Thursday, November 25, 2010

DDN2.0 - A Long Overdue Update, and a Hiatus for Dogged Writer


It's been a month of madness on the home front, between juggling day jobs and night jobs and writing jobs and teaching jobs... So many jobs, so little time. But I'm pleased to announce that as of last night, I finished the last of the editing for our Youthlinks issue of Downeast Dog News, which will come out at the beginning of December. Over the course of the eight weeks that I was working with them, the Youthlinks crew and I managed to get to Portland for a pit bull awareness seminar, Augusta for a stellar interview with Maine's Animal Welfare Program director Norma Worley, Rockland and Camden for visits to the local animal shelter, and we had an in-house session with DDN publisher Wendi Smith, designer Noreen Mullaney, and ad rep Pat Demos. My hot shot reporters Terri and Kyla did a great interview with their favorite teacher, Mr. Palmer, and his hearing dog Tango.

Caleb sat still long enough to come up with some excellent questions for our interview with Norma Worley and got some fabulous shots of the animals we visited at the shelter. Terri blew me away with her focus and dedication throughout the entire program, and I was particularly impressed with her when we checked out Pit Bull 101. These guys are not the smiling, picture-perfect faces you see on billboards, they're not class valedictorians and they won't be winning athletic scholarships anywhere... Terri told me at one point that when she graduates high school, she will be the first in her family to do so. Mikayla ended up moving a week before the program let out, but it was great to watch the bond of friendship that developed between she and Terri over the course of our time together. And while Caleb tried my patience at times, I think that in the end he enjoyed himself, and he was definitely a contributing member of our team on more than one occasion.

Sooo... The Downeast Dog 2.0 pentathlon is done. While there was a ton of work involved and I would do about four hundred and six thousand things differently next time out, I wouldn't trade the experience for anything. And now all that's left is to see what the final product looks like, and check in with the students and the stellar Youthlinks staff to get their final thoughts.

In the meantime, it seems the time has come for me to pursue some other interests and writing endeavors for a while. I hope to return to Dogged Writer eventually, with renewed enthusiasm and some exciting projects to announce. Thanks to everyone who has provided such wonderful support of the writing I've done and the places I've gone. I'm sure I will be returning to the dogged side of life before too long!

Friday, October 22, 2010

Animal Welfare Success Reliant on Inter-Agency Cooperation

Being a kid in the 1970s, Sesame Street was a childhood fixture. One of the themes they were forever emphasizing on the Street was one that continues to play a crucial role in the success of our endeavors as adults: cooperation. In the world of pet pantries, where I have been immersed over the past several days, this concept is particularly crucial.

When Alyce Pincoske of the Pet Food Pantry of Maine first said "Pick us! Pick us!" in response to my query searching for animal rescue and animal welfare organizations to spotlight here in Maine, I posted a quick Facebook blurb and shot out a few e-mails to folks saying that the Fairfield-based, non-profit pet pantry was having some tough times. By the end of that first day, I'd received e-mail responses from the Humane Society of Knox County and the Penobscot Pet Pantry, my brother had agreed to let me put a container in his business to gather food donations, and the fine folks of The Postcard Dude (my little bro's business) had all put their heads together in an effort to help out. Within five days, I was able to fill my car with the food and sundries provided by those at the Postcard Dude and the Humane Society of Knox County, in addition to a tremendously generous donation from the Penobscot Pet Pantry.



With people feeling the financial pinch around the globe, and more and more causes vying for our attention - and our dollars - it becomes critical for animal welfare organizations to reach out to one another to achieve the common goal: saving more animals. Keeping pets together with the people who love them. Educating the masses about critical issues like proper nutrition, the importance of spaying and neutering, putting an end to animal cruelty. We all love animals; God knows, none of us are in this business for the money. And so when organizations come together to achieve that common goal, it makes sense that our rates of success will multiply. And so, how can we best foster the collaborative spirit celebrated in our childhoods, in a climate where numerous animal welfare organizations are vying for a relatively small amount of funds from a limited donor base?

By sharing resources in those rare times of plenty. Helping one another in education efforts. Spearheading community efforts that encourage collaboration between agencies, rather than fostering competition and small-mindedness.

Andrew East of the Penobscot Pet Pantry is currently working toward establishing a state-wide Pet Food Bank from which pet food pantries around the state could draw whenever there is a need. Food stores would be kept in a central location, and individual pet food pantries - like the one in Fairfield - could then provide food for their communities and focus their fundraising efforts on education, spaying and neutering, and providing outreach so that, ideally, there are fewer people and pets in need in the future.

It's an idea the fine folks at Sesame Street would no doubt be happy to sing about.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Downeast Dog High School Edition Takes to the Streets


Today, we had our first outing with Downeast Dog 2.0, the high school team putting together the December issue of Downeast Dog News. Up to this point, it's been a lot of me standing in front of the classroom babbling about how great being a journalist is, and then forcing my intrepid reporters to look things up online. Last week, we had a small presentation by DDN publisher Wendi Smith, designer Noreen Mullaney, and sales exec Pat Demos, which was excellent but, again, from the students' perspectives it was mostly them sitting quietly for two hours and listening to what other people had to say.

This afternoon, however, Youthlinks guru Scott Browning and I piled the students - Caleb, Mikayla, and Terri - into the YL van, and we headed to area animal rescues Camden-Rockport Animal Rescue League and the Humane Society of Knox County. The point was for the students to have an opportunity to get some photos of the animals, find out a little more about the workings and dynamics of these two shelters, and specifically to ask a couple of questions for an article they'll be doing for the paper. Mostly, though, I wanted the students to have an opportunity to see firsthand why I love what I do: you get to go meet amazing people doing great things for the community, AND you get to play with awesome animals. Seriously, now, what's not to love about that?

Though the shelters are only a few miles apart here in Knox County, they have entirely different atmospheres. The students are all familiar with HSKC, but have had limited exposure up to this point to CRARL; I was pleased that they had an opportunity to look critically at both set-ups, and see firsthand that there are many different breeds of animal shelter out there. At both shelters, we all got the chance to play with kittens and ooh and aahh over the dogs (and Poppy the Pig at HSKC, who was a huge hit), and we got tours of the facilities. CRARL shelter manager Laura Stupca did a great job of showing everyone around and making us feel welcome.

At the end of the afternoon, we had an opportunity to speak with HSKC shelter manager Theresa Gargan for a few minutes, and I got a glimpse of the vision I had when I first came up with the idea of having an issue of DDN written exclusively by teens. Because my Youthlinks gang is familiar with HSKC and they know Theresa quite well, the normal reserve between teens and adults vanished; there was joking, conversation, and plenty of questions. When we piled back into the van at the end of the day, Mikayla was listing all the cats she wanted to take home, Terri was pining over a deaf pit bull at the Camden-Rockport Animal Rescue League, and Caleb was still comparing the long-haired, half-blind cat we'd just met at the Humane Society to an elder in the Warriors series.

I'm having such fun getting to know these guys better, and have been so impressed with their compassion and devotion to the animals in our world. On Saturday, we head to Portland for a day of pit bull awareness with SOME Pit! - Terri's a HUGE pit bull fan, so she's totally psyched, and I'm pretty sure Caleb has never met a dog he didn't like. I imagine Mikayla will be plotting ways to sneak the bullies we meet back home, and with Kyla along for the trek, there's no worry that the Q&A session at the end of the SOME Pit! presentation will be dull. There's no doubt that it will be an interesting day for the whole gang - myself most definitely included!

