Fostering a dog is an amazing thing. I was blessed with LUCKY for a short time. He went to an incredible home. My heart and soul have been touched my this angel and I hope he has the best life. I know his new family will for sure.
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Fostering a dog is an amazing thing. I was blessed with LUCKY for a short time. He went to an incredible home. My heart and soul have been touched my this angel and I hope he has the best life. I know his new family will for sure.

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So I currently have two foster dogs I took in as an emergency to get them out of kennels. The adoption for Lady has fallen through, several times now. She's with us for the long haul it seems and I didn't actually plan for that!
Food costs etc for her aren't something I can cover long-term like this (especially now with this cost of living crisis) so anything y'all can spare will help A LOT!
The usual costs like electric, gas, fuel, food are up now too which I would also appreciate help with. I'm disabled and have dietary problems that require specific foods (anything with spice in it, even as a preservative is Out) to eat. I also live with my 56 yo disabled mother and have to look after her too.
I do art commissions and have prints in the works of my existing artwork (you can see it here on my insta or here on tumblr) if you'd like to commission/buy a print.
You can message me here, on my kofi, or on insta to enquire about prints. A4 is ÂŁ20 and A3 ÂŁ35. Other sizes vary. If you live in UK/EU I can cover postage but outside that will cost extra (approx ÂŁ4.99).
If you want to commission me for an original piece, traditional or digital, message me with the details. I charge by the hour so be aware of that. My latest commission took me 38 hours to complete and was digital (see under cut for a lower resolution version of it).
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I have an Instagram where my family and I post about our foster dogs! Currently in our care is Nala!
She is a pitbull with a bad past but we are training and cuddling and she has already proven to be a great family dog!
Feel free to come follow our story!
Dogfosterfriends
Raincoats on dogs are the greatest.

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my foster sister has already taught me how to go up and down stairs!
Meet Tye!! My amazing foster boy. He is 2yrs old, chihuahua. Tye's story :: Tye was abandoned with another chihuahua, Milo, at a rental property in Tucson. With heat rising, friends acted fast to get them to safety. Sadly they had to be separated due to not being altered. Tye is now waiting to be neutered and can go up for adoption after. He is super sweet, and a great lapdog. When I got to him, he had to be caught with a sliplead. After 5 seconds of terror, he was in my lap and then my arms. He refused to be put down after that. He follows me everywhere and loves giving kisses!! đśđ
Foster Awareness
Do you know what fostering is? You might remember a time when you seen a sign or commercial about becoming a foster parent for a kid in need. Have you seen the television commercials about how abused animals need your help? About how much your donation will help? About how they get a new life with their adopted family? Have you heard about how much medical attention or money it takes to help them? I know I have. I havenât seen a commercial or much advertising about animal fostering. Animals, meaning not just dogs. But dogs are the focus of my topic.
     When you think about getting a dog, or decide a dog might be the right fit for you, what do think of? Animal shelters? Rescues? Breeders? The cute puppy in the window of a pet shop? How about a foster dog?
     When you decide you want to help a dog by adopting it, thatâs great. Some people want only purebreds of a certain breed. Theyâre rescues and shelters that lean toward one or even a few certain breeds. Some mainly take in small or big dogs, etc.
     There is nothing wrong with wanting to adopt, actually itâs a great thing!
     What have you heard about fostering a dog? I hadnât heard much. I did know that, I could get a troubled dog dropped off at my house, and then love them before getting my heartbroken when they get adopted by someone else. Thatâs not true!! I didnât know what I know now! I also didnât know that every life you save from a shelter is 2 lives youâre changing. One when you take the pup into your home temporarily(fostering), and another, because the spot you opened up will be another place for another dog in need.
     So what is foster? Thatâs the question, right? Well I suppose everyone has their own opinion on what fostering is to them. To me fostering is yes, opening your home to a dog that you will fall in love with, and get heartbroken when they leave to their forever home. But it is so much more.
     My first (and current) foster, Kitsumi, comes from animal control in Chicago. It isnât a great place from what Iâm told. Itâs probably one of the worst, at least this is what I am told, in our area. I was informed by a senior foster mom, that it might take Kit a while to open up, and mellow out, that itâs âa rough shelterâ. Kitsumi has not been with me a month yet, and she is bouncing around with my lab mix, Zoey. They are the best of friends.
