If you can't pay 100-300$, should you get a dog?Question:There are a lot of wanted dog adds all over the internet, so I take the time to respond to many people and educate them about petfinder; however, lately I seem to be getting a lot of respones like "we are familier with petfinder, but the dogs are out of our price range" Well from what I have seen there is a big range, but if you cannot afford 100-300$ (canadian) for the dog (which usually includes the shots, neuter, etc) Then how can you afford for other expenses in the future or emergencies? It costs me at least 45$ just for a visit to my vet, not to mention adding on an medications or anything else on top of that. I know a lot of people may be frugal, or have gotten there dogs on here for free and take good care of them, but some people really make me wonder what care these animals would receive. Answer: I agree with you. If people can't afford a couple of hundred dollars to get a dog, as soon as something goes wrong, they will bring it to a pound... They should think about getting a Parakeet or tropical fish or something....... Answer: Well, as I totally agree with you for the most part, I have to say that buying the dog can be different than paying for vet bills. For example, I love bulldogs, but I could never "afford" one. I just can't see myself paying that much for a dog when I can get one from a local shelter cheaper, and the money could be going to something else. Could I pay the same amount for a vet bill for one of my grrls? In a heart beat. But yes, many people make me wonder. A lot of them shouldn't have dogs - or kids for that matter :p Answer: Not wanting to pay it and not being able to pay it are two different things. I have a friend who is currently looking for a dog and has money set aside for vet bills and such, but would rather spend $50 for an adult dog from a pound and the other $250 on stuff for the dog. He can afford to pay more, but he'd rather spoil his dog as much as possible. This isn't really related to the thread topic, but it irritates me anyway. When rescues start "charging" more than BYBs do, you know those BYBs are getting a lot of business. I've seen dogs on petfinder for $500 (puppies, usually) and ads in the paper for pups of the same breed, for a couple hundred dollars less. :( Answer: I agree with RD- a lot of the rescues around here charge $400+ for their dogs... and the further down south in Florida you go, the more they charge. I've seen small breed puppies listed for $600-800 in South Florida on Petfinder... but you can go to hoobly.com or open up your local paper and find BYB puppies for $200. I think that it is one thing to be "frugal" on what you want to spend on a dog...i.e. wanting to rescue a dog with a cheap to no adoption fee but can afford to spend the necessary vet bills. However, if you cannot afford a dog you should not get one... dogs are expensive, and emergencies come up. If you genuinely cannot afford $300, you should not get a dog... what happens when an unexpected expense arises? Do you put the dog to sleep? Answer: Not wanting to pay it and not being able to pay it are two different things. I have a friend who is currently looking for a dog and has money set aside for vet bills and such, but would rather spend $50 for an adult dog from a pound and the other $250 on stuff for the dog. He can afford to pay more, but he'd rather spoil his dog as much as possible. This isn't really related to the thread topic, but it irritates me anyway. When rescues start "charging" more than BYBs do, you know those BYBs are getting a lot of business. I've seen dogs on petfinder for $500 (puppies, usually) and ads in the paper for pups of the same breed, for a couple hundred dollars less. :( I agree Answer: I don't know. Speaking from a relatively poor background, sometimes you just have to do what you can to make things work. If you asked me today to borrow $300, I would say that I didn't have it. I don't. But if my dog got injured and needed veterinary treatment, I'd get that money, come hell or high water. I really don't know where you should draw that line. Hopefully people who continually have problems would realize that perhaps their home isn't right for a dog. But that said, I don't think money is the key to happiness or being a good dog owner. I would rather see a dog in a poor but dedicated home than a wealthy but uninterested home. When I was helping my husband at a job site in a wealthy neigbhborhood, I saw the most beautiful white-factored Doberman. Somebody paid a lot of money for that dog, but he was just out running loose every day we went there. Other dogs were yard decorations, kenneled into a little corner so they wouldn't mess up the landscaping. I don't think there is a minimum income for owning a dog. To me the "if you cant afford X, then you shouldn't have a dog" arguement can be overly critical. Like those who feel like people who need to chain their dogs, rather than buy $500 kennels for each one, are somehow unfit as owners. Or perhaps if you have to feed Pedigree instead of Canidae, you shoudn't own a dog. Its