Penny and Patch are the quintessential rescue dogs. Like most abandoned
Dalmatians, they did absolutely nothing to deserve the uncertainty and
neglect that define their lives today. Their only fault was starting life
as adorably cute littermates. If you had seen this brother and sister
the day their new owners picked them out of the litter, you would have
thought that everything would have turned out fine. The family couldn't
decide which puppy they liked best, so they took them both. Everyone thought
that it was so sweet that these happy spotted little pups wouldn't be
separated, without even thinking that one Dalmatian was enough for all
but the most energetic and active families.
Everything went smoothly for a while. Like any
Dalmatian pup, Penny and Patch tested their new teeth on furniture legs,
peed on the carpets and got into the garbage. Everyone thought they
were so cute, but as they grew, they gradually received less and less
attention. By the time they were a year old Penny and Patch had become
outside dogs. They were well fed and not mistreated, but for the most
part, the world's cutest puppies had become nothing more than an afterthought
in their busy owner's lives.
Maybe it was ignorance or maybe it was neglect,
but one day during a routine exam, their veterinarian discovered that
Penny and Patch had heartworms. Neither dog was taking heartworm preventative
medication. The owners said that they didn't have mosquitoes in their
yard and that they didn't think they needed to give their dogs the preventative.
They also didn't want to pay for the heartworm treatment, and told the
vet to put the dogs down.
The vet called some rescue groups he knew instead.
One group paid for the heartworm treatment and another agreed to find
a home for the two dogs. You'd think that this was the beginning of
a happy ending for Penny and Patch, but it wasn't going to be that easy.
By the time the dogs were diagnosed with heartworm, they were over five
years old. Everyone seemed to be looking for younger dogs, or dogs with
more spots, or dogs that were friendly with cats. Maybe it was just
bad luck, but whenever a family came to the rescue group looking for
a Dalmatian, they left with a different one than Penny and Patch.
Months went by and dozens of new dogs entered
the rescue program. Some were more aggressive than Penny and Patch.
Others had serious health problems. A few weren't even pure bred Dalmatians,
but all of them eventually found their forever home while Penny and
Patch sat ignored in their kennel.
The rescue group hated to split the pair up
since they were obviously attached to each other. At first it didn't
seem that placing the pair together would be a problem. The dogs were
quiet and well behaved. They were actually easier to walk together on
a leash than many of the larger rescue dogs were to walk alone. When
Penny and Patch were taken to adoption events, they never acted aggressively
toward other dogs. Visitors would pet them and say over and over again
what a cute pair they made, but nobody wanted to take them home.
Instead
of getting a severe case of cabin fever like many dogs that spend too
much time in a kennel environment, Penny and Patch grew accustomed to
spending long hours in a 4 x 6 wire mesh cage. After adoption events
they actually seemed eager to return to their dimly lit kennel. They
both knew exactly where their designated space was in the rescue boarding
facility. As soon as you opened the gate to their kennel, they would
hop up on their blue nylon Kuranda dog beds and give you that contented
"home again" look that most Dalmatians reserve for their human owner's
bed or sofa. They were each making the best of things in their own way.
The sad thing was that as they slowly adapted to the kennel environment,
they became even harder to adopt.
Everyone seems to want a Dalmatian who "smiles"
and licks you on the face. Since Penny and Patch had spent so much time
with each other, they slowly grew less dependent on humans. This was
normal pack behaviour for dogs, but their potential new owners didn't
see it that way. Although Penny and Patch were calmer and better behaved
than many of the other rescue Dalmatians, they didn't seem to tug at
people's heartstrings. People would say that the dogs "didn't like them"
when they didn't automatically lick their face or jump in their lap.
It was ironic that many Dalmatians end up in
shelters in the first place as a result of their rowdy behavior, but
once they've been incarcerated, potential new owners seem a bit suspicious
of the calm and quiet ones. "Is that one sick," they say. Or, "Could
you show me one with a little more spunk?"
