Commitment to Foster Dogs
It’s up to us to create success. It’s up to us to manage safety for everyone involved. It's up to use to train them. It's up to us to help them recover and find a home of their own.
Bottom Line - It's up to us.
It’s up to us to create success. It’s up to us to manage safety for everyone involved. It's up to use to train them. It's up to us to help them recover and find a home of their own.
Bottom Line - It's up to us.
fos·ter [faw-ster,
fos-ter]
verb (used with object)
1. to promote the growth or development of; further;
encourage: to foster new ideas.
2. to bring up, raise, or rear, as a foster child.
3. to care for or cherish.
4. British . to place (a child) in a foster home.
5. Obsolete . to feed or nourish.
Replace Child with Dog – and we’re talking about Foster
Dogs.
This topic has been on my mind for quite some time now. The more involved I get in rescue the more I
see of this issue and wonder how it’s possible that someone who wants to help
an animal winds up being part of the problem.
Rescue dogs are not perfect.
There. I said it. Again.
If they were perfect whoever “owned” them first wouldn’t have dumped
them at the shelter, left the alongside the road, or asked for them to be
rehomed. I used the word “owned’ intentionally. Because whoever owned them did not promote
growth and development or encourage these babies in any way!
You’ll notice that it’s obsolete to say fostering is about
food and nourishment – though in some foster dog’s lives, even food was not
always provided. Owners of dogs do not really care for them at all, the dogs
are property and sometimes treated with less value than their sofa.
Rescue groups are trying desperately to save lives. And yet the problem grows – but that’s a
discussion for another day.
Rescuers are volunteers.
I can’t say I know of a single one that makes a living, or even a dime
for that matter as a rescuer. They have
full time jobs and manage the rescue in their personal time. Often at their own expense – financial and
personal.
Rescue programs simply do not work without foster
homes. Getting a new foster to sign-up
means another dog is saved! Plain and
simple fostering saves a life the very minute someone is approved to foster.
That is until the foster gives up on the dog. I've seen fosters threaten to put the dog on the side of the road
at I485 or take him back to the shelter.
I've seen them demand the dog go within the hour.
Yes, it happens daily. And when it does, the rescuers who are trying
to save lives, are now trying find a spot for a dog who already is in a
home. They scramble to find a new place to send the
dog for safe keeping. These rejections
of foster dog create a frenzy for everyone involved and other fosters and
rescue directors are spending time that could be spend on new dogs and fundraising
programs or their own personal lives “re-saving” the reject.
Remember we said rescue dogs are not perfect. I don’t know what people expect when they
agree to foster or when they adopt directly from the shelter. Even though a temperament test can be done
at the shelter – you have no idea really who that dog is when he’s pulled. An “owner”
is going to lie more often than not about their dog’s behavior when they need
to rehome them – after all they want someone else to take him.
Transitions are hard on dogs! Some happy go lucky personalities just go
with the flow. But a dog who has not had
proper socialization ever in his life, who was abused, neglected, has become
fearful, shy, or even potentially aggressive may take a while to warm-up, to
settle down, or to become his true self.
As a foster – your goal is to set the dog up for success. It’s not about just food and shelter. They may know nothing about living in a
home. It’s up to you to teach them. Moving
the problem to a new foster may not be the answer.
From a trainer’s point here are a few things I have observations
in the scenarios when things go south (this is not intended to be all
inclusive)
1.
Precautions were not taken.
2.
Things move way too fast
3.
Pack Introductions were not done properly
4.
Rescue / Trainer Instructions not followed
5.
Foster doesn't spend the necessary time crate training, house
training, basic skills or working on behavioral issues.
Folks, I cannot tell you how important is to slow things down
when you first bring home a dog. Use the
crate, more than you think is reasonable. Take time to crate train if
necessary. Take time to house-train if
needed. Take time to build a
relationship between you and the dog before you introduce him to others. Don’t
open the front door and give him free reign of the house.
When a new dog arrives at my house – it is about a week before they are integrated into my pack, have visitors or go for outings. For some fosters, it might be several weeks. The first days he’s crated the majority of the time – coming out only to potty and take a walk. After a few days he’s allow some play time in the yard alone with me – no other dogs or kids. When I do move to pack intro initial meetings with other dogs are brief – very brief. Controlled. On-leash and outside. When I do give him some time in the house – my dogs are in a different space. Some dogs progress faster than others – but it’s all about knowing you can read that dog, control your own dogs, and manage the situation - -you simply cannot do that in the first few days in most cases when a dog doesn’t have skills, doesn’t understand your language, and may not trust you.
When a new dog arrives at my house – it is about a week before they are integrated into my pack, have visitors or go for outings. For some fosters, it might be several weeks. The first days he’s crated the majority of the time – coming out only to potty and take a walk. After a few days he’s allow some play time in the yard alone with me – no other dogs or kids. When I do move to pack intro initial meetings with other dogs are brief – very brief. Controlled. On-leash and outside. When I do give him some time in the house – my dogs are in a different space. Some dogs progress faster than others – but it’s all about knowing you can read that dog, control your own dogs, and manage the situation - -you simply cannot do that in the first few days in most cases when a dog doesn’t have skills, doesn’t understand your language, and may not trust you.
