! dog or cat.
  • We believe that adopting an animal is a privilege, not mercy.
  • The adopter will create a Facebook album with photos of the animal with its new family and updates.

These are our adoption rules in a nutshell.
Do you think you can handle it?
Have you been thinking of how in the world can you make a difference at these overcrowded pounds? Well, here is your chance to put your action where your heart is.

  • Pull an animal.
  • Then take it home, let it settle in,

let the dog or cat settle down for a few days

  • take pictures and post it on the Let’s Adopt! USA page,
  • Include all details you have about the animal:
  • Age, temper, likes, dislikes, history (stray, dumped by owner, etc)
  • We’ll campaign to get the animals adopted.

Do you realize that you will be saving TWO lives at once.
Not only will you be taking the one dog off death row, but another one will have a better chance, because there’s new cage space. And hopefully, you’ll inspire friends and family to do the same all over the country.
Perhaps concentrate on high kill facilities such as many municipal facilities in the South, from Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas – some pounds have a 90 (that’s NINETY) % kill rate.
Here’s where you can make a big difference.
There are many small groups that are willing to help you pull an animal and organize transport.
I will be listing some of these groups and links soon.
For now – please search your heart and decide whether you can open your home to a rescue this summer. I know you can and want to.

Let us help you figure out how and make it a reality. For the animals and for you.

We can potentially save hundreds of animals this summer. Are you with us?

Got Foster Dog?


Let’s start saving lives – one dog, one cat at the time.

BE The Change
Misha Dee

Read more »



Today’s blog is actually inspired and for the greater part written by one of my dear teachers.

Please read it with an open mind, read it again with your mind inspired, and then read it again, with your heart ready to spring into action.

Cruelty is an infectious disease and one must strictly guard oneself against it. Some students seem to have this peculiar infection and they somehow gradually dominate the others. Probably they feel it is very manly, for their elders are often cruel in their words, in their attitudes, in their gestures, in their pride. This cruelty exists in the world. The responsibility of the student and please remember with what significance we are using that word – is to avoid any form of cruelty.

Jidduji talking to students
Jidduji with children

Once many years ago I was invited to talk at a school in California and as I entered the school a boy of ten or so was passing me with a large bird, caught in a trap, whose legs were broken.

.

I stopped and looked at the boy without saying a word. His face expressed fear and when I finished the talk and came out the boy – a stranger – came up to me with tears in his eyes and said, ”Sir, it will never happen again.” He was afraid that I would tell the headmaster and there would be a scene about it and as I didn’t say a word to either the boy or the headmaster about the cruel incident, his awareness of the terrible thing he had done made him realize the enormity of the act.

It is important to be aware of one’s own activities and if there is affection then cruelty has no place in our life at any time. In western countries you see the birds carefully nurtured and later in the season shot for sport and then eaten. The cruelty of hunting, killing small animals, has become part of our civilization, like war, like torture, and the acts of terrorists and kidnappers.

Dogs tortured to death for consumption in Korea

In our intimate personal relationships there is also a great deal of cruelty, anger, hurting each other. The world has become a dangerous place in which to live and in our schools any form of coercion, threat, anger must be totally and completely avoided for all these harden the heart and mind, and affection cannot co-exist with cruelty.

You understand, as a student, how important it is to realize that any form of cruelty not only hardens your heart but perverts your thinking, distorts your actions. The mind, like the heart, is a delicate instrument, sensitive and very capable, and when cruelty and oppression touch it then there is a hardening of the self. Affection, love, has no centre as the self.

Now having read this and having understood so far what is said, what will you do about it? You have studied what has been said, you are learning the content of these words; what then is your action? Your response is not merely to study and learn but also to act. Most of us know and are aware of all the implications of cruelty and of what it actually does both outwardly and inwardly, and leave it at that without doing anything about it – thinking one thing and doing just the opposite. This not only breeds a great deal of conflict but also hypocrisy.