Mikayla & Caleb with Fred the beagle

Monday, October 18, 2010

Rescue ME Monday: The Pet Food Pantry of Maine


On a cold day last February, I rented a car and make the trek to Fairfield, Maine, to do a story on their local Pet Food Pantry for Downeast Dog News. While there, I was alternately amused, impressed, and charmed by the interaction between the dozen or so volunteers who keep this little pantry going in an area that has been particularly hard-hit by the struggling Maine economy. Now, nine months later, I'm happy to say that I've been able to stay in touch with a couple of the volunteers at the Pantry, and was thrilled to hear that they were interested in being spotlighted for Rescue ME.

The Pet Food Pantry of Maine currently serves close to a hundred families, and that number is growing. They are responsible for feeding around 220 cats and 210 dogs, as well as smaller animals like rabbits, ferrets, parrakeets, and guinea pigs, every month. The Pantry also does what it can to educate families about the importance of spaying and neutering, good nutrition, and health care, and provides literature on low-cost spay/neuter programs offered around the state. As a result of their efforts working in conjunction with the Vet Tech Program at the University College of Bangor, sixteen dogs were spayed and neutered in September. There's no question that these hard-working volunteers go the extra mile everyday to accomplish their goals. In order to continue doing their good work, the Pantry was granted 501(c)3, federal non-profit status last spring, and they hold regular fundraising breakfasts, dinners, and dances. Through their efforts, individuals who might have had to surrender their pets as a result of financial hardship are now able to stay together through these tough times.

To read more about this great organization, check out my feature article in Downeast Dog News last winter.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Innovative Programs at the Humane Society of Knox County

For our final post to close out a week with the Humane Society of Knox County, I thought I'd take a look at some of the programs this great organization offers. Since 1989, the Humane Society of Knox County has sponsored innovative fundraising and educational programs to keep going in an economically challenged area. Here are three great programs the organization offers to the midcoast Maine area; they are by no means the only things that HSKC does, but they are certainly standouts!

Run-a-Hound

Working with Rockland-based Youthlinks for the second year, Run-a-Hound is a program that encourages physical fitness for young people by taking shelter dogs and high school students out every Monday afternoon for a lengthy run. You can read more about the Run-a-Hound program in the feature story written by Ivy Demos for Downeast Dog News last winter.

K-9 Corrections

My former obedience training mentor, Marie Finnegan, is the trainer-in-residence for this program teaming up inmates from the Bolduc Correctional Facility in Warren, Maine, with shelter dogs at HSKC. Once the K-9 Corrections dog has been selected, he (or she) actually goes to the Facility and lives on-site with the inmates, who are responsible for feeding, exercise, and intensive training over a period of eight to ten weeks. During that time, the goal is for each dog to become a certified Canine Good Citizen, while the inmates learn practical skills like dog training along while a hands-on lesson in compassion and responsibility. To learn more about this great program and how you can help, check out this fact sheet.

The HSKC Volunteer Mobile

Looking for a way to make your advertising stand out from the rest? The Volunteer Mobile may be just the thing: a Smart Car with ad space galore to get your message across and convey that yours is a business that truly cares. Want to learn more? Read all about it here, and find out how you can help the planet, the animals, and your business, in one fell swoop!

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Cats, Dogs... Pigs? Truly Something for Everyone at the Humane Society of Knox County

To close out my week featuring the Humane Society of Knox County in Rescue ME, I spent the afternoon chilling with some of my very favorite people and pets. HSKC is home to nearly two hundred cats at the moment, between those housed at the shelter and those kept in foster homes, as well as between fifteen and twenty dogs at any given time. They also house rabbits, parakeets, guinea pigs, and just about anything else that will fit inside the small shelter and is in need of a home. This week, that means they are also home to a pink and white pig named Poppy, who I found entirely by accident snoring contentedly in the corner of a dog kennel. Poppy was the final survivor in an animal cruelty case in Etna, Maine, where a number of horses and other farm animals were found in need of rescue. Because the lighting wasn't great, she was difficult to photograph, but here's my shot of Poppy the Pig:



In addition to Poppy the Pig, there were of course a ton of cats of all shapes and sizes to choose from. HSKC has a great community feel, with cats roaming freely around the lobby and in and out of the cat community room. Here are a few shots of the wonderful facility the folks at the Society have put together:





And some of the very contented residents...





Since this is the Dogged Writer, I would be remiss if I didn't mention some of the fine canines at HSKC. I got to meet Fred, the most awesome beagle EVER, who was scared of the cats and played with both kids and other dogs with complete abandon. Young, handsome, and utterly lovable, Fred is definitely a dog who deserves a great home. I watched an adorable Corgi go home with a sweet elderly gentleman, fell in love with a gorgeous, six-year-old male German shepherd named King, and made doe eyes at a couple of soulful hounds by the names of Devon and Abby:

A man among men: King

Irresistible: Devon

Princess Hound: Abby

And then there was this fellow, a twelve-year-old terrier with a severe flea allergy whose owners are trying to make the difficult decision whether or not they can afford to care for the little guy as he enters his twilight years:



Times are tough around the country, and I can't imagine having to make the decision to part with such a sweet old guy as little Ozzie. If his folks do indeed decide that they can't keep him any longer, however, I'm sure it won't be long before people will be lining up to give him a new forever home.

So, that was my day at HSKC. Stay tuned tomorrow as I do a final round-up and talk about three innovative, educational programs the Humane Society of Knox County is spearheading, and how you can help them continue their good work. Hope you're having a great weekend, and thanks for stopping by!

CC Comes Home: Another Old Lady Cat Retires With My Mom


Over the last couple of years, my mom has taken to providing a sort of retirement home for some lucky old lady cat or other - first with Seraphina, a lanky, funny black and white cat who was with my mom for eighteen years before she passed over the Rainbow Bridge about a year and a half ago. Then came Gabby, a cantankerous old calico who had belonged to my sister-in-law; when they had kids and the house got crowded, however, Gabby wasn't the happiest cat on the block. When space opened up at Mom's, she volunteered to take Gabs in. For a little less than a year, the calico lived the life of a queen - she slept with my mom, had the run of the house, and sat by the glass doors with tail twitching as she kept watch over the birds and squirrels who frequent Mom's back deck.

About a month ago, Mom noticed that Gabby wasn't getting around as well as she had been. When Brandi (my sister-in-law) took Gabs to the vet, they found that the old girl was riddled with cancer and her lungs had filled with fluid. After some discussion, they agreed that it would be best if Gabby was put down. Mom and Brandi - the two mamas Gabby loved best - were there for those final moments, cried together, and spent the weekend remembering all the things that made Gabby the extraordinary cat that she was.

It didn't take long, however, before Mom realized that she couldn't possibly live in a cat-free house. "I haven't lived more than two weeks without a kitty, my whole life," she told me the other day. It was sad to come home to an empty house, she said; sad to watch TV or work on the computer without a kitty purring at her side.

Last Saturday, I went to the Humane Society of Knox County to get some pictures of the cats and dogs and volunteers, in anticipation of my week featuring HSKC in Rescue ME. While there, I started talking to Jen - a shelter worker at HSKC - about my Mom's predicament, and asked her if she knew of any old lady cats who might need a good home.

Enter CC, a lanky black and white kitty who spent the first ten years of her life with a little old lady who treated the fabulous feline like a queen. Sadly, CC had nowhere to go when her owner passed away. When she came to the shelter, she refused to eat; Jen took her on as a special project, force feeding the girl until she finally decided that, perhaps, she would like to try living a little longer after all. For over a year, Jen has been fostering CC at her house.