over-thinking the issue to my mind. Everybody has a different way they approach dog ownership, and very few are totally wrong, IMO. Answer: I don't know. Speaking from a relatively poor background, sometimes you just have to do what you can to make things work. If you asked me today to borrow $300, I would say that I didn't have it. I don't. But if my dog got injured and needed veterinary treatment, I'd get that money, come hell or high water. I really don't know where you should draw that line. Hopefully people who continually have problems would realize that perhaps their home isn't right for a dog. But that said, I don't think money is the key to happiness or being a good dog owner. I would rather see a dog in a poor but dedicated home than a wealthy but uninterested home. When I was helping my husband at a job site in a wealthy neigbhborhood, I saw the most beautiful white-factored Doberman. Somebody paid a lot of money for that dog, but he was just out running loose every day we went there. Other dogs were yard decorations, kenneled into a little corner so they wouldn't mess up the landscaping. I don't think there is a minimum income for owning a dog. To me the "if you cant afford X, then you shouldn't have a dog" arguement can be overly critical. Like those who feel like people who need to chain their dogs, rather than buy $500 kennels for each one, are somehow unfit as owners. Or perhaps if you have to feed Pedigree instead of Canidae, you shoudn't own a dog. Its over-thinking the issue to my mind. Everybody has a different way they approach dog ownership, and very few are totally wrong, IMO. I agree....well said Answer: I absolutely agree, Baha. I'm not rich and can't afford an extremely expensive dog (I would love a Doberman, but $3500+ for a show prospect is way out of my high-schooler's budget) but if I had to pay $3500 for treatment for my $450 dog, I'd find a way to make it work. I don't think there even should be a line drawn. Honestly, and I know a lot will disagree, I'd like to see all these unwanted shelter dogs go into poor homes and eat alpo and table scraps, have no toys and no fancy care but still get the love and attention they deserve. If the dog gets hurt, and the people can't afford extensive vet care and need to relinquish it or have it PTS, that's very sad but at least the dog got to live with a family that loved it. What a great alternative to turning homes away (and then euth'ing the perfectly healthy dog) because they don't make a certain amount of money each year, or because they don't have a fenced yard, or because they have a kid, etc. Answer: I absolutely agree, Baha. I'm not rich and can't afford an extremely expensive dog (I would love a Doberman, but $3500+ for a show prospect is way out of my high-schooler's budget) but if I had to pay $3500 for treatment for my $450 dog, I'd find a way to make it work. I don't think there even should be a line drawn. Honestly, and I know a lot will disagree, I'd like to see all these unwanted shelter dogs go into poor homes and eat alpo and table scraps, have no toys and no fancy care but still get the love and attention they deserve. If the dog gets hurt, and the people can't afford extensive vet care and need to relinquish it or have it PTS, that's very sad but at least the dog got to live with a family that loved it. What a great alternative to turning homes away (and then euth'ing the perfectly healthy dog) because they don't make a certain amount of money each year, or because they don't have a fenced yard, or because they have a kid, etc. Oh I absolutely agree, especially having gone through that with the charlie issue and he is STILL in a foster home (almost 2 yrs "I think") because the idiots up there refuse to put him a a good home (regardless who its with) Answer: I don't know. Speaking from a relatively poor background, sometimes you just have to do what you can to make things work. If you asked me today to borrow $300, I would say that I didn't have it. I don't. But if my dog got injured and needed veterinary treatment, I'd get that money, come hell or high water. I really don't know where you should draw that line. Hopefully people who continually have problems would realize that perhaps their home isn't right for a dog. But that said, I don't think money is the key to happiness or being a good dog owner. I would rather see a dog in a poor but dedicated home than a wealthy but uninterested home. When I was helping my husband at a job site in a wealthy neigbhborhood, I saw the most beautiful white-factored Doberman. Somebody paid a lot of money for that dog, but he was just out running loose every day we went there. Other dogs were yard decorations, kenneled into a little corner so they wouldn't mess up the landscaping. I don't think there is a minimum income for owning a dog. To me the "if you cant afford X, then you shouldn't have a dog" arguement can be overly critical. Like those who feel like people who need to chain their dogs, rather than buy $500 kennels for each one, are somehow unfit as owners. Or perhaps if you have to feed Pedigree