Most students do not like to be hypocrites; they like to look at facts but they do not always act. So the responsibility of the student is to see the facts about cruelty and without any persuasion or cajoling understand what is implied and do something about it. The doing is perhaps a greater responsibility. People generally live with ideas and beliefs totally unrelated to their daily life and so this naturally becomes hypocrisy.

So don’t be a hypocrite – which doesn’t mean you must be rude, aggressive or overly critical. When there is affection there is inevitably courtesy without hypocrisy.

What is the responsibility of the teacher who has studied, learned, and acts toward the student? Cruelty has many forms. A look, a gesture, a sharp remark, and above all comparison. Our whole educational system is based on comparison. A is better than B and so B must conform to or imitate A. This in essence is cruelty, and ultimately its expression is examinations; so what is the responsibility of the educator who sees the truth of this?

How will he teach any subject without reward and punishment, knowing that there must be some kind of report indicating the capacity of the student? Can the teacher do this? Is it compatible with affection? If the central reality of affection is there, has comparison any place at all? Can the teacher eliminate in himself the pain of comparison?

Our whole civilization is based on hierarchical comparison both outwardly and inwardly which denies the sense of deep affection. Can we eliminate from our minds the better, the more, the stupid, the clever, this whole comparative thinking? If the teacher has understood the pain of comparison what is his responsibility in his teaching and in his action? A person who has really grasped the significance of the pain of comparison is acting from intelligence.

[Jiddu Krishnamurti - Letters to Schools Volume One 15th February, 1980]

Teachers & Students alike….

BE The Change

street dogs are fair game in many countries

Make that one phone call to report animal cruelty, help a neighbor out, who struggles with feeding their animals in this economy, make contributions to those organizations that work so hard on bringing change. Become part of the solution by volunteering your time, knowledge and resources.

Let’s Adopt! USA needs YOU – yes YOU …help us in our quest to save animals, but also to spread the word, educate the members of your community about no-kill.

Become a leader in your own community.

Visit our Facebook Group and sign up as a volunteer in the discussion area.

Let’s make some noise for the voiceless out there.

Let’s stop the brutal killings, sanctified by your city leaders, funded by your tax dollars,

Let’s put tougher laws on animal cruelty, hoarders, breeders.

Let’s DO SOMETHING.

The apathy of many people is mind-boggling to me. We have grown numb to the pictures of death row animals, mutilated, abused, sick, dying…

the suffering doesn’t end by us looking the other way…

here today ….gone tomorrow….. until the next load arrives.

Help Us, Help THEM!

BE The Change!

Misha



We are in urgent need of flight volunteers to the US, Canada (Montreal, Toronto), Germany and Holland.
Please get in touch with

Viktor: v.larkhill@googlemail.com

or contact me via

misha@myletsadopt.com

Thank You!

BE The Change

~Misha

Here’s an article by Viktor about how it works and why we are relocating animals to other countries.

Let’s Adopt! is Looking For Flight Volunteers for Angels Without Wings

Since its conception almost 2 years ago Let’s Adopt! has always been a pioneer in animal welfare related issues. We have introduced, singlehandedly, the concept of foster homes in Turkey. We have, for the first time in homing animals, put down rules other than the stupid documentations they ask for in shelters, gas bill, electricity bill, residence papers… We have, more than any bureaucratic nonsense of filling forms and providing that you live where you say you live, made sure that our dogs and cats actually LIVED INSIDE HOMES, not gardens and factory properties. We have insisted that the family should have another companion animal to adopt one from us. This is to make sure that they are aware of the responsibilities and requirements of an animal. Also, a great way to see how they care about their existing animals. We never agree to adoption of pure breeds simply on the basis of their blood. We make sure that the family adopts a stray first to be able to own a Golden Retriever or a Rottweiler.

And most of the time we have succeeded. The failures always happened when, out of the goodness of our hearts and naivete that we still
carry inside us for the goodness of people, we made exceptions.