"She gets too stressed out at the shelter, but she deserves a house where she can have the run of the place - and she's not exactly best friends with my dogs. She's a great cat, but right now she's just not getting what she deserves."

Today, Mom and I went over to HSKC and picked up CC. We were told that she would likely hide for at least a week, if not more, and not to expect too much of her at first. So... Here's CC, about ten minutes after her arrival at Mom's Home for Old Lady Cats:



Clearly, she's settling in pretty nicely, and hasn't shown the least bit of interest in hiding. She ate shortly after arriving, and has been happily exploring her new world ever since. Mom is already completely won over, and has begun rearranging the house in anticipation of any little thing CC could possibly want in her retirement - including a big, fluffy bed by the door, so that she, too, can pass her days watching the squirrels and birds on the other side of the glass. It seems CC has come home.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Creativity Corner: Creating a Child-Sized Agility Center


My mom is one of those people who is wasted in corporate America - she was born to be a toymaker. Since my nieces were born a few years ago, she's devoted her spare time to elaborate and innovative projects for the girls every Christmas, including a miniature dance studio, a "Mouse House" for a character named Millie Mouse - complete with a homemade board book my mom wrote and illustrated with photos of Millie inside her Mouse House - and an epic children's book illustrated with collages of the girls in all sorts of amazing situations. This year, since my youngest niece, Maya, is wild about dogs, Mom and I had the brilliant idea of combining our talents to create an agility center in miniature. We're just getting started, but I thought I'd share a little of what Mom has done thus far.

She found this small, lightweight bookshelf at a lawn sale for $5 - where I see something like that and think, well, "Bookshelf," she immediately starts seeing such items as the base for her elaborate creations.




Because there weren't many shelves to remove, my mom started by simply laying the shelf on its back and figuring out exactly what parts she wanted to include and how she would need to modify the whole thing. Initially, two fabric baskets were nested at the top of the shelf. She removed the baskets and used that area to create the upper level of the agility center, where we now have a dock and tub so Maya can play "Dock Dogs," since we took her to see the Dock Dogs this summer and she's been nuts about them ever since:




Underneath the dock itself, we'll be adding a sliding curtain and several dollhouse dog crates we found on Amazon; that will be where the dogs hang out in between their performances. Also on the lower level, Mom cut a couple of boards to form a solid floor over the slats at the back of the shelf. She was able to find a cheap, green scatter rug to simulate grass, and cut it in two so that part of it sits on the shelf itself and the rest extends beyond so that there's enough room for the whole agility course. I went online and found a gently used Breyer agility set on Ebay for twenty bucks, and Mom repaired a couple of pieces that weren't quite up to snuff, so that now we have a complete agility course:




Pretty cool, eh? Now, I know what you're thinking: that's all great, but it sounds like Jen's Mom has done pretty much all of this. How does Jen get to say this is "her" project, too? Excellent question. Basically as far as I can tell, I'm a creative consultant. Plus, I get to do all the graphics to put on the sides and interior of the structure, to make it look like an authentic doggy center any junior canine aficionado would be proud to call her own. But mostly, I just get to play with the little plastic doggies while my mama's kid-friendly brain spins and somersaults. I highly recommend it. I'll be sure to post more of the project as it evolves; having seen the things Mom has created in the past, I have no doubt it will be ridiculously, fabulously elaborate by the time December 25 rolls around!

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Maddie's Story: When the Shelter Becomes Home


Less than a month ago, I wrote this post about Maddie, an adorable pup who had been at the Humane Society of Knox County for over two years, waiting for her forever home. The problem with Maddie, it turns out, was that this sweet girl had gotten very, very comfortable with her life at HSKC. She went for outings, got lots of visitors, participated in the Youthlinks Run-a-Hound program, and even had her very own outdoor kennel and doghouse made. For a dog who'd never really experienced the charms of being a full-time, live-in pet for a single family, Maddie's life at HSKC seemed like a pretty good gig.

The problem was that Maddie had become so enamored with her life at the shelter, she would shut down when she was taken to a potential adopter's house. She would starve herself, get stress-induced hot spots, try to escape... For two years, people interested in adopting the pup would bring her home only to return her a few days or a week later, frantic at Maddie's behavior.

"It was like she was doing everything she could to be brought back," Jen, one of the shelter workers, explained recently. "She just didn't know how to handle being in this whole new setting - here maybe it wasn't perfect, but at least she knew what she was getting, and she really had a pretty good life here."

Today, I'm pleased to say that Maddie seems to have found her perfect match - a former vet tech and experienced foster mom who is dealing admirably with all of Maddie's tricks.

"She starved herself that first week," Jen tells me. "And the woman says she can see a little bit of a hot spot on her tail - and about eight days in, Maddie got away, but the woman just drove up, opened the door and said, 'Maddie, wanna go for a ride?' and Maddie hopped right in."

Maddie has been in her new, hopefully-forever home for almost two weeks now - longer than any potential placement she had over the course of over two years living with HSKC.

"People thought we were crazy, keeping a dog that long, but she was such a sweet girl, we just knew if we hung in there long enough, somebody would come along."

There are very few animal shelters who have the resources to keep a dog like Maddie indefinitely, waiting for the right home to come along. At the Humane Society of Knox County, the policy is that no animal will ever be euthanized for a lack of space. In order to maintain that policy, the shelter works hard to maintain relationships with foster families, keep their adoption rates up, and do everything they can to help families in need keep their pets rather than surrendering them for financial or behavioral issues. Regardless of their efforts, it takes an extraordinary amount of resources to hold to their goal of remaining a shelter that puts animals to sleep only in cases where illness or behavioral issues make euthanasia the most humane option. In the case of Maddie - the dog who would not be placed, the mutt most likely to live out her days never knowing the love of a family - it seems that all the hard work the devoted staff and volunteers at the Humane Society of Knox County put in to keep their charges alive and well until the right forever home comes along, has indeed paid off.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Rescue ME Monday: Humane Society of Knox County


On Saturday, I had an opportunity to mosey on over to the Humane Society of Knox County, one of the local shelters here in midcoast Maine. As is usually the case, things were hopping. As soon as I walked through the door, I heard a series of feeble, high-pitched "eep-eeps." Theresa Gargan, the shelter director, quickly summoned me over to a cat carrier, where four newborn kittens were nestled under a heated towel.

"They're orphans, poor things," Theresa explained. Former HSKC employee and current foster mom extraordinaire Kendra Cochran was preparing her car to take the kittens home, where she'll be responsible for feedings every two- to three- hours until the newbies are a bit older.



Meanwhile, a mom and her two sons were in the process of adopting an adorable, fawn-colored bunny rabbit (HSKC houses cats and dogs primarily, but occasionally takes in smaller animals when there's a need). While the littlest boy wandered among the cat cages, I spent a little time in the well-ventilated, sunny cat porch, getting to know some of the residents, including this sweetie.



Afterward, I walked the grounds to check in with some of the many dogs for adoption at HSKC, many of whom were outside in their exercise pens, getting a break from their kennels. The facility has several large outdoor enclosures with secure, high fences so that the pups in residence get a chance to run off a little steam, practice their socialization skills with both people and other dogs, and meet potential adoptive families in a setting that's not quite so loud or so charged as the inside of the shelter itself.



