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Tails of the Tundra currently covers Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware
and parts of Maryland, New York and West Virginia.
Please
look at the map on the right and click on your area. You will be
directed to the appropriate page which will allow you to meet the
dogs available for adoption in your area who are currently staying
with foster families.
Don't
forget to Read about the breed
If you haven't before experienced the pleasure--and the challenge--of
living with a husky, we recommend you visit our breed
information page.
Submit an application
If, after reading about these lively dogs and their antics, you
feel you are up for the challenge and you live in our servicing
area, fill out an adoption
application. (If you are outside our servicing areas, check
the national rescue site at www.siberianrescue.com
for a rescue closer to you.)
The application process
After you submit your adoption application, a member of our application
committee will email or call you to confirm we have received your
application. If you are emailed, expect a call within the next couple
days to discuss & review your application. The reviewer will
be asking questions and taking notes based on your answers to get
an idea on what type of dog will be a good fit for both your family
and any other pets in your home. This process is important in determining
suitability for the actual adoption day. Once we have confirmed
your personal information, we will then confirm your vet references.
This may take between one and six days depending on the availability
of the references, as vet offices are often busy and often we must
wait for a return call. After the vet check is complete, we contact
your personal references. Once they have been contacted, the application
process is complete. At this point the approved applications are
forwarded to a TOTTSHR volunteer that is in charge of scheduling
the appointment for your adoption and home check.
The adoption appointment
A TOTTSHR volunteer scheduler will then contact you to review the
dogs currently available in your area. In reviewing these dogs with
you they will also go over the specifics of what you are looking
for in your new dog. This helps the scheduler to try and pin point
which dogs might be the best candidates to bring to your home taking
into account things such as: if you have kids, dogs, cats, the height
of your fence if you have one, the energy level you are looking
for and more. The scheduler will discuss with the foster parents/owner
surrenders your situation and any positives or negatives of their
particular dog being suitable. The scheduler will also ask them
to confirm their availability over the next 2 or so weeks to set
up transport of the dogs to your home. Because most volunteers have
full-time jobs, the appointment will almost always be on a weekend.
It’s natural for you to be anxious to welcome your new family
member, and if it seems we are taking too long to get back to you
to schedule the adoption day, its just because we are working hard
to bring you the best available dogs for your home. We
will try to make this process as speedy as possible, as these dogs
deserve to start their new life with you as soon as possible.
The scheduler will then contact you to schedule an appointment for
your adoption and home check. We will come to your home
with two or three dogs that we feel, based on our discussions with
you, would fit well in your family. If we all feel a particular
dog is a good match, you can adopt the dog at that time, and the
process is complete. We hope that your home is the very last stop
on the dog's journey and we do all we can to help you and your dog
make the transition easier, including providing you with an information
packet loaded with tips and phone numbers. We also call you periodically
to see how things are going and to help you work through any issues
that may have arisen after the adoption.
Please
note that we have revised our vet care standards to include more
testing and reduce the frequency of some vaccinations in accordance
with current findings in the Veterinary field. For more information
on the current standards in vet care, please visit our Pet
Care Resources page.
Our
quality standard vet care is as follows:
-
Spay/Neuter
- While
some veterinarians are spaying and neutering dogs at younger
than 6 months, we feel that it is safer for the dog to wait
until they have reached 6 months of age before having them undergo
the surgery. For dogs that have not reached 6 months of age,
we do require a $150 deposit that we return to you when you
provide us with proof that the dog has been spayed or neutered.
-
Complete
Diagnostic Blood Panel - These
tests that are not normally ordered by many shelters and rescue
groups are run to ensure the proper functioning of internal
organs and to detect possible infection. It also provides baseline
values for the future care of the dog.
- Senior
Wellness Profile w/ T4 - is done on all dogs 8 years
and older (includes urinalysis and T4 Thyroid panel).
-
Heartworm
Test - If the heartworm test is negative, the dog is
placed on regular heartworm preventative. If the heartworm test
is positive, the dog is treated to eradicate the heartworms
and then placed on regular heartworm preventative.
- Lyme
Test (C4) - If the dog is positive the dog will be treated
for Lyme and a follow up C6 Antigen Lyme test will be done.
- Rabies
vaccination - done every 3 years, if no prior medical
history is available the dog is given a 3-year Rabies vaccination.
- DHP
(Distemper, Hepatitis, Parvo) vaccination
- done every 3 years,
if no prior medical history is available the dog is given a 3-year
vaccination.
-
Bordatella
(kennel cough) vaccination - yearly.
- Leptospirosis
vaccination
- done yearly ONLY after the dog is over the age of one.
-
Flea
and tick preventative - monthly.
- Broad
Spectrum De-worming
- done on all dogs within the first week of entering foster care.
- Puppy
Vaccination Protocol - We follow the current core vaccination
guidelines of the AAHA. Please
visit our Pet Care resources page for links to the most recent
guidelines available.
- Microchip
- we make every effort to have each dog microchipped prior to
placement.
Our
adoption donation requirements are as follows:
-
Puppies
6 months of age or younger require a donation of $325. In addition,
for dogs less than 6 months old that are adopted before they
are spayed or neutered, we require a $150 deposit (refunded
when proof of spay/neuter is provided).
-
Dogs
over 6 months and under 8 years old require a donation of $275.
-
Dogs
8 years and older require a donation of $150.
We
realize that most people want cute, fuzzy puppies, but our senior
dogs can provide the same love and adoration as a puppy, without
all that messy teething, chewing and training. Think of them as
puppies without training wheels. Make sure you check out The
Joys of Owning a Mature Dog.
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