No more exceptions, ever! Our rules are chiseled in stone and won’t be broken.

But, then there is something that really breaks our backs: The crisis and the way it effects thousand of families in this country and around the world. This is one of the reasons why there are so many abandoned animals, not only here but all around the world. Yet, people in Europe and North America still have the necessary funds to take care of their animals where the animals are seen as a part of the family and not accessories that look good near the fire place.

Why do I ramble on? Because that is what I do to ask for your help again, as you need to know why we do the things we do and need the
things we need?

We have declared that due to the non-existence of adoptions in the current climate we have a massive backlog of animals who need homes.

Not only that, we are experiencing an influx of animals which we had homed and now are being returned to us after months of being home dogs. Imagine the total destruction of the animals, imagine the damage the family makes their kids go through, imagine the state we are in…

Give Our Dogs Wiiiiings

Friends, though not every day of the week, we receive emails from our members in Europe and North America where people tell us that they are moved by the stories and struggles of our animals, asking us whether it would be possible to adopt them outside the country. After careful consideration, Skype conferences and many emails, we come to a decision.

It is all okay until when we need to fly our babies out, after their legal requirements are fully met;  chips, bloodwork when necessary,
vaccinations, fulfillment of a certain age etc.

This is when we need you. Many of you are professionals, many of you take trips outside the  country for business and for leisure, many of you study in foreign countries or visit friends and family who live abroad. Be our flight volunteers!!! Fly with one of our animals,
provided that there is the perfect family waiting for them on the other end and take part in the joy of knowing you have placed a life
in need in the safest of hands.

Get in touch with me a couple of weeks before you are due to fly and hopefully we will have  a dog or a cat for you as your flight
companion.

Go on, give us wings…

Viktor Larkhill
v.larkhill@googlemail.com



Happy Spay Day From Let's Adopt! USA

Today is Spay Day…

and I would like to remind you about the importance of fixing your pets.

Here are some quick facts to remember:

One unfixed tom cat can produce THOUSANDS of kittens.

One unfixed cat can (and will) have two litters per year.

Kittens reach sexual maturity as early as at the age of 5 months.

Once a cat has given birth, she can go back into heat within 48 HOURS! As a foster volunteer veteran I have watched this happen (in disbelief) many, many times.

Contact your local animal services or do a quick online search for low cost spay/neuter in your metro area, and do the responsible thing.

Fix your animals. Do YOUR part to end the suffering of thousands of animals born each year, just to rot in pounds, being abused or starve to death before they can even open their eyes.

Thanks, and remember….

Spread The Word!

…Be The Change

~Misha



This two-level feral cat house was built by a volunteer at Ohio Alleycat Resource. We purchased it to support OAR and to give our feral cats a warm, safe place to enjoy their cat naps.

I heard over the weekend that there was snow on the ground in 49 out of 50 states, and this made me think about the feral cats who are outside trying to stay warm and find food.

I’m sure you don’t need the reminder, but you might find this list of 20 reasons to keep your cats indoors useful in educating others about why it’s irresponsible to allow their cats to roam outdoors.

Feral cats are the offspring of domestic cats and are primarily the result of pet owners’ abandonment or failure to spay and neuter their animals. Feral cat colonies can be found behind shopping areas or businesses, in alleys, parks, abandoned buildings, and rural areas.

We found a feral cat colony living under our house a few months ago, and that’s how we met Charlotte, Frida, and a few other cats who are still feral. Charlotte was still a kitten when we caught her, so we moved her inside immediately after spaying her. Frida was quite fierce with us before we trapped and spayed her, but after we did that, she changed her personality completely and decided she wanted to be an indoor lap cat. So that she is! We believe Frida and Charlotte are mother and daughter, so we are pleased that they can remain together.

Charlotte stayed in our bathroom for a couple of weeks after she was spayed so that we could socialize her and allow her to adjust to her new home.