The Humane Society of Knox County was the first animal-related job I ever had - at least, the first where I ever got paid. I cleaned out kennels, walked dogs, fostered a beautiful, deaf white cat named Victoria while she convalesced during her pregnancy, learned how to give vaccines and even how to draw blood. Though the money was nothing to celebrate - as seems inevitable in animal rescue, - I was in heaven. I was with animals, day in and day out. It gave me a taste of what it was like to be part of a caring community of fellow animal lovers, and a glimpse of all that's possible when compassionate, dedicated people work together for a common cause.

Today, nearly twenty years later (youch - how the time flies!), HSKC continues with its mission of "caring for unwanted and homeless animals while participating in activities advocating responsible pet ownership and the prevention of abuse and cruelty." The small facility serves twenty-two towns in midcoast Maine, and its official policy is to euthanize only when severe physical or behavioral issues make humane euthanasia the most viable option for the animal.

This week, I'm very pleased to make HSKC the focus of Rescue ME. We'll meet a whole lot of worthy cats and dogs (and even a guinea pig or two!) looking for forever homes, talk to the devoted staff, and get a glimpse into some of the many great, educational programs the shelter offers area residents. HSKC will have a permanent page on my website, which you can find here, and be sure to check in again over the course of the week to learn more about this hard working, small-town shelter.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Adopting a Greyhound: Life in the Fast Lane Can Be Downright Slow

Yesterday afternoon, I had another opportunity to hang at the Maine Greyhound Placement Service - this time to get some photos and video footage of their beautiful charges. When I was there last, the Canine Carnival had everyone hopping; this time, I had an opportunity to speak at length with Jess, a vet tech who interned with MGPS before recently coming on board as an official member of the organization. Since we're just finishing out the week spotlighting Maine Greyhound Placement's excellent work, this seemed a prime opportunity to share a few of the things I learned.

(1) Greyhounds require little exercise, preferring instead to spend the bulk of their time lounging. "They make great apartment dogs," Jess informed me. "They'll have bursts of energy when you first take them out, but they're okay with short walks everyday. The rest of the time, they'd rather just hang out on the couch."

(2) Unlike many big dogs, hip dysplasia is all but unheard of in greyhounds. Because of the way they are raised as pups - running in a straight line on the track, to prepare them for their racing future, - their hips form correctly and maintain good alignment throughout the course of their lives,

(3) Greyhounds live an average of twelve to fourteen years, giving them one of the longest life spans of any mid- to large- sized dog,

(4) Health problems for greyhounds are minimal, though their dental care is an issue and, like many large-breed dogs, they do have a higher risk of bone cancer than smaller dogs,

and...

(5) Another reason Greyhounds make great apartment dogs? They shed very little, and barking is a rarity.

So, if you're looking for a companion dog who's great with family and relatively low-maintenance, consider a great Grey. Need another reason to take one home? Check out Coda, a two-year-old Greyhound currently in residence at Maine Greyhound Placement, in action:

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Clean Slate Photos and Video

A few people have asked for pictures of some of the animals I mentioned in an interview I did recently on NPR, about my time living at Clean Slate Animal Rescue, an animal rescue that I founded with a man who was later arrested for animal hoarding. The video clip I have included here is of the Kentucky elementary school where Dave and I set up Clean Slate after moving from Oregon. In this clip, my former partner's eighty-five year old father, Pop, is bringing in Annie the goat for milking. While I was there, we had fourteen goats - three of whom gave milk, which we used to supplement the cat and dog food. Pop was our resident milker, having grown up on a farm. The goats would volley for the best position to get in first, as it meant they would get the first shot at the grain they loved.


Here are a couple of photos, of happier times at the rescue.

This is Donna, a dog whose tragic death was the catalyst for my departure from Clean Slate. She was a funny, quirky little spitfire who was always giving the others hell when she didn't like what they were up to, but I love this photo that Dave took of her, because it captures her in one of those rare moments when she was completely relaxed.

The farm gang back in Oregon, in the fall of 2006. This was during our glory days - the house was orderly, the animals were well fed and in good condition, and Dave, Pop, and I were all in good cheer, working together to keep things running smoothly.


Me in one of the fenced areas out behind the school, with a few of the resident dogs. The area shown was one of three fenced runs outside, and was usually filled with goats and farm animals. When giving the grass a break from hungry mouths, we would release the farm animals in the front yard and let the dogs lounge in the back.

The Kentucky school where Dave and I lived, with Festus the Donkey out front.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

'Tis the Season for Gifts that Give Back


As the holiday season approaches all too quickly, it's time to start the age-old process of agonizing over who gets what. This year, however, instead of giving gifts that will be cast aside and easily forgotten, consider shopping early for something that will leave a lasting impression - not only for you, but for those who might benefit from the goods your hard-earned dollars have purchased.

Here are a few ideas to get you started.

(1) Start by checking out GreaterGood.org. Whether your cause is Hunger & Poverty, Breast Cancer & Women's Health, Children's Health & Well-Being, Literacy & Children's Education, Protecting & Restoring the Environment, or the Care & Feeding of Rescued Animals, Greater Good's innovative online program allows "100% tax-deductible contributions to pass directly through to nonprofit causes." An excellent program that works only with reputable non-profits around the world, helping to ensure that your donation is actually going to those who need it most.

(2) Support your local non-profit. Head on over to your local animal shelter or humane society, and find out what kind of programs they have for giving. Many organizations offer sponsorship programs to help out the animals in need right in your own backyard, or have fun and funky gift shops with that perfect something special for the person who has everything. It may not be as trendy as giving to one of the larger non-profits around the country, but small shelters provide a tremendous service, and rely on their communities to keep going. Just be sure to do a little homework to ensure that your money is going to an organization you believe in: Check out the facility, ask what the percentage of a charitable donation actually goes to the operating costs of the shelter, and meet the animals. Once you're assured that this is a cause you can stand behind, get out your check book and know that you've done your part to shop locally and think globally.

(3) Consider a little elbow grease. Recruit the kids and devote a day this holiday season to something that will bring you closer together and teach a valuable lesson about community service: volunteer at your local food bank, animal rescue, children's hospital, or related charity. Set aside a couple of hours, plan to grab a family dinner afterward to talk about your experience, and foster the lessons learned by continuing a relationship with the organization after your volunteer day, if your children express interest. Volunteerism enhances a sense of community and compassion, builds confidence, and provides an opportunity for young people to develop an understanding early on about issues like homelessness, poverty, and animal cruelty. Growing up in a world as complex as hours, these are lessons every child should learn - and what better way to gain that education, than with you by their side?

(4) Check out Art for the Animals, "a unique gift giving program that combines wildlife donations and original folk art into extraordinary holiday gifts." With amazing items ranging in price from $20 to $500, including plush toys, gorgeous jewelry, handbags, hammocks, and wall art, you're sure to find something for everyone on your holiday list.

(5) Since this is Dogged Writer, I'd be remiss if I didn't finish things out with a plug for pooch-friendly buying. For innovative, fun, eco-friendly dog toys and pet supplies, check out Maine's own Planet Dog. Two-percent of all proceeds go to the Planet Dog Foundation, which supports programs "that train, place and support dogs who work to help people in need." If you're looking for something fun and funky that your dog is sure to thank you for, you can't miss with Planet Dog!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Animal Hoarding: Death and the Animal Hoarder

The first week on my own on an Oregon farm in the summer of 2006, I was caring for a batch of kittens my partner had "rescued" from a high-kill shelter in northern California. My partner, Dave, had gone back to California - I was alone with twenty dogs and about twenty cats, along with cows, llamas, chickens, a goat named Seymour and a sheep named Cornelius. My days were filled with chores - laundry, feedings, letting the dogs out, getting the dogs in. And nursing the kittens, all of whom had upper respiratory infections.

