Dal-Savers Dalmatian
Rescue, Inc.
Hot Line: (414) 297-9210 (3257)
Fax: (414) 228-1182 Fax: (815) 874-1720
Website: www.DalRescue.net E-Mail: LoveADal@yahoo.com
How can you help rescue?
Many people think if they
can't foster dogs, they can't help rescue.
Nothing could be further from the truth!
Here is a partial list of things YOU may be able to do.
1. Apply to be a rescue representative for
your area.
2. Pay for an ad in your local/metropolitan
paper giving contact information for rescue.
3. Transport a dog.
4. Go to the local shelter and watch out for
needy dogs.
5. Provide local vet clinics with contact
information and/or educational materials on responsible pet ownership.
6. Attend public education days and try to
educate people on responsible pet ownership.
7. Conduct a home visit or accompany a
rescue person on the home visit.
8. Go with a rescue person to the vet to
help if there is more than one dog.
9. Write a column for your local newspaper,
club or rescue newsletter on dogs currently looking for homes, ways to help
rescue, or responsible dog ownership in general.
10.
Drive
a rescue to and from vet appointments.
11. Talk to local vets and encourage them to
offer discounts to rescues.
12.
Maintain
web site listings, showing dogs available.
13.
Help
organize and run fund-raising events.
14.
Hang
a poster at the grocery store, giving contact information for rescue.
15.
Go
to a foster home once a week to help socialize a dog.
16.
Let
rescue know when/where you'll be flying and that you'd be willing to be a
rescued dog's escort.
17.
Put
together a *Owner's Manual* for those who adopt rescued dogs of your breed.
18.
Provide
post-adoption follow up or support.
19.
Offer
to test a foster dog with cat.
20.
Microchip
your own dogs if you are a breeder, and register the chips, so if your dogs
ever come into rescue, you can be contacted to take responsibility for your
dog.
21.
Donate
a small percentage of the sale of each dog to rescue if you are a breeder.
22.
Have
a yard sale and donate the money to rescue.
23.
Make
a financial donation (even the smallest amount helps).
24.
Donate
a dog bed or towels or other bedding type items.
25.
Donate
a sterilized bone, a chew toy, or stuffed squeaky toy.
26.
Donate
a crate.
27.
Donate
a blanket or baby blankets.
28.
Donate
a stainless steel food dish.
29.
Donate
a collar, leash or harness.
30.
Donate
some grooming supplies (shampoos, brushes, ear cleaner, toothbrush/toothpaste,
etc.).
31.
Donate
some treats or a bag of food.
32.
Donate
long distance calling cards.
33.
Donate
a gift certificate to a pet store (one that sells supplies only).
34.
Donate
a raffle item if your club is holding a fundraiser.
35.
Donate
flea control products (Bio-spot, Advantage, Frontline, etc.).
36.
Donate
a canine first aid kit.
37.
Donate
a spay or neuter each year (or some vaccinations).
38.
Donate
a bottle of bleach or other cleaning products.
39.
Donate
or loan a portable pen/crate to a foster home.
40.
Donate
printer paper, envelopes and stamps to your rescue.
41.
Donate
sheets of linoleum or other flooring materials to put under crates to protect
the foster home's flooring.
42.
Donate
other types of dog toys that might be safe for rescues.
43.
Buy
two of those really neat dog items you "have to have" and donate one
to Rescue.
44.
Donate
the use of your scanner or digital camera.
45.
Donate
the use of a photocopier.
46.
Host
rescue photos with an information link on your website.
47.
Loan
your carpet steam cleaner to someone who has fostered a dog that was sick or
marked in the house.
48.
Use
your video camera to film a rescue dog in action.
49.
Pay
the cost of shipping a dog to its new home.
50.
Pay
a house-cleaning service to do the spring cleaning for someone who fosters dogs
all the time.
51.
Lend
you artistic talents to your rescue's newsletter, fund-raising ideas, T-shirt
designs.
52.
Go
with a rescue person to the vet if a foster dog needs to be euthanized due to
incurable health conditions and suffering.
53.
Go
to local shelters and meet with shelter staff about how to identify your breed
or provide photos and breed information, showing the different types the breed
may come in and the different color combinations.
54.
Go
to local businesses and solicit donations for a rescue's fund-raising event.
55.
Help
pet owners be better pet owners by being available to answer training
questions.
56.
Loan
a crate if a dog needs to travel by air.
57.
Donate
a coupon for a free car wash or gas or inside cleaning of a vehicle for a
foster home.
58.
Make
financial arrangements in your will to cover the cost of caring for your dogs
after you are gone - so Rescue won't have to.
59.
Make
a bequest in your will to your local or national Rescue.
60.
Donate
your professional services as an accountant or lawyer.
61.
Donate
other services if you run your own business.
62.
Loan
your cell phone (and cover costs for any calls) to someone transporting a
rescue.
63.
Donate
your *used* pen/crate when you get a new one.
64.
Organize
a rescued dog picnic or other event to reunite the other adopters and volunteers.
65.
Educate
friends/family/coworkers on the reasons NOT to buy from a pet store. Encourage them to adopt from rescues or
shelters, or to purchase ONLY from a responsible breeder.
66.
Join
your local kennel club or dog training club and become involved in
community-level activities.
67.
Volunteer
at your local shelter/humane society.
68.
Place
a link from your own website to a rescue website.
69.
Remember
that rescuing a dog involved the effort and time of many people and make
yourself available on an emergency basis to do *whatever* is needed.
70.
Do
something not listed above to help rescue.