So what’s the difference between a stray cat and a feral cat?

A stray cat:

  • may be vocal
  • may approach you and may approach food as soon as you put it down
  • may look unkempt or poorly groomed
  • may be seen at all hours of the day

A feral cat:

  • will be silent
  • will not approach you and will wait for you to move away before approaching food
  • will appear groomed
  • is generally nocturnal

Caring for a feral cat colony begins with spaying and neutering all the members of the colony. It works!

One pair of breeding cats, which can have two or more litters per year, can produce 420,000 offspring over a seven-year period.

Always seek the advice of your local cat rescue. They often will lend you humane box traps and offer low-cost or free spay/neuter surgeries for feral cats, and many of them also maintain feral cat food banks to help you offset the costs of caring for feral cats.

Here are some instructions for trapping feral cats.

These companies sell humane box traps:

Tomahawk Live Trap Co.
PO Box 323
Tomahawk, Wisconsin 54487
800.272.8727
http://www.livetrap.com/

ACES (Animal Care Equipment & Services, Inc.)
P.O. Box 3275
Crestline, California 92325
800.338.ACES
http://www.animal-care.com/

Heart of the Earth Marketing
205 High Street
Fruitdale, South Dakota 57742
P: 800.526.1644
F: 605.892.0154
http://www.animal-traps.com/

Lucy came from the streets of Turkey to join Frida and Charlotte.

Once your colony is spayed and neutered, there is still much more you can do!

Ally Cat Allies, the nation’s feral cat advocacy organization, provides some great tips on how to care for feral cat colonies.

You can also provide a feral cat shelter.

If you have a feral cat organization near you, they might have feral cat houses for sale. But you can also make them yourself with a few inexpensive supplies. You can even search Craig’s List, FreeCycle, and your local junkyards for free materials to use.

This multi-part video gives instructions for how to make very inexpensive cat shelters.

Here’s a print-out which explains how to make a feral cat shelter, and here’s another set of plans for an inexpensive feral cat shelter.

Alley Cat Allies offers instructions on how to construct an array of wonderful shelters for feral cats. You can use styrofoam boxes, plastic tubs, an old garden shed, or even old truck camper covers.

Fresh, dry straw (not hay) is the best lining material for your feral cat shelter. Don’t put blankets or towels inside because they can freeze and will not keep the cats nearly as warm.

Feral cats also need food and water.

Providing a feeding station for them is a very kind thing to do, and Alley Cat Allies provides a great set of instructions for how to build one.

I’m not an engineer and am pretty hopeless when it comes to construction. Some of you might be the same way. But that’s no reason to be deterred from helping cats. Gather some friends together, and help each other build feral cat houses and feeding stations. Or contact your local feral cat organization to see if they can help you or put you in touch with others interested in doing the same thing.

Bella is a stray cat we met while trapping the feral colony we found. She lived with us until she found her forever home with two other cats and a wonderful couple who are both nurses at our local children's hospital.

It can be tricky to provide fresh water for cats during the winter, but here are some tips to help prevent the water from freezing:

  • Use deep, narrow bowls.
  • Keep the bowls in a sunny place.
  • Refill the bowls with hot water.
  • Add a small pinch of sugar to each bowl when you refill it.
  • Purchase heated electric bowls.

If you keep your colony on a regular feeding schedule, they will be ready to eat and drink when you bring out their food and water which means that the water will be consumed before it has time to freeze.

National Feral Cat Day is October 16, but we must care for our feral cats every single day of the year.

Thank you for doing your part.



After 15 years in animal welfare as a rescuer, full-time volunteer, foster, mentor, and trustee of a grassroots rescue group in Berkeley, CA, volunteering for big established shelters, smaller shelters, no kill/kill…
I just had enough of turning in circles.
Here I was 15 years later, deeply disappointed by the lack of understanding of volunteer and shelter management by the last shelter I volunteered for the past 6 years.