URI is a common ailment among cats in shelters. An airborne illness, it circulates and recirculates without proper care and containment, and is often fatal to kittens, senior cats, and any felines with compromised immune systems. In shelters, those afflicted are typically treated with antibiotics and quarantined until they are better, if the shelter has the space, money, and manpower to invest in the cats' recuperation. If they do not, the cats are frequently euthanized.

On the farm, we had a large, closed garage with no circulation, no heat during the winter and no air conditioning in the summer. A huge fan was set up on one end of the building to circulate the stale air within. The ill kittens were kept in a giant, metal mastiff crate big enough for me to climb into. I did this three times a day, sitting against the metal bars while kittens climbed over me or slept fitfully in my lap. They were very sick - their noses and eyes gummy with mucous, their breathing labored. I fed them baby food that they would suck from the tip of my finger. When the first one - a little tabby kitten I named Stevie - died, I was with him. I listened to him wheeze his final breath, told him it was okay to let go.

It was not a good death. I lost five more kittens that week; none of the deaths were 'good' deaths. Perhaps there is no good death for one so young, but I believe what they suffered in their final hours was among the worst ways any animal could leave this world. Holding their tiny bodies, I can remember sitting in that cage longing for a needle, for the strength to end their suffering myself, for anything to end what they were going through. What is the best way to kill a kitten?

In the year and a half that I was with Dave, I sat through many such deaths. Dave assured me that this was the part of animal rescue people didn't talk about - this was what it was like on the front lines. Animals died because people abandoned them, bred them carelessly, or returned them when they became inconvenient. We were the good guys.

Dave did not sit through the deaths. "You can't do this to yourself," he told me once, when I insisted on holding a goat as it passed from this world, wracked with convulsions. "You'll burn out if you keep doing this."

I disagreed. I had no money to get medical care for them myself, and my insistence that we take in no more until we could care for those we had, consistently fell on deaf ears. The least I could do, it seemed to me, for these animals who were pulled from shelters and never given the chance for a good life or a good death, was to sit with them in those final moments. To mark their passing, hold them, acknowledge that they had touched someone in this world.

I became the death keeper.

In a recent interview with Dick Gordon on NPR's The Story, Dick asked me in bewilderment that bordered on anger, how animal hoarders could purport to love the animals who were living in filth and neglect around them, often dying hideous deaths alone.

I don't have a definitive answer, but I watched Dave through that year and a half. He loved the animals, without question. He doted on them, agonized over what the best decision was for their well-being, and wept for them when they passed. As the months progressed and it became clear that the dream I thought we were working toward for a clean, well-run, organized facility was not a vision we shared, I saw a glimmer of something else begin to surface in Dave. He was haunted by those we couldn't save, tormented by the thought of overflowing shelters and furious with anyone who disagreed with his perspective.

His zeal became madness, difficult to argue with and impossible to understand.

Dave was terrified of death. He believed that he could tell when animals - and people - were about to die. On more than one occasion, he told me that he couldn't bear to look his aging father in the eye, because he believed he would be able to "see death," as he called it. He said the same about me at times, and spoke of it often with the animals.

"I saw it," he told me of one of the cats, Flat Tail, who died shortly after we arrived in Kentucky. "I knew he didn't have long. I don't even want to look at these guys anymore."

When death is that terrifying and that unstoppable, perhaps for him it became a manner of self-defense to stop looking the animals in the eye as the situation deteriorated, after I was gone. To forge ahead with maniacal zeal, unable to admit that the blood, sweat, and tears shed for these animals he had purported to love above all else, actually paved the way for unimaginable suffering at his hands.

I often wonder what happened in the year after I left Dave and the school, that led him to 360 animals - some living, some dead, - living as a recluse with his father, feared by many in the community, pitied by others. He was viewed as a martyr for the cause by many, even after his arrest. Letters to the editor spoke of a man who had put the animals first and done something about the hideous state of animal welfare in the south, when no one else would.

The truth may never be completely known or understood, but that disconnect between how an animal hoarder sees his situation versus the reality of his surroundings is ultimately what leads to the suffering, neglect, and eventual death of the animals in his care. It is that disconnect that must be addressed, if we are ever to understand the way a hoarder sees the world, and put an end to the chaos and suffering they create.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Rescue ME Monday: Maine Greyhound Placement Service


Each week at the Dogged Writer website, I'll be featuring a different animal rescue or animal welfare organization around the state of Maine. This week, I visited the Canine Carnival, held by the Maine Greyhound Placement Service on their 13-acre farm.

Though saddled with a spine-tingling history and allegedly haunted even now, the home of Maine Greyhound Placement Services is an unmistakably pleasant place to visit these days. MGPS is centrally located on a thirteen-acre farm in Augusta that is renowned throughout the state as the site of one of the bloodiest murders in Maine history (see the Haunted Hounds sidebar on the Rescue ME page for more details on the farm's history).

Today, however, the old farm has been infused with new life. Maine Greyhound Placement Services bought the place in 2003. Since that time, volunteers have been hard at work putting up fencing, creating large exercise pens, and renovating the old barn to make it habitable for the rescued greyhounds that MGPS pays to have shipped here from around the country, once the dogs are retired from the racing circuit. The rescue runs a gift shop (Tally Ho Gifts) from the barn, as well as a boarding facility to raise money to keep the extensive operation running. This past year, a major goal was realized when MGPS completed construction on their very own, on-site veterinary clinic, in order to take care of day-to-day medical needs and larger procedures like spaying and neutering for their charges.

On Saturday, October 2nd, MGPS opened their doors to the public for the Canine Carnival, a day-long event that volunteers hope will become an annual fundraiser. Agility and rally demonstrations, kennel tours, vendors, and a raffle were all offered under sunny skies and cool fall temperatures. As the day progressed, I had an opportunity to speak with volunteers and greyhound enthusiasts alike, to learn more about these long-legged, doe-eyed beauties.

One of the volunteers I spoke with at length was Norman Leclair and his dog Lewy, who used to race under the name PC Triple Cash. Lewy is now a therapy dog who spends a good portion of his week at area nursing homes, doing in-home visits for shut ins, and then typically does his part for his fellow greyhounds at Petco on Saturdays by wearing the MGPS red vest to raise money and awareness for the cause. Leclair is a white-haired gentleman with sparkling eyes and a deep laugh, who had no problem opening up to me about his history with, and love for, the breed. As games, activities, and chatter buzzed around us, Leclair told me that he'd known Lewy was meant for him because the dog arrived on his son's birthday - a son he had lost when the boy was only twenty-one.

"I knew as soon as I saw him that Lewy was sent to me from somebody pretty special," Leclair tells me. He smiles at the dog, lying peacefully at his feet while we chat. "People say all the time how lucky Lewy is that I saved him, but I didn't save him. He saved me."

Check out the new feature on the website, Rescue ME, for the full story on Maine Greyhound Placement Service, plus links, photos, and interviews.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Animal Hoarding: NPR Interview

On Monday, I drove to Portland to do an interview with Dick Gordon of NPR's The Story, relating my year and a half living in Oregon and Kentucky with anywhere from 75 to 110 animals with my former partner, who was later convicted of 295 counts of animal cruelty when 362 animals were found in the same Kentucky elementary school where we once ran Clean Slate Animal Rescue together.