Supervise! Don’t
give him opportunities to pee in the house and create frustration for you. Don't give him an opportunity to eat your shoes or sofa. Eyes on him.
Supervise! If
children are in your home or visiting, it is not negotiable that you supervise
with eyes on the dog at all times that child is present. Crate the dog as needed.
Supervise! After you
have done proper pack introductions – supervise them together in the house for
days! Watch out for resource guarding over toys, food, beds, etc. Watch out for play that escalates too far or a dog that doesn't heed warnings or doesn't want to play. Especially with different size dogs and different age dogs.
Supervise! Interact them with 1:1 to train, socialize and otherwise address any issues they may be having. We have to teach them the things they don't know. Being frustrated because they don't already know them does no one any good!
Supervise! Interact them with 1:1 to train, socialize and otherwise address any issues they may be having. We have to teach them the things they don't know. Being frustrated because they don't already know them does no one any good!
If you cannot supervise – that foster dog needs to be in his
crate! Period.
As they settle into your house and family – issues may arise
that they have previously not demonstrated.
Your own dogs may respond differently.
If you are not certain how to resolve the issues you’re experiencing -
-please ask someone for help.
Your rescue director will do everything possible to give you the support you need. Inexperience, inaccurate or incomplete assessments and assumptions may lead you down a path that makes things worse. Most things don’t get better own their own without training from us. It’s not always difficult – when you have the right information. Be open to following instructions and be patient. Behavior don’t change overnight and they do require us to change sometimes and to be consistent. Be open to learning something different – especially if what you’re trying isn’t working. Sometimes what worked for 1 dog won’t work for the next. Be willing to invest some time and effort, maybe even a bit of money for toys, training tools, a crate, etc – if that’s what will make things better for everyone.
Your rescue director will do everything possible to give you the support you need. Inexperience, inaccurate or incomplete assessments and assumptions may lead you down a path that makes things worse. Most things don’t get better own their own without training from us. It’s not always difficult – when you have the right information. Be open to following instructions and be patient. Behavior don’t change overnight and they do require us to change sometimes and to be consistent. Be open to learning something different – especially if what you’re trying isn’t working. Sometimes what worked for 1 dog won’t work for the next. Be willing to invest some time and effort, maybe even a bit of money for toys, training tools, a crate, etc – if that’s what will make things better for everyone.
Please know that most problems will NOT get better on their
own. But that with proper guidance,
proper response from you as the handler, they can often be resolved quickly and
easily if addressed early and are not allowed to escalation or become rehearsed
behaviors.
Before you agree to foster – consider what you are truly willing
to do and truly capable of. If your
foster dog has issues – what are you prepared to do? If it were your own personal dog – what would
you do? Would you abandon your own dog and kick him out of the house? Above
all – don’t fail the dog again. Don’t
be part of the cycle that finds them shuffled to yet another home. It confuses them. It frustrates them. It creates setbacks. It may make problems worse, especially for
dogs with fear, abandonment, or anxiety issues.
Severe behavioral issues will be addressed through training,
medical treatment, or other means the rescue director can advise you on. The rescue will support you to provide
support to that dog. With a little
direction and willingness to implement it – even if it’s somewhat inconvenient –
you can create a resolution and see that dog transform right before you in a
short time.
What doesn’t work for anyone is demanding the dog be kicked
out of the home again that night. When
that occurs – it’s not fostering – it’s perpetuation of the problem. Tire him out with physical exercise and
mental stimulation (training, food puzzles, games, etc). Crate the dog apart from other dogs or
family members he may take issue with. Take
a training class with the dog – ask your rescue director about it.
Discuss your expectations and non-negotiable issues with the
coordinator before you become a foster or before the dog is pulled. No one expects you to keep a dangerous dog
or to put family members at risk when severe issues are present. If as a foster it’s not a good match for your
experience, your kids, or your cat – there isn’t a rescue coordinator out there
who will insist that dog stays with you. Know that a few days of crating may be
necessary to give the rescue group a chance to respond to the request. In an all foster program – there is often
nowhere to move the dog immediately.
Each foster vacancy is typically filled with the next pull from the shelter. Everyone should want what is best for the dog.
Be willing
to promote the growth or development of; further; encourage: to foster new
ideas
I hope every day that more fosters (and adopters) are
found. I also know it is work. It can be tiring. It could be expensive. It could be risky. It’s up to us to create success. It’s up to us to manage safety for everyone
involved.
See article on Pack Introductions
See article on Pack Introductions
Someone told me today about a potentially off-color joke
from Chris Rock. It’s said that he
speaks about the tiger incident with Siegfried and Roy -- “The Tiger went Tiger” – why is everyone surprised
by this.
The Dog is a Dog. And you have to teach him to live in our world. *********************************************************
The K9 Coach
980-339-8064
www.thek9-coach.com
info@thek9-coach.com
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