Category Page pets

petsRescue

Has anyone noticed me? Im really sweet. William – 10 weeks old 💙 This little mixed breed boy is a full-body wiggle of happiness! William loves toys, plays great with his kitten and doggy friends, and is always ready for fun. When he’s done romping, he’s all about cuddle time. His sister found her forever home, and now it’s his turn — he misses having his playmate and is ready for a family of his own. Sweet, playful, and full of joy… how has no one scooped him up yet? 🐾 #adopt #adoption #adoptdontshop #adoptdontbuy #adoptapet #adopadog #adoptthisdog #adoptme #rescueme #rescueadog #saveadog #saveme #euthanasia #foster #fosteradog #fosterthisdog #fosterananimal #euthlisted #share #sharethispost #urgent #savingHokeAnimals #HokeCountyNC #Volunteer #ambassadorsofhokecountyanimals #communitysupport #DonationDrive #Nonprofit #NorthCarolina #WishlistWednesday 🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘

Zack D. Films

My neighbor pounded on my door at 11:00 PM during a thunderstorm. “Your dog has something in the backyard!” he yelled over the rain. “He’s shaking it. I think it’s a rabbit!” My stomach dropped. My dog is Tank—140 pounds of Cane Corso. He looks like a gargoyle brought to life. If he caught a rabbit, it was already over. I grabbed a flashlight and ran into the downpour. Tank stood by the back fence, soaked, mud splashed across his massive chest. Something small and gray hung from his mouth. “Tank! Drop it!” I shouted. He didn’t drop it. He trotted toward me, eyes wide, almost frantic. He nudged my hand gently, still holding it. I shone the light. Not a rabbit. A kitten. Maybe four weeks old. Half-drowned in mud. Tank wasn’t shaking it. He was trying to carry it without crushing it. I held out my hands. Tank lowered his huge head and opened his mouth slowly. He didn’t drop the kitten—he placed it into my palms with incredible care. We rushed inside. I grabbed a towel. The kitten was freezing, barely breathing. Before I could start drying it, Tank nudged me aside. He lay down and began licking the kitten gently. His tongue was bigger than its entire body. He cleaned the mud from its face, warmed it with his breath, and curled his enormous frame around it, building a wall of heat. The kitten let out a faint squeak and buried its face in Tank’s neck fur. My neighbor called him a killer. I watched a 140-pound “monster” hold his breath so he wouldn’t scare a baby. The kitten’s name is Squirt. He lives here now. And Tank? He’s not just a guard dog. He’s a nanny. Don’t judge a book by its cover. Sometimes the scariest beasts have the softest hearts. 🐾❤️ #doglover #kindnessmatters

petsRescue

WELCOME BUDDY🥰🐶🐶 Buddy is a 14 week old 3.5 lb chihuahua mix with a heart of gold ! He is a cream colored little elven Prince who think he's the boss of everybody. Though he's small enough to be easily picked up with one hand, he's got an Everest-sized sense of entitlement. He's got a knack for being spoiled and indulged, it's like magic or he's just one determined little fella. One of his favorite things to do in life ever is to taunt other doggies from the safety of his persons arms. A real tough guy he is! He's got more attitude than a pimply teenager. He might be a feisty little diva but it's only because he's full of life and loves to meet new people and doggies. He's a one elf welcome wagon and never shies from giving anyone a huge hello. When he plays he gives it his all. He secretly thinks he can fly. As energetic as he is he also loves being held and cuddled by both people and dogs. He can't be bothered to do anything halfway, it's just got to be all Buddy's way or nuttin'. Buddy is very pad trained and likes to be very strategic about his potties to maximize his treats. Buddy will do great with a playful buddy as well, and if the playful buddy is much bigger than him, the dog needs to have small dog experience. He will also do well on a family home with children six years of age or older. #adopt #adoption #adoptdontshop #adoptdontbuy #adoptapet #adopadog #adoptthisdog #adoptme #rescueme #rescueadog #saveadog #saveme #euthanasia #foster #fosteradog #fosterthisdog #fosterananimal #euthlisted #share #sharethispost #urgent #savingHokeAnimals #HokeCountyNC #Volunteer #ambassadorsofhokecountyanimals #communitysupport #DonationDrive #Nonprofit #NorthCarolina #WishlistWednesday 🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘🆘

petsRescue

#AdoptDontShopThis little Yorkshire Terrier, now looking so fluffy and hopeful in her soft grey sweater, once had a name nobody bothered to remember. She was born into a backyard breeder's nightmare—tucked inside a filthy wire cage stacked among dozens of others in a damp, windowless shed on the edge of a forgotten town. Her mother, exhausted from constant litters, barely had milk left. The puppies were taken too young, sold cheap to anyone who knocked on the door. She ended up with a family who thought a tiny "teacup" Yorkie would be the perfect Instagram accessory. For the first few months they posted pictures, dressed her up, called her cute. Then reality hit. She barked when left alone (because she was terrified). She had accidents on the carpet during thunderstorms (because nobody taught her otherwise). She needed grooming every few weeks (because her coat matted painfully if ignored). She wasn't a toy—she was a living creature with needs. One rainy Tuesday evening they decided she was "too much trouble." They drove her to a quiet industrial area, opened the car door, placed her on the wet pavement still wearing the little pink bow they bought for photos, and drove away without looking back. She was eight months old. She sat there in the downpour for hours, shivering, soaked to the skin, her tiny body trembling so violently her teeth chattered audibly. Cars sped past. Nobody stopped. She wandered for days. Her once-pristine coat became matted with mud and burrs that pulled at her skin until it bled in places. She scavenged trash behind restaurants, choking on bits of chicken bone. She hid under parked cars at night, pressing her small body against the warm tire to steal a little heat. Every loud noise made her flinch; every shadow made her cower. She learned that humans approaching usually meant pain or abandonment. A kind delivery driver finally spotted her one freezing morning—curled in a ball behind a dumpster, eyes dull, barely moving.

Zack D. Films

The shelter paperwork said "Hospice Foster." That is code for: He is dying, and nobody wants him to pass away in a cage. He was a 13-year-old Golden with a massive mass on his spleen. The vet gave him two weeks. Maybe three. They asked if I was sure. "It’s going to be hard," they warned. "Don't get attached." I signed the papers anyway. I decided we weren't going to spend the next two weeks waiting for him to die. We were going to live. His name is Charlie. And we made a "Bucket List." Day 1: Steak dinner. (He inhaled it in 4 seconds). Day 3: He slept in the "big bed" right in the middle of the pillows. Day 7: We went to the beach. I put a party hat on him and bought him his first vanilla soft serve. I took this picture, thinking it was the last one. But looking at his face covered in ice cream... he didn't look like a dog who was ready to go. He looked like he was just getting started. I took a gamble. I drove him to a specialist the next morning. I maxed out my credit card. "We can try to remove it," the vet said, looking at his muzzle. "But at his age? And with his heart? It's a coin flip. He might not wake up on the table." I kissed his head and let them wheel him away. I sat in the parking lot for five hours, staring at my phone, terrified I had made the wrong choice. The phone rang. He made it. The mass was benign. It was heavy, but it wasn't cancer. He came home three days later. That was six months ago. He put on five pounds. His coat got shiny. He’s currently snoring on my feet. He greets me at the door every day with a stuffed bear in his mouth. He wasn't dying. He was just heavy. He just needed someone to take the weight off so he could run again. #doglover #saveanimals #shelterdog #dogrecovery #saveanimals

MAXWELL_UPWELL

He didn't understand the diagnosis. He didn't need to. He iust knew. His person wasn't okay. The routine changed. The voice was weaker. The energy was gone. So he staved close. Quiet. Watchful And when his human went to the hospital the dog waited. Until one day, they let him in. He climbed onto the bed - and he never left. He didn't bark. Didn't whine. Just lay there pressed against the chest of the man he loved more than anything. The doctors weren't sure at first. But they saw. They saw how the man's heartbeat calmed. How his breathing steadied. They saw how this dog wasn't iust a visitor - he was a healer. A quiet presence doing what no medicine could. He didn't ask for treats, or attention. He iust needed to stay Because sometimes, love isn't loud. It's just... not leaving. And that was enough. That was everything.'

Zack D. Films

The surrender form was filled with heavy black ink. The family wrote: “Sudden and unprovoked aggression. Snapped at my husband. Dangerous.” His name was Buster, a four-year-old Golden Retriever mix. Usually gentle, he looked terrifying in the shelter’s intake room. Anyone within three feet of his kennel triggered a low, rumbling growl. He wouldn’t let anyone touch his head. Immediately, he was marked “Rescue Only/Euthanasia Risk.” Dogs with a bite history rarely survive. I’m the head veterinary technician at the county shelter. I’ve seen true aggression. But Buster? I saw terror, not malice. His eyes were wide, his body stiff, tail tucked. I asked for twenty minutes with him before the final decision. Using a mild sedative, I calmed him enough to examine him safely. Everything seemed normal—until I lifted his left ear flap. Inside was a massive, infected foxtail, buried deep in his sensitive ear. The surrounding tissue was swollen, red, and hot. Buster wasn’t vicious. He’d lived in blinding, agonizing pain for weeks. Every attempted touch felt like knives twisting in his ear. He was begging for help in the only way he could. I carefully removed the foxtail, flushed the infection, and applied antibiotics. Then I waited. When Buster awoke, disoriented, I held my breath. The growl never came. Instead, he sighed, crawled into my lap, and pressed his face to my chest. Pain was finally gone. Two weeks later, Buster was adopted by a family who truly understood him. There are no bad dogs—only bad situations, and humans who fail to listen when their best friends quietly cry for help. ❤️ #doglover #shelterdog #rescuedog