To say the interview was difficult would be an understatement. To start with, I've been battling a wretched cold for a while now, which meant the hour and a half drive to P-Town was punctuated with bouts of coughing, random panic attacks and crying jags, and a lot of off-key singing along to the latest GLEE soundtrack. It wasn't pretty, in short. Still, I managed to get to the studio in one piece, and was met by a very nice studio tech whose name I have now completely forgotten (I was essentially focused on using as few 'ums' as possible, not choking to death on my own phlegm, and trying to keep from bursting into tears - still, I feel badly, because the tech was (a) pretty darn cute, and (b) a very nice guy).

We went into the studio, and started the interview a few minutes before eleven that morning. It was of course a remote interview - Dick Gordon wasn't there, and so I sat in the studio with headphones speaking into a gigantic puffy mic while the Cute Nameless Tech Man adjusted sound levels and smiled encouragingly. Over the course of the interview, I did have to stop a couple of times when I was completely overcome by coughing fits, but otherwise it went quite smoothly, I think. We basically ran through the entire year and a half, from my first date with Dave to our trek to California to buying the school in Kentucky, traveling cross-country, and then the decline of our relationship and my eventual departure. There were a couple of parts that were especially difficult - definitely talking about losing Benny and Donna to dog fights (the event that was the catalyst for my leaving) was very hard, but the other thing that was difficult was just trying to convey information about hoarding in general while still giving the story: I didn't want it to sound like I was preaching or some kind of expert, but definitely wanted to try and disseminate a little bit of factual information. I'm not sure whether I did that or not - honestly, the whole thing is kind of a blur.

My biggest concern at this point is just that I don't know how Dave will come out looking in all of this. It's never been my intent to make him look like a cruel man or even a crazy one... He loved the animals; that much was always clear. I wasn't a victim in any of this - it's not as though I was some wide-eyed twenty-year-old fresh off the farm, I'd been around the block a time or two. Had I known then what I know now about animal hoarding, I certainly would have handled things much differently. There are many things that I wish I had done differently, in terms of the medical care that the animals did (and did not) receive while I was there, and of course with respect to the unfathomable neglect they suffered after I left. Those are regrets I'll always carry with me, but the writing that I'm doing now, the interviews and the memoir and whatever else (if anything) comes of this, has nothing to do with any bitterness toward Dave. I haven't spoken with him since long before I read the news that he'd been arrested; I have no idea where he is now. I wish him luck. I hope that he's gotten the attention that he needs so that he might gain a little perspective and keep from repeating past patterns, but I don't know how realistic that hope is. I wish him the best.

ANYWAY... That's the stuff I didn't say in the interview, for what it's worth. As I said, I think that it went well. The episode is supposed to air on Tuesday, October 5th, so I'll be sure to post a link when it's available.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Fur n' Foliage in Thomaston

On Saturday, I had the distinct pleasure of being able to wander from my humble home and meander up the road to the old Thomaston Academy lawn, where the Humane Society of Knox County had assembled for their annual fundraiser, Fur n' Foliage. HSKC is our local shelter, consisting of a small but very committed force of staff and volunteers who care for the wayward pets who rely on them for their food, shelter, love, health, and future happiness. Over the course of the day, there was an agility demonstration, there were raffles, barbecues, and of course the ever-popular Fur n' Foliage dog walk. Here are a few snaps I caught over the course of this great, community-centric day.


This little guy just killed me - what a cutie! Before long, the sweater had to be scrapped because it was just too warm... But what a photogenic face!



A couple of lucky pups who make their homes with staff from HSKC. Up top, Moses the wonder dog and Theresa in the agility course. And below, Jen's gorgeous little dachsund.


I fell in love with this sweet old Newfy, who cemented my lifelong dream... The only purebred dog I've ever wanted of my very own is a Newfoundland. Of course, Newfy rescue will be the way I go when the time comes, but... Just look at that face. I love these guys!


Marie Finnegan tries to tempt this gorgeous mastiff, Digger, through the sample agility course. The big guy ultimately decided he'd rather go 'round the obstacles, but sat nicely in the hula hoop and was the sweetest gentleman all day long. I'm such a sucker for those big dogs!

If you're interested in learning more about HSKC, mosey on over to their website. This Friday, I'll be spending a good chunk of the day at the shelter as the first segment in my new weekly feature, Rescue ME Monday. Stop by on October 4 to read the post, complete with pics, video, and a firsthand account of what makes this little shelter tick.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

OKGo - White Knuckles for Cinema Saturday

I know it's everywhere now and it's been shared by every dog-lovin' superfreak from here to Timbuktu, but I still loooooove this video. And, of course, always a fan of OKGo!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Maddie: Is This Energetic Girl the One for You?


Maddie will have been at the Humane Society of Knox County for a year this October. That's a long time for anyone, but when you consider that for pups, one human year is equivalent to seven dog years, it becomes clear: Maddie needs a home. The reason this sweet girl has been at HSKC for so long is simple, really - she's a high-energy, intelligent dog who would likely do best in a single-dog household with someone who will be around the house a significant amount of the time. She'll need someone who can exercise her regularly, and would benefit from a securely fenced yard. If you're just looking for a hound you can lay around the house with, Maddie's probably not your best match.

So... Who is the ideal match for Maddie? It could be someone who works from home, or someone who travels and is looking for a partner on the road. In "Meet Your Match" lingo, Maddie has been designated GREEN - A Free Spirit. "Intelligent, independent, confident, and clever, I prefer making my own decisions but will listen to you if you make a good case. We’re partners in this adventure. Treat me like one and we’ll both live happily ever after."

Does this sound like the dog for you? Maddie gets along all right with some other dogs, but can't be trusted around cats or other small animals. If you live an active life and are anxious to find a loyal friend to share in your adventures, Maddie just may be the girl you've been looking for. Do yourself a favor: Give this too-often overlooked pup a second glance!

If you're interested in meeting Maddie or any number of other great, adoptable pets, contact the Humane Society of Knox County at 207-594-2200 for more information.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Think Outside the Box: Adopt a Less-Adoptable Pet Week


I only learned of the Blogpaws' Be the Change for Pets challenge yesterday, and was especially excited to find out about this week's big focus: Adopt A Less-Adoptable Pet Week. I've worked and volunteered in shelters for most of my adult life, and so have had the extraordinary privilege of meeting a whole lot of so-called "Less Adoptable" pets: the dogs who've gone a bit grey at the muzzle, sight-impaired cats or hearing-impaired hounds; animals whose devotion will know no bounds, if we can just see our way past that preconceived notion of what makes the perfect pet.

What does make the perfect pet, for you? Adopting a less adoptable pet doesn't mean ignoring your lifestyle or personality just to make a point - if you like to lay around more often than not and your idea of a good romp is a leisurely stroll in the front yard, then probably a pit bull isn't the best pet for you. But, a senior dog may be just the friend you've been looking for. Likewise, if you're on the go and want someone to keep up with you over hill and dale in the wee hours of the morn'... Well, that high-energy dog at the local shelter who's dragging the junior volunteer up and down the avenue? May be just the fit for you. Adopting a less-adoptable pet is about knowing yourself, understanding your strengths and your limitations, and looking outside the box to find the perfect companion for you. It may be that the fluffy puppy with the long line of prospective families won't fit nearly as well into your life as the shaggy dog in the corner with the winsome grin that everyone seems to pass by.

