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Fostering - It’s a Tough Job, But Somebody’s Gotta Do It!

10/17/2019

1 Comment

 
By Lindsay Long
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I was introduced to Country Roads Animal Rescue in 2018 when I adopted Maverick. I had lost my two dogs in a cruel twist of fate and was looking for a new companion. I had seen Country Roads on social media, but didn’t know a whole lot about them. Long story short, I have always been partial to labs, black labs in particular, and they had two brothers at the time. Maverick has been the best – he’s chaotic, fun, has a huge personality, and a confidence that some don’t understand (mainly because I tell him at least 15 times a day how handsome he is). ​​​

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Since adopting Maverick, I have continued to follow Country Roads on social media and watching their call for fosters. In February 2018, they posted a black and white pit mix that was on death row, super skinny, and trembling at the shelter. For some reason the look in her eyes stopped me in my tracks. I was sitting in a work conference at the time and couldn’t stop looking at the video they posted of her. I contacted the rescue and said if they couldn’t find another foster for her, I would be willing to foster her. The day before she was set to be euthanized, I was contacted because no one else had stepped up

When I picked her up, she was nothing but a bag of bones! I think I could probably count every bone in her body. It was quickly discovered that probably due to her rough life, she was not going to tolerate Maverick (nothing anything new for Maverick) or my cats for that matter. Betty is a special foster. She is basically boarded in my house because she does not like my animals. She stays in a kennel in a bedroom on her “down” time because she and Maverick do not do well at all; partly because of her, but partly because of Maverick too – he’s a lot! Yet she still seems happy and she knows the routine and the rotation and seems good with it. While I think eventually, she needs to go to a single animal home, for now we make do with the situation.
Then, last week, I guess I was bored or needed a challenge and decided I could handle two puppies. The puppies have been great! They’re puppies, so they are a lot of work, but I knew that before I agreed to take them. It took me a LONG time to decide that was I was ready to give puppies a try. That decision took some time because I had Betty to consider and I had my life to consider. Would I have enough time to devote to them? Would Betty suffer because of new puppies? Logistically, how would juggle everything? Months…I thought about these things for months before I felt confident that I could take puppies on knowing I may have them for 2 weeks or I may have them for 6 months. 
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​Rose (left) and Oliver (right)

Fostering is a BIG commitment. A dog may be in a foster home for 2 weeks or 2 years, there’s no guarantee. Sometimes a dog may be dog friendly, other times it may want to eat everything with 4 legs. Going into it, I know fostering isn’t a lifetime commitment like adopting a dog, but I also consider what happens if I have the dog for an extended period of time. The situation with Betty isn’t ideal, but it’s what I signed up to do when I signed up to be a foster. Dogs aren’t perfect, they require time and attention and training. And rescues depend on fosters to help save these dogs. 

Country Roads provides a tremendous network of fosters that are more than willing to offer advice and support to other fosters. They have helped me in my times of “what the heck did I just do”, when things don’t go as planned. For every difficult, or less than ideal situation, there are 10 times more rewarding situations when it comes to fostering. And sticking with it has proved even more rewarding that one could ever imagine!   
1 Comment
Carolyn
7/28/2021 01:39:14 pm

OMG, when I saw your post about Maverick, my heart skipped a beat. I'm the person who found Maverick and his littermates in March of 2018 as I was driving home from visiting my horse at the stable where I boarded in NE OKC.
As I was approaching NE 63rd and Air Depot I saw a car that had pulled into a driveway that leads into a pasture and I could see a handful of small puppies hanging out there. I pulled over to see what was going on...there was a man and two children there looking at the puppies who were all just sitting there, a little dazed and confused. He said they weren't his and then he and the children left. I was in the process of packing my house up and moving and had a box in the trunk. I pulled it out, loaded up the puppies (I believe there were five) and took them to Central OK Humane on Western. They gave me some puppy food and advice and then I took my box of puppies home for the night. I had two dogs and three cats already and knew I couldn't possibly take on a litter of puppies that would need to be vetted and spayed and neutered and then rehomed. The next morning I took them to OKC Animal Welfare. They gave me their ID numbers and assured me that they most likely would be picked up by a rescue. When I checked back later, I was informed that they had been taken in by Country Roads. I then watched and waited to see those sweet puppies find their forever homes. I'm so glad you got Maverick...their foster family took the cutest pics and his was probably my favorite. Since that time, I've become a foster for Central OK Humane, but I still think about Maverick and his crew whenever I pass by NE 63rd and Air Depot...if a coyote or a hawk hadn't gotten them, the chilly weather would have been a challenge. Your post makes me so happy! Thanks for adopting a shelter dog.

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