Olimpia
Biologist & Ecologist
... being young and/or without a yard?
Over the last couple years my roommates and I (all around 21 years old) have tried several times to adopt a dog from rescues, and every time we've been rejected for one reason or another. Even when we had a yard, it seemed like there was always an excuse to reject us (one rescue even told us that with two dogs already, we had to GIVE ONE UP to adopt one of theirs! WHAT?) I have a feeling that they hear "21 years old" and think that I spend all morning hung over and all night playing beer pong, and so can't give a rescue dog a stable, loving environment. Which is completely false, but it's hard to prove.
And now I'm going to see if I can work on getting a friend for my sheltie, since now I live alone and she doesn't have any friends to play with. I've already contacted a sheltie rescue to run my situation by them (21, student, apartment) and see if I would even be considered if I applied for a specific dog. So far no reply, but I assume there will be a response in the next day or two.
Has anyone in a similar situation had success adopting?
I don't know why they automatically eliminate anyone without a yard. My dog gets at least 1.5 hours of walking a day, plus several laps of rollerblading around the neighborhood at a full run, plus a couple hours of dog park several times a week... you can't tell me my dog's not getting enough exercise!
I was a lazier dog owner when we lived in a house with a yard, if you ask me.
Fingers crossed that they give me a chance!
Over the last couple years my roommates and I (all around 21 years old) have tried several times to adopt a dog from rescues, and every time we've been rejected for one reason or another. Even when we had a yard, it seemed like there was always an excuse to reject us (one rescue even told us that with two dogs already, we had to GIVE ONE UP to adopt one of theirs! WHAT?) I have a feeling that they hear "21 years old" and think that I spend all morning hung over and all night playing beer pong, and so can't give a rescue dog a stable, loving environment. Which is completely false, but it's hard to prove.
And now I'm going to see if I can work on getting a friend for my sheltie, since now I live alone and she doesn't have any friends to play with. I've already contacted a sheltie rescue to run my situation by them (21, student, apartment) and see if I would even be considered if I applied for a specific dog. So far no reply, but I assume there will be a response in the next day or two.
Has anyone in a similar situation had success adopting?
I don't know why they automatically eliminate anyone without a yard. My dog gets at least 1.5 hours of walking a day, plus several laps of rollerblading around the neighborhood at a full run, plus a couple hours of dog park several times a week... you can't tell me my dog's not getting enough exercise!
Fingers crossed that they give me a chance!