This week, follow Blogpaws' excellent advice: Give them a second glance.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Animal Hoarding and the Adoption Question

Over the weekend, a friend e-mailed me this link posted by Kimi Peck, who has been under investigation numerous times for animal hoarding in southern California. Her questionable activities have been documented on a couple of different sites, most notably the website Save the Chihuahuas. Though the content of Ms. Peck's letter in general is a little, shall we say off-center, it was one comment in particular that caught my attention:

"One of Tufts University definitions of a hoarder
A hoarder doesn't adopt out animals. No one can take care of the animals better than they can."

I was actually unable to find anything on the Tufts website stating explicitly that animal hoarders do not adopt animals out, though the ASPCA does stipulate that with so-called rescue hoarders, "Little effort is made to adopt animals out."

This, to me, is a very important point in the debate over whether or not someone is actually an animal rescuer or an animal hoarder. In this post, I talk about Alice (not her real name), a woman living with over fifty dogs and a multitude of cats and farm animals at her small home in Oregon. Alice was the go-to foster home for an organized, 501(c)3 animal rescue, which meant that many of her dogs were adopted out regularly. However, the fact that they were adopted out had little to do with Alice's efforts; Alice focused primarily on getting more dogs. On more than one occasion, I can remember her contacting Dave and I upon receiving the latest PTS (Put-to-Sleep) list from the California shelter we worked with regularly.

"We want all of them," she would tell us. "We could get homes for every one of them - we don't want a single one of them put down."

Naturally, the rescue coordinator at the Merced County shelter was thrilled to hear this. And it was true that the animal rescue itself had a good adoption record; it was also true that there were a surprising number of dogs at Alice's house that, she assured us, could never be adopted out. There was a compulsive Lab who would fetch from one end of the property to the other for as long as someone would throw for him; there was a mysterious Doberman living inside who had attacked Alice and the other dogs on numerous occasions for taking up space on the bed; there were Pugs with asthma and mutts with allergies. None of these dogs, we were assured, would ever find someone to care for them the way Alice did.

My own experiences with Dave were not dissimilar. Before I came onboard, his rescue partner was an extremely motivated rescuer who was adept at making connections and getting animals adopted out. She was active online, quick to post photos and descriptions, and was a general whiz at the virtual side of animal rescue. Dave did the home visits and got more animals. Lots and lots more animals. The animals' care while at the farm was negligible, something Dave justified because "it's just a quick fix - they come in, they go out. It's better than being dead."

Since that particular rationale never really did much for me, I informed Dave when I came on board that I wanted to be more hands-on than his previous partner: I didn't want to be on the computer all the time. He could handle the networking and adoptions. I did the cleaning, enrolled with Animal Behavior College and started reading up on training, administered medication, developed nutrition plans for some of our more immuno-compromised charges. Our adoption rates were abysmal, though Dave assured me that this was just because we were in transition. We were taking a break; rehabilitating the animals we had. In the meantime, we did a couple of transports and thus could increase the numbers of animals we said we had successfully placed by simply driving them from one rescue to the other, with minimal interaction in between.

I am not an expert on animal hoarding, but in my experience, this is what I have found with the rescue hoarder:

(1) Their successfully placed animals (Kimi Peck claims she has adopted out more than 5000 Chihuahuas in her rescue career) are significantly inflated and corresponding records to back up such claims notably absent;

(2) If adoption rates are high, it is because someone else within the organization is driving those adoptions; were that individual to leave, placement rates would likely plummet;

(3) These placement rates often take into account things with which the actual individual had little involvement: adoption drives by other members of the organization; transporting animals for other rescues; and, in Kimi Peck's case, animals that were actually seized by the authorities and forcibly placed in the hands of other animal rescues;

(4) There are an infinite number of excuses as to why an animal may not be adoptable, and therefore must be added to the roster of permanent charges. Dave had five dogs that he called his own, however we had about a dozen others that were deemed unadoptable, and no efforts were ever made to adopt out the cats, though he would think nothing of bringing in another dozen at a time to live out their lives at the rescue. This may have been admirable had we not constantly been struggling with flea infestations, upper respiratory epidemics, and a complete lack of socialization opportunities.

So, there you have it... The rescue hoarder does adopt out animals, however - in the words of Gia Logan, who runs animalhoardinginfo.blogspot.com, "Hoarders do adopt out, but it may be one every couple of months. (Legitimate) rescuers work at adopting out, every weekend, showing their animals, etc... Even in the book on Barbara Erickson (Inside Animal Hoarding, by Celeste Killeen) she adopted out... But they collect more than they adopt. A (legitimate) rescue keeps the numbers manageable, their animals healthy."

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Cinema Saturday


This has been around for a while, but I just discovered it personally and thought it was a perfect feature for this Cinema Saturday.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Rescue Hoarding: Excerpt from Memoir, Cats in the Cradle and Bullies in the Belfry


The following is an excerpt from my memoir-in-progress, Cats in the Cradle and Bullies in the Belfry, detailing the year-and-a-half that I spent with a man later convicted of animal hoarding, when he was found with 362 animals - some alive, some dead - in an elementary school he purchased in Kentucky when we were still together. It is my hope that by telling some of these stories, other individuals who find themselves involved with hoarders will be able to recognize the signs, overcome the guilt and conflicted emotions inevitable in such a situation, and rise to help the animals locked in such tragic circumstances.

Three weeks after our first meeting through an online dating service in Portland, Oregon, Dave asked if I would like to go with him to California, where he was readying his house for sale. My family was horrified. My Portland friends were likewise appalled. I knew very little about him – the things I did know were certainly enough to give one pause. I’d never seen his place in Oregon, never met any of his friends. I knew that he ran an animal rescue from his home, but had only seen photos from his website. We'd been on dates, talked on the phone, exchanged e-mails... After a lengthy internal debate and an even lengthier external one with all those warning me that I would likely be killed and dumped in a ditch somewhere, I made my decision:

I’d moved to Oregon for new experiences. To be brave, step outside the narrow boundaries I’d set for myself over the years.

I would go to California.

We were to leave on the first of June, 2006 – a Thursday. That afternoon passed with no word from Dave. The evening, likewise, passed. That night, Dave finally called.

“Boarding fell through for the dogs, so we might have to take a couple of them with us.” He sounded tired. My reservations began to fade; I imagined the two of us in his mysterious Marin home with a couple of homeless pooches lying contentedly at our feet.

“That’s all right,” I quickly reassured him. “Take your time getting everything ready, and try to get some sleep tonight. We’ll leave tomorrow. And it’ll be fun to have some dogs around – don’t worry about it.”

The next day came and went. In our next phone conversation, two dogs had magically turned into ten. My reservations returned. Friday night at eleven o’clock, Dave called to say that we would definitely be leaving on Saturday afternoon. Our ten dogs might be as many as thirteen, but certainly no more than twenty.

I went to my cozy little kitchen and began preparing thermoses of calming tea, in anticipation of a long weekend of panic attacks and general insanity.

Saturday night at nine o’clock, Dave pulled up in front of my apartment building in upper Northwest Portland, in his green Dodge van. The Rose Festival had just begun: pretty girls in pretty dresses and trendy boys with hipster hats walked hand-in-hand on the sidewalk. It was a warm evening, the air scented with the blooms of spring: Roses and lilacs, a residual trace of cigar smoke from my upstairs neighbor.

Those scents vanished as soon as I opened the door to Dave’s van, replaced with the overpowering scent of wet dog, a vague undercurrent of eau de livestock to add punch. I handed Dave my backpack, clutched my thermos of calming tea a little bit tighter, and climbed in.