I wanted change!


Each year we’d wait for the first litter to hit the shelters, and within weeks, there was mayhem, kittens/puppies everywhere. People “miraculously” found them under their porches, in their garages, no idea how they got there, but they always knew exactly how old they were
I was tired of listening to the excuses from people. It was always the animal’s fault, well if you didn’t count the allergies, baby on the way, boy/girlfriend moving in.
People are treating animals like a piece of furniture, the latest fad. Once out of fashion, they’re discarded.
Latest bold example are the little toy breeds, filling up the shelters all over the country right now. Thanks to Hollywood bimbos clutching them in front of cameras like purses – their airhead fans want to be like them, so instead of a frontal lobotomy they get a chihuahua or a pug or other little cutie.
These might be small animals, but they still need attention, affection, exercise, and yes, they live 10 years or longer. Cats can live over 20 years.
Are people not realizing that? Why is that?
Is it that the cute puppy or kitty is too tempting and they’ll agree to anything just to take the cutie home TODAY?!
I’ve held hundreds of adoption counseling sessions, and am still amazed how people setting themselves up to fail as responsible guardians.

So, what makes Let’s Adopt different?

Let’s Adopt is about awareness and holding humans accountable.
We are not in the business to build yet another shelter.
We are here to change the system.Saving lives by educating humans, changing legislature, building local communities of animal lovers from the inside out.
Each of you can contribute to our mission by joining our network on Facebook and help us grow.
We want to connect a rescuer with a foster home, and get the animal directly into its new home.
Our adoption rules are a little different than the standard “fill out application- be approved-pay & good bye- whew“.(rescuers out there, you know exactly what I mean!)
We want to educate the adopter, and ensure that s/he understands beforehand the responsibility and the gift each animal coming through Let’s Adopt! is.
We want to find forever homes. Nothing less will be good enough, and we have no issue turning applicants down. Our history in other countries prove that we’re on to something. Check out the Turkey based main page at blog.myletsadopt.com
Let’s Adopt! is not about moving a large number of animals, but about finding quality homes, educating communities and saving lives not even born yet.

The city I currently live in has it’s municipal shelter about 30 minutes from downtown.The Humane Society is a 10 minute drive.

Guess where prospective adopters will go browse for animals.
Guess where most animals are dying just days after arrival.
This needs to change!!!
I am tired of hiding the city’s dirty little secret with my tax dollars, while charity is sucking dry the donation pool. Easy, with 6 figure marketing budget.
Animal Rescue is big business.


When I went to a workshop at a Humane Society, the person leading the workshop started the day by saying… “Hello, my name is XXXXX XXXXXX, and our mission is to put us out of business….” >
Well, needless to say that after 7 years they are still up & running and probably still using the same line.
What has changed in the area? Nothing!
The municipal shelters are still overwhelmed and underfunded. The HS does good work, I don’t want to take that away from them.

However, 40 thousand animals are being killed in my metro area each year.

This is an outrage.

Which leads me back to the answer of the original question.

Why I am with Let’s Adopt!?
Because we’re here to change the game. To make to officials a bit more uncomfortable, ask tough questions and ultimately bring change. True change.
You can do this as well.
I will soon post some resources I am currently collecting for YOU to use in your community. How to start petitions, get measures on your local ballots, start a spay/neuter program… just to name a few.
So, stay tuned for that!
Meanwhile don’t forget to join the US network on Facebook.

Feel free to introduce yourself in the discussion section and share some of your local issues. Start a dialog with our virtual community…

Here’s to real change – for the animals!

One Love!
Misha



Making Dreams Come True….

Are YOU Foster Material?


Please make this image your profile picture on Facebook for the coming few weeks.
We are in such great need of foster homes around the globe.
Please support us by sharing the image on your page, and adding it as your avatar.
Thank you very much!
BE The Change!

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