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SCOTT S. HAMRICK / Inquirer
The canine lifeline has brought
Buster to Hatboro’s Walton family. The lucky dog,
a year old, relaxes in his new yard as Elizabeth, 10, climbs
a tree.
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Posted on Tue, Jul. 20, 2004 Coming for
to carry them home
| Thanks to the Internet and an "underground
railroad" of drivers, dogs from high-kill shelters several
states away are spared, delivered to loving families in the
Northeast. |
By Amy Worden
Inquirer Staff Writer
NEW MARTINSVILLE, W. Va. - Buster spent the early spring
on death row here, stuck in an outdoor kennel at the overcrowded
county shelter.
The beagle-mix puppy was the last of a litter found starving and
neglected under a barn. The next stop for him was the euthanasia
room.
These days, Buster - now a lively 1-year-old - frolics in the quarter-acre
backyard of his Hatboro, Pa., home. Buster owes his sweet
suburban life to what has been called the "canine underground
railroad." This network of animal lovers plucks unwanted dogs
from high-kill shelters in depressed areas of Appalachia and the
South, and brings them to the Northeast, where there are more adoptive
homes.
In Buster's case, five volunteer drivers, each taking a 75-mile
leg of the trip, whisked him away from almost certain death in northwestern
West Virginia last month and delivered him to his loving home in
Montgomery County.
It's a story played out every day across the country as rescue groups
comb animal-shelter lists on the Internet and then put together
a string of drivers to save endangered dogs - and, when there's
room, a crate full of hitchhiking cats.
"If we had to put down all the dogs that we would if we didn't
send them out, no one would work here," said Theresa Bruner,
vice president of the Federation of Humane Organizations of West
Virginia. "It would be too depressing."
Too many unwanted cats and dogs, not enough homes. It's a familiar
situation everywhere. In Philadelphia, shelters destroyed 8,369
dogs last year, about 60 percent of the dogs they took in, most
because of age, injuries or temperament, according to the city's
two shelters.
But a combination of factors conspire to make the crisis in West
Virginia and elsewhere in Appalachia and the South particularly
acute: widespread poverty, the absence of spay/neuter education
programs, and a staggering number of stray animals.
Shelters in West Virginia took in 103,000 dogs and cats last year,
and about 75 percent were destroyed, according to the Federation
of Humane Organizations.
A decade ago, the state's numbers were even grimmer. But in recent
years, animal shelters there and around the country have been using
the Internet to find homes for dogs. The Net frees shelters from
relying solely on the local population for adoptive homes - especially
helpful to a poor state like West Virginia.
"The Internet is a godsend," said Rosy Cosart, director
of the Wetzel County Animal Shelter, where volunteers work hard
to place Buster and many others like him.
Libby Marquardt, a volunteer coordinator for Trucknpaws, which
has 2,000 members and says it is the largest transportation network,
estimates that thousands of dogs are being moved every week all
over the country.
Marquardt, of Mount Airy, Md., spends hours each week combing shelter
Web sites for adoptable dogs, screening rescue groups and drivers,
and mapping out routes throughout the mid-Atlantic and Midwest.
There is a high demand for certain breeds and puppies in urban areas
that rural shelters can fill, Marquardt said.
Still, there are plenty of unwanted dogs in the Philadelphia area
that are needlessly destroyed, animal-care officials say. Of the
7,300 dogs euthanized last year by Philadelphia Animal Care and
Control Association, the city's shelter, about half were unadoptable
because of age, temperament or health, but the others were destroyed
because of lack of space, said Jeff Moran, a spokesman for the agency.
Erik Hendricks, executive director of the Pennsylvania Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said there was a shortage
of puppies in urban areas because many more people in those areas
spayed and neutered their pets. To meet the demand in the group's
Philadelphia shelter, he said, the SPCA ships in puppies from shelters
in northern Pennsylvania.
Urban shelters also have large numbers of overly aggressive dogs
that are not suitable for families, he said. "There is the
pit-bull factor," Hendricks said. "But there are a lot
of dogs perfectly healthy and young, just not puppies anymore, who
won't be adopted even though they may have 10 or 12 years of good
life and love ahead."
Buster and his five littermates spent their first 10 months huddled
under a barn in this hardscrabble area along the Ohio River in northwestern
West Virginia on the Pennsylvania border.
"The person who called animal control said they'd been dumped
on her property," said Cosart.
An animal control officer deposited them at the Wetzel County Animal
Shelter in late March. "They were almost comatose," she
said. "They were scared and hungry." Three of Buster's
littermates were adopted and saved, two by the group that helped
Buster. One was destroyed because he fought with his kennelmate
over food.
The shelter is in a small cinder-block building in a patch of lowland
at the edge of the county fairgrounds. The shelter staff has brightened
the place up with lavender paint and stenciled paw prints. Volunteers
built a shed roof over the kennels, but it is so crowded lately
that some dogs are tethered to stakes with doghouses nearby.
A Web-savvy volunteer maintains a list of the shelter's available
cats and dogs, posting their pictures on the national pet adoption
site, petfinder.com.
Buster's journey to Pennsylvania began when 17-year-old Pete Walton
of Hatboro stumbled on the tricolored puppy with the floppy ears
while surfing the Net in May.
The Walton family was looking for a younger companion for their
7-year-old poodle, Comet. They decided to explore adoption when
they discovered the average puppy at the local pet store cost $1,000.
"Why buy a dog when you could save one?" Pete Walton said.
The Waltons contacted Animal Rescue and Referral, an all-breed rescue
group based in Richboro, Pa., which arranged to transport Buster
to the Waltons' home. Just before dawn on June 5, Joe and Lou Rabel
rolled up to the shelter in an SUV with their own ex-shelter dog,
Buttons, a Saint Bernard/Great Dane mix. The Rabels, a retired West
Virginia couple, make regular 200-mile round-trip runs to Maryland
with dogs from the Wetzel County shelter. "It's the least we
can do," said Lou Rabel, 62. "We see so many animals that
are dumped."
Buster and his traveling companion, a spitz named Teddi who was
heading for a home in Wilton, Conn., were spruced up for the road
trip. After a bath, a dose of Dramamine, and a round of goodbye
kisses, Buster was packed up for the 400-mile ride ahead.
On the Saturday of Buster's journey, the rain was coming down in
sheets in Hagerstown, Md., a hub of mid-Atlantic canine transport
activity. The city sits at the junction of Interstate 70, a major
east-west route, and I-81, a major north-south route through Pennsylvania
that links the Northeast with the South.
It was a busy morning in Hagerstown. At one meeting point, volunteers
put 23 dogs, mostly puppies of various stripes, into a van heading
to a rescue group in Lancaster. After a drink and a bathroom break,
Buster was loaded up again for the next 75-mile leg to Harrisburg.
By the time he reached his permanent home in Hatboro, Buster had
traveled in five different vehicles and had spent a night at the
Levittown home of rescue volunteer Anne Maghee.
On a recent summer evening in Hatboro the Walton family - Dave,
Chris and Pete and his sister, Elizabeth, 10 - watched Buster gambol
with his canine pal, Comet, in their fenced-in yard. It took Buster
a few days to figure out how to navigate the staircase, but now
he sprawls out on the couch like he owns the place, says Chris Walton.
Carsickness may be Buster's only shortcoming."He doesn't travel
very well," said Chris. "But that's OK, he's home now."
Contact staff writer Amy Worden at 717-783-2584
or aworden@phillynews.com.
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