instead of Canidae, you shoudn't own a dog. Its over-thinking the issue to my mind. Everybody has a different way they approach dog ownership, and very few are totally wrong, IMO. Well said. ^ Your first paraghaph hit home for me... I don't have have $300 to loan someone, but by the grace of God my dogs will get whatever treatment they need, no matter what. Annd, I think we've proven that with Buddy and his love of the vet's office, procedures, medications, etc.. :rolleyes: And, to me a good dog owner is one that is willing to do whatever is necessary to ensure that their dog has the best life possible, including both regular and emergency vet visits. If an annual vet visit (for shots, exam, etc.) can not be afforded.. maybe that person(s) should not have a dog...but no person should not be allowed to be owned by a dog if they don't want to fork out $400 for an adoption fee. Answer: I absolutely agree, Baha. I'm not rich and can't afford an extremely expensive dog (I would love a Doberman, but $3500+ for a show prospect is way out of my high-schooler's budget) but if I had to pay $3500 for treatment for my $450 dog, I'd find a way to make it work. I don't think there even should be a line drawn. Honestly, and I know a lot will disagree, I'd like to see all these unwanted shelter dogs go into poor homes and eat alpo and table scraps, have no toys and no fancy care but still get the love and attention they deserve. If the dog gets hurt, and the people can't afford extensive vet care and need to relinquish it or have it PTS, that's very sad but at least the dog got to live with a family that loved it. What a great alternative to turning homes away (and then euth'ing the perfectly healthy dog) because they don't make a certain amount of money each year, or because they don't have a fenced yard, or because they have a kid, etc. I agree here. I can't afford to pay a couple hundred dollars for anothe dog right now. But I could definately find a way to pay for emergency vet care if I needed to. Take out a loan, work out payment options with the vet, etc. I just set aside money from each paycheck for the dogs annual vet check ups, vaccines etc. Answer: Hmmm... family and bills come first. Not saying I wouldn't take my dogs to the vet if needed or in an emergency.. but my family and my bills come before my dogs needs. Answer: To put a minimum income on dog ownership is ridiculous, IMO. Even if someone has to euthanize their dog when it gets Disease XYZ because they can't afford medication, the odds are the dog will have lived a longer, happier life than if it had been left in an animal shelter to begin with. So many dogs are put to sleep, is it really worse to give a dog a few more years with someone who has a low income but loves the dog . . . instead of putting the dog to sleep right off for lack of room? Also, just because someone can't/won't spend $500 to buy a dog doesn't mean they won't scramble, scrape, beg, and borrow to get the money if their dog becomes ill. Besides, the less you spend on the dog initially, the more you can put aside for emergencies. Answer: IMO dogs are a LUXURY item. If you can't afford them, don't have them. I come from a vet clinic background where I saw countless dogs and cats euthanized due to vet bills that people couldn't pay. On the other hand, I think it's great when people adopt a homeless pet instead of buying a costly puppy from a breeder, but I feel it's very important they be able to provide the proper medical care and healthy diet for the animal. Answer: =showpug;503455 If you can't afford them, don't have them. I agree. Pets are expensive.. why get a pet if you cannot afford it? Answer: i see 2 sides of this arguement 1. Put urself in the rescue's shoe's,they keep and feed these dogs within hopes of placing it,,they do spend alot of money,,, they definatley can't be making any money,,,even though i do think some are out of hand as of now, it seems like they're using petfinder as classifieds 2. if a good family wants a dog but can't afford to pay for it then, well at least alittle to cover neutering,,, then they should be able to adopt one,,,, i rescue at least one on a regular basis and it's free to someone i trust and i feel will give it a good home Answer: If I had a customer that wanted to adopt a dog but could afford the adoption fee and nothing else, I think we'd try to talk them out of the dog. Now if I had a customer that wanted to adopt a dog but could afford the adoption fee and nothing else and the dog was going to be put to sleep tomorrow (because no one wanted it) I would probably let the customer have the dog. Our clinic isn't an adoption center. We tell that to our clients a lot. BUT one thing we do do is if someone finds a stray (not a "I'm sick of this dog and don't want it any more" deal; you wouldn't believe how many of those we get, it's sickening) and they bring it in we have them pay half the care fees and boarding fees and they can set an adoption fee if they'd like and they get that. Most of the time they have to agree to have the animal vaccinated and fixed and we'll swallow