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Commenting on an old thread, but I'm going through the same thing Ann. I've put in apps with several rescues and they email me back, pulling apart my responses word for word, to the point where I question my ability to care for a corgi. I started out feeling like I was finally ready to provide a great loving home for a dog that needs it and now I'm ready to give up. I'll try to keep my chin up and head to the shelters.
I hope you are kidding!
As a rescuer there are dogs that really need a good home and therefore stringent rules may apply. These dogs have sometimes been through enough and they need a stable forever home not to be returned in a few weeks because they don't fit the new owners life. Adopting a rescue dog is a commitment and most people take it seriously but it sometimes takes a long time for a rescue to fit in due to their baggage. There is a rescue that I know that has placed dogs out of state and I have also. It's more work but worth the effort.I have also rehomed some of my own dogs and when they go to their new home I want it to work which it always has. There are wonderful people out there that will work extra hard to make a rescue work and then there are ...people who don't realize the work involved.
No one should EVER buy from a pet store. You are supporting puppy mills, people that breed dogs for money only. Dogs stuffed in tiny cages covered in their own filth, pumping out puppies every heat, and when they get too old the owner just tosses them away like garbage. Please do some research and educate yourself on buying from a reputable breeder if you don't want to go through a rescue. And yes, most rescues have VERY good reasons for all the trouble they put you through to adopt a dog, because they don't want it coming back when the owner decides it sheds too much, or barks, or they're having a baby (VERY typical excuses for rehoming a dog).
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