Barks and whines began in earnest the moment I closed the door. A particularly shrill yelp came from a crate closest to my seat – I tried to peer inside, but could see nothing but a pair of shining eyes in the dim light of the van.

“That’s Puppy,” Dave explained. “He doesn’t like crates.”

I hesitated. “Can I let him out?”

Dave glanced at me. Half the neighborhood was blocked off for the Rose Festival; he was having a hard time navigating the myriad of one-way streets to get us back on the highway.

“Once he gets in your lap, he’s never getting out – he’s a big baby.”

That didn’t sound like a bad thing. In my experience, puppies trump calming tea every time when coping with anxiety. I opened the crate, and a wriggling black and tan pup with big ears came leaping out. I scooped up the sleek little man and cuddled him on my lap. Moments later, his nose resting on my arm, the little dog was asleep.

We arrived at Dave’s home, a ranch-style house in the much-sought-after county of Marin, at 10 a.m. the following morning. I’d gotten no more than an hour of sleep during the drive, while Dave hadn’t slept at all – insisting that it was better for the dogs if we drove straight through. Though clearly exhausted, he shrugged off my suggestion of a nap with an eyebrow tipped north and the clear implication that I must be mad.

“Now? But we just got here.”

A nap was out of the question anyway, as we had eleven dogs who’d been stuck in crates for more than twelve hours. Working in tandem, we managed to get all of the dogs out for a quick bathroom break, with Dave providing color commentary and one-sentence bios on each of the residents.

“That’s Stache – hold onto him, we’ll never catch him if he gets away. And keep him away from the other crates, he’ll fence fight with anyone he sees.” This was delivered with a nod toward the charge I held on a short lead: A beautiful, dark grey guy with the softest coat I’d ever touched, and a curly tail. “He’s from Taiwan, so he’s a little shy.”

Dave quickly pulled out Stache’s crate, cleaned it in the driveway, and carried it inside. The front yard was overgrown, and the inside of his home equally neglected. A drum set, guitars, and amps that I later learned belonged to Dave’s stepdaughter, were set up in the otherwise-empty living room. Paint was peeling, and there were stains on the walls and holes in the flooring. An open case of laminated flooring had spilled in the entryway, covered in dust and dirt.

Stache went back into his crate, and was relegated to a room in the back of the house where Dave’s old office had been. A desk and piles of computer equipment remained, along with posters and flyers of political causes I’d never heard of. I tried to imagine this place as a home – the house where he’d been married, raised two kids, run a successful business for nearly twenty years. He told me that when his ex-wife had lived there, the place had been filled with antique furniture, immaculate and tastefully decorated.

Looking around, I couldn’t even imagine it.

As Dave and I cleaned crates and tried to organize the dogs to maximize safety and harmony, stories began to emerge.

Underdog, a lab mix rescued from the put-to-sleep list at a county shelter in California, was thin to the point of breaking, his stomach bloated like the malnourished children in UNICEF ads. “He looks a hell of a lot better than he did, though,” Dave assured me. I wasn’t sure how that could possibly be true. His backside was nearly bald from a case of demodectic mange, and his spinal column stood out starkly against his frail frame. Undie didn’t seem to be lacking in energy or enthusiasm, however; we released him in Dave’s fenced backyard with three similarly-sized dogs – Puppy, Toast, and Emily – and all four pups were quickly oblivious to our presence.

Next came Heffalump. She sat whining piteously in her crate, her wide cattle dog face nevertheless grinning at our approach.

“Watch her,” Dave warned me. “She can be a grumpus bear sometimes.” I raised my eyebrows at his words, but said nothing. In time, I would become well-acquainted with the term – it was something I was accused of myself on many occasions, when the days grew long and tempers proportionately shorter.

Heff came out of her crate like a barrel-chested bullet. Once I had her in hand, I realized that she was missing a hind leg. Despite this, she managed to propel herself with startling speed; I clung to the end of the leash, amazed at how one hind leg could support such a dense little body.

Those were the “easy” dogs. Dave handled the rest while I looked on, watching curiously as he interacted with a class of dog I’d had little experience with: the bullies.

There was Piglet, a scrawny little black pit bull/lab mix who, Dave said, had been chained to a barrel for the first three years of her life. She was finally rescued by the famed Best Friends; from there, she and two of her fellow so-called “pocket pits” were transported to Dave’s place. The others found homes without a problem, but Piglet – with her hyena-like bark, aggression toward all things smaller than she, and lack of socialization with humans – had proven to be a much more difficult placement.

There was Cookie, a beautiful brindle pit mix who loved everyone – dogs, people, the world at large. She had come from another county shelter in California. She came out of her crate and nearly knocked me to the floor; I felt the power in her shoulder muscles, saw the definition in her hind legs, and melted at the wide bully grin I’d soon come to know so well. Cookie quickly abandoned me in favor of Dave, leaping ecstatically in the air with a high-pitched squeal and then barking frantically when we returned her to her crate after her all-too-brief walk.

Next came Jellybean.

“She’s the one you told me about, right?” I looked on curiously, from a distance. Jellybean was black and white, and – though not emaciated like Underdog – was clearly underweight. She panted heavily in her crate, her eyes following our every move.

“Yeah – Jelly here’s been having some trouble lately.”

Dave was master of the understatement. Jellybean had been involved in two serious fights with the other dogs back in Oregon, and had attacked one of the llamas on the farm – clamping on so tightly that Dave said he hadn’t been sure he’d be able to get her off.

With the sound of growls, barks, and whines as background music, we made sure everyone was secure before releasing Jellybean in yet another empty back room. Her tail whipped back and forth at sight of Dave, but she remained aloof when I approached. With time and space, she soon came around. She sniffed me cautiously and nuzzled my hand. Within a few minutes, we were fast friends.

And then there was Cara. Cara was a 60-pound pit bull mix with a skin condition so severe she’d lost most of her hair. Her skin beneath was pink and raw, her ribs showing starkly beneath. She was isolated from the others for fighting issues. She looked at me through her crate door with oversized amber eyes and a wide bully grin.

Dave was quick to explain away the dogs’ conditions: He and his foster partner had taken on cases nobody else would take. They’d come to him this way. Everything would have been fine, the dogs would have been healthy and happy, if his partner hadn’t bailed on him. It was better than being dead, wasn’t it?

I wasn’t so sure.

My final introduction was to Donna – the dog who would change everything for me, from start to bloody finish.

Dave carried her crate inside without taking its resident for a walk, explaining as he went.

“She’ll have to be isolated for now – she’s a fear biter. If she gets out, we’ll never catch her.”

She was another street mutt from Taiwan, completely unsocialized and terrified of humans. We took her to a room with a sliding glass door at the far side of the house, looking out over the little courtyard out back. The room was piled high with boxes, newspapers scattered in every direction. Dave opened the crate and I peered inside.

Crouched against the back wall, a little blonde dog with long hair and a pointed, elfin nose stared at me. Though she had been with Dave for nearly three months already, her hair was matted and her eyes runny.

“I don’t push it with her,” Dave told me. “I figure if it’s not life threatening, it’s better that she gets to trust me first than force the issue just so she looks good. She won’t be adoptable for a long time, anyway.”

We set bowls of food and water in a corner of the room. Donna didn’t move; we stepped back and waited silently. Finally, after a couple of minutes, she hesitantly took her first steps into my world. As soon as she was out of the crate, she looked at Dave and me and raced for the hills. Glancing around at the layers of debris around me, I was convinced we’d never see her again.