half the cost. This way if some poor family does want to adopt the animal, well at least it's been vaccinated/fixed. Answer: IMO dogs are a LUXURY item. If you can't afford them, don't have them. I come from a vet clinic background where I saw countless dogs and cats euthanized due to vet bills that people couldn't pay. or even worse yet, take the animal home to suffer. i've seen that time and time again as well. i agree that for some people, there's a difference between can't afford and won't afford. i also agree for some people there's a difference between can't afford x luxary and will afford medical care if needed. but that difference is not there for everybody, and that difference doesn't seem to be there for a LOT of joe public petowners. and yes, some shelters and rescues charge more than a byber, but their dogs come vaccinated, speutered, and microchipped. at least around here. in the south especially, add heartworm tests/treatment. that's hundreds of dollars in savings. Answer: I have seen posts on both this and other forums by people that have dogs with medical problems. Eyes that are covered with pus, noses bleeding, worms, fleas, etc... and they don't have money or are reluctant to take the dog to the vet because the vet is "expensive". To me, that's like bringing a child into the world and not taking it to the doctor when it is sick. Answer: I think people who do not have a lot of money should still be able to have a dog. BUT if they are so poor that they do not have the money to get insurance (that's what 20$ a month? Or put the same amount aside each month if they do not want to have insurance) then IMO they should not have a dog. I have seen posts on both this and other forums by people that have dogs with medical problems. Eyes that are covered with pus, noses bleeding, worms, fleas, etc... and they don't have money or are reluctant to take the dog to the vet because the vet is "expensive". To me, that's like bringing a child into the world and not taking it to the doctor when it is sick. With this being said, I very much agree with Bobsk8! Answer: What ever the price of the dog , you should have at least $1000. you could draw on in case of an emergency . Answer: Sure, my vet is "expensive" - I live paycheque to paycheque, I don't have a grand store of money but I have a GREAT relationship with my vet and it's called credit with him, too. :P If I have to give him a post dated cheque or make payments, he's more than happy to cooperate with me so that my animals get the care that they need even if I don't have the money on hand right now. Answer: I don't know. Speaking from a relatively poor background, sometimes you just have to do what you can to make things work. If you asked me today to borrow $300, I would say that I didn't have it. I don't. But if my dog got injured and needed veterinary treatment, I'd get that money, come hell or high water. I really don't know where you should draw that line. Hopefully people who continually have problems would realize that perhaps their home isn't right for a dog. But that said, I don't think money is the key to happiness or being a good dog owner. I would rather see a dog in a poor but dedicated home than a wealthy but uninterested home. When I was helping my husband at a job site in a wealthy neigbhborhood, I saw the most beautiful white-factored Doberman. Somebody paid a lot of money for that dog, but he was just out running loose every day we went there. Other dogs were yard decorations, kenneled into a little corner so they wouldn't mess up the landscaping. I don't think there is a minimum income for owning a dog. To me the "if you cant afford X, then you shouldn't have a dog" arguement can be overly critical. Like those who feel like people who need to chain their dogs, rather than buy $500 kennels for each one, are somehow unfit as owners. Or perhaps if you have to feed Pedigree instead of Canidae, you shoudn't own a dog. Its over-thinking the issue to my mind. Everybody has a different way they approach dog ownership, and very few are totally wrong, IMO. hi, I'm new. well said, I agree!! I really enjoy this site btw!! Answer: The purchase price of any animal is usually the least expensive part of ownership...Our shelter charges a $100 adoption fee which covers the alteration, hw test, shots & microchip...you would be surprised at how many people walk away because they think it is too expensive...it is a lot less than paying for a spay, chip and shots from any of the vets around here so you would have a bigger investment in a free dog, but they don't think of it that way...they think they are doing us a favor by taking a dog, so it should be free or cheap...these are the same peolpe that wouldn't take the dog to the vet for alteration and probably wouldn't take it for illness either...if they balk at the fee, I usually deny the application because my thinking is that they don't realize what an investment they are going to be making...It is not necessarily the "poor" people that complain about the fee either...you don't have to feed the very best food for a dog to