     I have watched Kit come out of her shell. She isnât all the way there but weâre getting there. So Fostering means when kitsumi finds a home (which I am even able to not only help find, but also be there to meet them and interview them) she will get just that, a home, a home forever. She isnât going to get a few years home. When you get a dog from a shelter kennel, you donât know a lot about them. You donât know if they are potty trained, if they are friendly with other animals, their moods, their energy levels, and so on. Sure a few of the kennel assistance could tell you that when they go for a walk all they do is pull, and when they go in to put their food bowl down the dog goes in the corner and shakes or on the opposite side, that they jump on them while trying to knock the bowl out of their hands. That doesnât mean that the dog isnât a âgoodâ dog. Nor does it mean that the dog is a high strung speed racer with issues. The only people that dog gets to see daily is the ones that come into his house (or whatever enclosure he is in). So he might be jumping because he thinks you will think its cute, and stay longer to pet him because you do think that so he does get his reward of more of your time, therefore he is getting reinforced.
     With kitsumi, she was dumped off at animal control allegedly because the owner had âtoo many dogsâ. It was written down that the owner said âshe sleeps on the porch with the rest of the dogs.â Kit was scared after everything she had ever known what ripped away. So she growled at some âniceâ people at the shelter. They told her that they understood by removing her from the adoption floor and placing her in the back to sit on death row, you could go see her. She wasnât one of the dogs you could even ask about, she was put under that only a rescue group could take her (which isnât easy to find on their website, or anywhere for that matter).
     I found kitsumi on a website that said she was in danger of being euthanized any day. I talked it over with my mom, and when we agreed, I took action immediately. I emailed the contact on the website (that was all the info I could get, the animal control in Chicago doesnât have a phone number you can call or talk to someone). I received an email back later that day, and was directed to find a rescue to help, and then thatâs when everything began.
     I can tell a future owner that Kitsumi does have an off switch, but itâs after Significant play time. She would rather sleep with you in bed, but she will go in her crate. A plus is that she is crate trained, if you prefer to crate train, if not thatâs okay too. Kit loves to train. She likes learning new things, and she picks them up fast. She doesnât appear to like staying in the kitchen. She isnât great with cats, but is bffâs with dogs. She likes to play rough, so if they have a dog, it needs to be the same energy level. She doesnât pull hard on leash, but she could stand to do a little more training, as she doesnât pay much attention to where your feet are and ends up trying to trip you. She is very destructive with toys. I could go on, and on.
     A dog that comes from a foster family, is more likely to get a forever home versus a dog that comes from the shelter. Does that mean I donât think you should get a shelter dog? No, shelter dogs are not bad, they donât all get taken back, some dogs go from shelter to homes and get a forever home with a patient loving family.
     It is just that you know what youâre getting with a foster pup. Therefore, it is easier to make a better match. It is also less frustrating for the owner and gives them more confidence.
     If a dog cowers in the corner, for a few days, that makes an inexperienced dog owner nervous and unsure of themselves. If Kitsumi was the dog in this situation, she would growl if this person came too close. What do you think an inexperienced dog owner will do with a dog that they canât get near (so it is going to the bathroom all over the place.) and now she is growling at said person. If I play this scenario in my head, I donât like the conclusion I come to.
     Fostering doesnât cost anything, is what rescues say on their websites. That is true for the most part. It also depends on the rescue. With my rescue, and I think every other, the vetting is billed directly to the rescue. They provide the food, toys, crate, etc. But I free feed, and long story short, itâs easier to have everyone on the same thing, so I buy the food for her. They didnât bring toys, I bought some of those because I wanted kit to stop chewing on everything else (they did bring some later though). I also borrowed a crate, because while they did bring one, it didnât work right. They brought a thin crate mat and sheet. I donated blankets I had.
     I know that it might hurt to give her to someone else, but I know that without my help, she would be put to sleep by now. I know that fostering her, helped make her chances at not only survival better, but the chance to have a long and happy life, with a family that will provide not only the basics (a warm and dry place to sleep, food, water, etc.) but love her, cuddle her, and give her a life that full of meaning, and happiness. I feel like if more people knew more about fostering, they could be better educated and know more about what fostering really is. Consider fostering, if you canât give up your foster, thatâs perfectly okay. Many people fall in love and decide to adopt them that they even have a name for it. Itâs called foster fail.
     What does fostering mean to you? Do you have a foster story? I do, and I am willing to share. Have questions? If I know the answer, I will be more than happy to pass it along, if not I might be able to find out from fellow moms.