I
don't want to give the wrong impression here. It's not that Penny and
Patch were lethargic or listless. They were just a bit calmer than the
Dalmatians who loved to pull the yellow fuzz off tennis balls with their
teeth, or knock you over as a way of saying hello. As time passed, each
dog developed it's own distinct personality. Patch loved to eat and
would try to steal Penny's food when she wasn't looking. Penny would
counter by pulling the entire dish of food over to her corner of the
kennel with her paw. As long as he had gotten enough to eat, Patch was
the more laid back of the pair. Although both seemed docile and calm
when humans were around, there must have been moments of frustration.
When Patch got really mad he would pee on you or if you weren't around,
something near and dear to you. Penny was a secret chewer. On two different
occasions, Penny chewed a big hole in her "indestructible" dog bed.
No one ever saw her do this, but it was either she or space aliens visiting
her kennel at night.
Time and time again, people would come to the
kennel looking for a companion for a Dalmatian they already had. Lot
of people with one dog often wanted another, but very few families without
a dog at all were willing to try adopting two at once. It was a "no
win" situation. A few people thought three dogs would be nice, but inevitably,
the dog they already had was aggressive and didn't like Penny and Patch.
Penny was always the bridesmaid and never the bride, while Patch was
rapidly becoming an institutionalized "lifer" who seemed at times to
prefer life in a shelter to a real home.
Once, it looked like Penny and Patch would finally
find the permanent home they deserved. A young couple fell in love with
the dogs and wanted to adopt both of them. Everyone was happy. After
a trip to the vet for their annual shots and a final bath that left
them looking prettier than anyone had seen them in months, Penny and
Patch got a royal send off from their rescuers and embarked on their
new life as pampered house dogs.
Less than a week later they were right back
where they started. The rescue group and the new family both had the
best of intentions, but it just wasn't meant to be. The family had young
children and became frightened of the dogs when they growled at their
kids. It wasn't the dog's fault. Patch growled at the family's young
boy when he got on all fours and pretended to be a dog while Patch was
eating his dinner. Penny did her growling a bit later when the family
tried to get her off their bed to sleep on the blanket they had prepared
for her.
It would be easy for any knowledgeable dog owner
to say that the rescue group shouldn't have tried to place the dogs
in a home with small children. You could just as easily say that it
was stupid for the young boy to pretend he was a dog and come near Patch
while he was eating. The dogs should have slept in a crate for the first
several weeks too, while they were getting used to their new environment.
Nevertheless, when someone is genuinely interested in a rescue dog that
has received no attention at all and has languished in a kennel for
over a year, it is easy to overlook such things.
Nobody got hurt and everybody learned something
from the experience. The family, who had rescued another Dalmatian when
they were first married, realized that life with children was fundamentally
different than the times they had enjoyed as a couple with their first
rescue dog. The rescue group decided to not even try to place dogs with
families who had children younger than six years old. You might say
that all was well than ended well, but it was still very sad to bring
back a sparkling clean Penny in her new pink collar and a proud looking
Patch in his matching blue collar to their old kennel run at the boarding
facility. When Penny and Patch returned to the kennel, they were the
only ones who didn't appear to be unhappy. They both recognized their
wire mesh cells, immediately started wagging their tails and hopped
up on their familiar blue dog beds. In their own minds they were home
again.
Did the pair even realize how badly they had
screwed up? If only Penny hadn't growled and snarled at her new owners
when they tried to reclaim their queen sized bed at night. Penny was
just doing what she had always done. She never liked Patch to bother
her while she was sleeping and would always give Patch a quick "back
off" growl if he got too close. All these things can be resolved with
patience and training. Maybe they can't be resolved with a two-year-old
child nearby however. For every person who says that a little growling
is absolutely normal, there is another who has been bitten.
Penny and Patch are perfectly normal dogs who
have adapted well to an abnormal situation. It is hard to imagine why
someone wouldn't be eager to offer this congenial pair a home. To the
best of anyone's knowledge, neither dog has ever jumped through a glass
window, killed a neighbor's cat or knocked a priceless pre-Columbian
artifact off a coffee table with its tail. Their only crimes were being
adorably cute puppies and wagging their tails at the wrong family.
"Pick of the litter" good looks are more than
enough to get a Dalmatian puppy its first home. Finding someone who
is willing to give an abandoned adult Dalmatian a second chance is a
little harder. Perhaps the hardest of all is finding someone with the
patience and experience to give dogs like Penny and Patch another chance
at a life they don't even know they are missing.