have a good life, but you do have to be prepared meet it's veterinary needs like hw preventative, etc. and if they can barely afford to take care of themselves then it is unlikley the dog will get it's heartguard...however, I do have some "poor" families that put their animals first and will go without food before letting their animals be without, so it is by an individual case basis...poverty doesn't always equal abuse or neglect, in fact...once a year, we collect for the shelter on the street corner and the "wealthy" people will roll up their tinted windows and drive on by while the "poor" folks stop and empty the change out of their ashtrays and under their floormats...they give freely of what little they have...to me there is more than one way to measure wealth and sometimes I would much rather adopt to those "poor" folks...they are rich with love and caring which is something money just can't buy...a lot of the people that have the resources to provide the best of care choose not to...could be why they have all of the money! Answer: Good post, SeniorPetLover! The rescue I'm with charges $175 adoption fee for dogs. That includes the spay/neutering, HW test, shots, and in some cases HW treatment, or treatment for kennel cough or other illnesses the dog may have come in with. We also pay for food. Heck, one dog is nicknamed the $8000 dog because he got bloat and it was $8000 for him to undergo surgery to fix it. He is fine now, but still needs a home. Some of the purebred rescues around here will charge $300 for a dog. Sometimes their fees vary though, depending on the medical care and expenses that have gone into different dogs. Some places also charge more for puppies because they are more desirable. Answer: i have to agree with Bobsk8 on this. ive seen so many pets suffering because people just "dont have the money" to cover vet care. i have a neighbour thats the worst culprit ever. she has no job and the state pays the bills (shes "disabled" she has depression and aparently cant work, (i suffer from bipolar depression extreem social anxiety and epilepsy, and i can work, but of course when your being handed money why try?!) she had a 13 yr old shepard, nice dog, never trained, not housebroken but a sweet dog all the same, all he wanted was love. he had lumps and bumps, growths, mange bad teeth and an eye infection. she "couldnt afford" to take him to the vet (even after i gave her the number of a low cost clinic who accepted payment plans!) a few weeks later she goes out and adopts a collie x shepard x chow mix puppy, she cant afford vet care for her old shep but can go out and pay $200 for a puppy from a shelter (im not even sure what they were thinking adopting to her!) By the time the pup was a year old he had a broken tooth, mange, cherry eye and had not been neutered, no training ect, and he was dog agressive to any dog that wasnt the shep (her property isnt fenced either so now both these dogs were wandering the neighbourhood) again i gave her the number for the low cost spay/neuter, at the very least have these dogs neutered!, and every time i saw them wandering i called animal control, it cost her $50 each time per dog to "break them out". So i dont see her for about 6 months, and i see her mix wandering but no shepard, i thought hed passed away he was old and cancer riddled. And now im seeing a young black pit mix with hairloss running round with her shep mix. my mum talks to her and she tells her she got this new puppy 6 months ago she was 3 months old when she got her (so a 9 month old female) she then tells mum that the pup wasnt getting along with her shepard so she took her 14 1/2 yr old shepard and left him at the shelter. she then admitted now the female had mange, but was spayed when she got her. and that the shelter that took her shep had neutered her shep mix for her! my mum asked her why she hasnt taken either dog to the vet for the mange and she said "I CANT AFFORD IT!" why get ANOTHER dog if you cant afford the first one!?!?! i always worry when i see adds for "wanted puppy under $100" that its another person like my neighbour! Answer: Geez, Foxy. :P We have some neighbors like that. But like I've always said - you can't legislate responsibility! I'm glad I have a great relationship with my vet - I get procedures at bare rock bottom prices - of course, there's nothing exceptionally high tech or flowery about my vet either. His bedside manner is gruff, but he fixes my animals and that's the important part for me!! I had a cat that tested positive for FelV... I was mortified that night, cried my eyes out in his office and he told me to come back "when I was ready" - Toby was literally wasting away nothing I could do to keep his quality of life. I genuinely believe he would have put Toby to sleep for me for free or for the bare cost of the drugs. TRUST your vets, people! Can't stress this more! You don't have to be rich to have a good relationship with your vet! Answer: I agree on some of the argument, but prices of dogs are sometimes outrageous. For someone like myself, with allergies and asthma - I have to have a certain type of lower dander dog, or dogs that don't have thick undercoats in order to tolerate them. I looked for rescues, dogs in shelters, ect and could not find the kind of dog I was compatible with. Just because someone doesn't have a lot of money doesn't mean that they can't give the dog a good home. Most vets will work out payment plans if something severe happens, and I believe that most people can afford to work things like that out OR to insure their dogs at least minimally. I just feel like life is short.. people lose jobs, have financial crisis's and life happens. If someone has a lot of love to give an animal and the responsibility to care for that animal, I say they should go for it. Answer: I think that if you can't afford appropriate care for your dog... you shouldn't get one. I feel terrible for the pups that will get adopted by those '$300 is too expensive, I'll get a $200 pup from a BYB' people, as they will probably not be neutered, nor have appropriate vaccinations. It's easy really - if you can't afford $300 for a wormed/vaccinated/neutered dog, I don't think you can afford the $200 to neuter, the $60ish to vaccinate, and the other $50 to worm. Not mentionning heartguard pills. Even if you get a free pup from a random ad, it will cost you more in the end than the $300 rescue dog. So no, if you can't afford those $300, IMO you shouldn't have a dog. Answer: Sure, my vet is "expensive" - I live paycheque to paycheque, I don't have a grand store of money but I have a GREAT relationship with my vet and it's called credit with him, too. :P If I have to give him a post dated cheque or make payments, he's more than happy to cooperate with me so that my animals get the care that they need even if I don't have the money on hand right now. absolutely. and you got that great relationship by being a good and conscienscious owner. i wish more people realized that and made the effort to have their pets seen for yearly wellness exams, not just when they're direly ill. Answer: I agree with RD- a lot of the rescues around here charge $400+ for their dogs... and the further down south in Florida you go, the more they charge. I've seen small breed puppies listed for $600-800 in South Florida on Petfinder... but you can go to hoobly.com or open up your local paper and find BYB puppies for $200. That is a crazy adoption price. Its unusual around here to see one over 350$, and even that is high usually because of added medical costs like an eye issue or something. What a great alternative to turning homes away (and then euth'ing the perfectly healthy dog) because they don't make a certain amount of money each year, or because they don't have a fenced yard, or because they have a kid, etc. I didn't mean how much they make per year. Many people can live very frugaly. No matter how much money you have if you can hopefully put away 5-10$ per month or less and save up the 200-300$ for a dog, with some left over for emergencies. I don't know many people who could not do this, but a lot of times its the "gimme gimme gimme, i want it now now now". Yea its childish, but they want it cheap, now and don't want to wait, unfortunalty our society seems to be going this way more and more. IMO dogs are a LUXURY item. If you can't afford them, don't have them. I agree, people do not NEED to have a dog, its a luxuary. If more people understood that then less dogs would be dumped for financial reasons. (I understand it very well after waiting until I had a secure job for a 4 years before getting a dog) The purchase price of any animal is usually the least expensive part of ownership... Our shelter charges a $100 adoption fee which covers the alteration, hw test, shots & microchip...you would be surprised at how many people walk away because they think it is too expensive...it is a lot less than paying for a spay, chip and shots from any of the vets around here so you would have a bigger investment in a free dog, but they don't think of it that way...they think they are doing us a favor by taking a dog, so it should be free or cheap...these are the same peolpe that wouldn't take the dog to the vet for alteration and probably wouldn't take it for illness either... I agree, it's this reasoning that bothers me. Answer: I don't know. Speaking from a relatively poor background, sometimes you just have to do what you can to make things work. If you asked me today to borrow $300, I would say that I didn't have it. I don't. But if my dog got injured and needed veterinary treatment, I'd get that money, come hell or high water. I really don't know where you should draw that line. Hopefully people who continually have problems would realize that perhaps their home isn't right for a dog. But that said, I don't think money is the key to happiness or being a good dog owner. I would rather see a dog in a poor but dedicated home than a wealthy but uninterested home. When I was helping my husband at a job site in a wealthy neigbhborhood, I saw the most beautiful white-factored Doberman. Somebody paid a lot of money for that dog, but he was just out running loose every day we went there. Other dogs were yard decorations, kenneled into a little corner so they wouldn't mess up the landscaping. I don't think there is a minimum income for owning a dog. To me the "if you cant afford X, then you shouldn't have a dog" arguement can be overly critical. Like those who feel like people who need to chain their dogs, rather than buy $500 kennels for each one, are somehow unfit as owners. Or perhaps if you have to feed Pedigree instead of Canidae, you shoudn't own a dog. Its over-thinking the issue to my mind. Everybody has a different way they approach dog ownership, and very few are totally wrong, IMO. I agree, having money doesn't neccessary make a person a good owner. A happy pet in a poor person's home is better than a neglected pet in a nice house. A house is a house until love comes in it. There are a lot of poor kids that need a good pet companion & would \ will make good masters. I grew up as a kid with Houndogs, Blueticks,Redbones, Walkers ... Thinking back my dad taught me how to treat an animal just as if they should be treated " man's best friend " , he also taught me about taking care of our dogs health such as vacinations,shelter, proper nutrition, & LOVING CARE .:) Thanks Dad, if you can hear me from Heaven.:) Answer: the adoption price at the shelter by me can be upwards of $700 for a puppy that "looks purebred" Satos (street dogs from puerto rico) are $600 "to cover cost of flight to the states and entrance to country examination" personally as much as its a good cause to help other countries stray dogs..we have enough strays of our own to find homes for first! their lowest adoption fee is $150 for an adult cat with special needs (medical expenses to be taken on by new owner) so i do understand sometimes is a better bet to scour the adds, especialy if your looking for a mutt and are willing to take your chances with a BYB or oops litter. (as much as i hate the fact that there are oops litters and BYB's) i mean heck, some good quality breeders have pups available for less than the shelter neer us! but again, i do cringe every time i see the "cant afford more than $100" or other similar notes due to many personal experiences like the one in my previous post to this topic. Answer: Foxy ... I've never heard of prices that high !!! That almost sounds like they are dog milling from other countries ! Answer: i know right!!! its insane, i worked there for a little while as kennel care and its just ridiculous, the people there are elitist (rich fairfeild county people thinking their obviously better than anyone else because they have money AND are donating time to a shelter) and most of the dogs there are HIGHLY people agressive. (one ot the point of lunging the kennel door/walls and hanging on by his teeth 3 feet above the ground and snarling (i was told, "oh dont mind him he just gets excited to see people *BLINK!*) he had a note on his cage "to one person home only, expereinced owner required, must love "CHARACTER" $400 adoption fee Pure bred American Pitbull 2 yrs old!" Anywhere else would have put that dog to sleep, it attacked a worked when it got lose requiring hundereds of stitches and there gonna try and adopt it out?! I quit after seeing many of their other practices too! Answer: I can never agree with the idea that if you can't afford $X for a dog, you shouldn't own one, since my life was changed by a dog my parents could barely afford when I was a kid. She got fed, got netuered, and got taken to the vet when she was sick. It is not the way I take care of my dogs now, because I can afford to be Ms. Munchausen with their health and spoil my dogs rotten. But it was the only way we could afford a dog, and she was everything to me back then. And she had a very good life. If anything had happened to my dog, we couldn't have afforded to do anything much, but she was adored by a large family who was always around, talking to her, feeding her people food, walking her, letting her out into her yard, etc. And she had me to raise, a job she took very seriously. A job, companionship, food, water, and a place to run. What more does a dog really want? One thing about price at shelters - when people can afford to buy a puppy from a breeder or a petstore but choose to go to a shelter, they probably are doing it because they're aware that there are more homeless pets than homes, and they may not expect there to be any obstacles or special cash cost to rescuing a dog from death. It's a reasonable expectation, and it really is the shelter's responsibility to educate them about why they charge so much. If the person truly can't afford the price, the shelter should try to find out more about their situation and help them either decide to wait until times are better to get a pet, or steer them toward a cheaper but good shelter. Answer: I could not have paid that outright for Victor. That money was what i had to pay for his vet neutering and heartworm treatment. I can only speak for myself but he does seem to have a very loving and caring home. |
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