The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Take a Good Look at This Video…Then Think About What You Are Seeing: A Powerful Message That Every Dog Lover Needs To See… A Puppy is Not a Product


This tongue-in-cheek ad by Same Day Pups is to show you that breeders and puppy mills are using impulse shopping to place animals in homes. This ad is not real. It’s absurd and so is shopping online for a puppy like they’re a toy. Shopping online is surely convenient but bringing an animal into your home should never be about convenience. It should be about love. Adding a pet to your family is a real commitment because an animal is a real family member.

Many puppy mills operate online and pull at your heart strings. They have fancy websites and post adorable photos (and even videos!) of available puppies that they can be sent to your local airport (some even next day!). Don’t be fooled. Just because these puppies look pretty in the pictures doesn’t mean they come from a loving environment. Plus, sending these puppies can be so traumatic. These puppy mills are for profit, not for the good of the animal. Adopt, don’t shop! So many wonderful animals are waiting for homes!


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Monday, May 18, 2015

Mom Opossum and Her Adorable Babies Take Over Closet in Los Angeles Home


Beverly Grove, Los Angeles -  A woman cleaning out a closet noticed a trash bag moving. Startled she opened the bag and found a mom opossum and her babies.

When she opened the bag the mom opossum was upset and hissed at her. Tara McVicar pulled out her cell phone and documented her close encounter. "That's a terrifying sound, but you're relatively cute," she says to the hissing marsupial.
She's soon won over once she realizes it's a momma possum with her seven babies on her back, nearly melting down: "Omg! it's the cutest thing I ever saw."

McVicar thinks the opossums got in when she left the patio door open for her daughter's pet rabbit, Mustache.

Eventually she's able to get the animals outside when she puts the bag, with a few babies inside, in Mustache's backyard cage. The babies calling out for their mother draw the opossums out. "Just take 3rd all the way to Beverly Hills," she says as she bids the possum family farewell.






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Heartwarming Story: Two Teens, Both with Disabilities, Go to Different High Schools and Had Never Met, Until Their Service Dogs… Brought Them Together


Seniors Delaney Johnson and Nick Ackerman, strangers until a few weeks before their high school proms, both planned to skip the big night–that is, until they and their adorable service dogs Troy and Griffin met. What happened next is something you just have to see for yourself!

The two teens, both with disabilities, go to different high schools and hadn’t even met until their service dogs, in a way, brought them together.

Nick, who has a service dog named Troy, was interviewing Delaney, who has a service dog named Griffin, for a school video project on service dogs.

Making small talk, she asked him, “Are you all geared for prom?” When he told her he had no plans to go to his, she volunteered to go with him. He accepted.
With their service dogs along, they attended his school’s prom, then hers.

A Lansing State Journal columnist and photographer went along .

Delaney, 17, goes to Haslett High School, where, before she got her 2-year-old Dutch shepherd Griffin, she would faint or pass out up to 20 times a day due to narcolepsy.

Between medication and help from Griffin, that condition — and a second neurological condition called cataplexy — have been brought under control.
Her dog acts to distract her if she’s experiencing anxiety and, in case of an attack, he’s trained to stay with her, lying on top of her if she becomes incapacitated so that she feels protected.

“Since I got Griffin, I’ve not had any major cataplexy attacks at all,” said Johnson, a singer and songwriter who plans to take Griffin with her this fall to attend Grand Valley State University. “…He’s my own personal little bodyguard.”

Nick attends Forest Hills Central High School in Grand Rapids, where he’s a champion debater. His service dog Troy helps Nick, who was born without arms, do everything from carrying things to zipping up his coat.

Nick, who plans to attend Eastern Michigan University in the fall, met Delaney two weeks ago, when he interviewed her for a class project on service dogs and the subject of proms came up.

On May 2, they went to his prom. Last Saturday, they went to hers.

The columnist and photographer accompanied the foursome — from home, where they posed for family photos, to a sushi dinner and then to the prom itself.

“I was going to stay home and eat ice cream and watch movies,” Delaney said later. “I’m just so glad I went…It was an amazing time.”









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Sunday, May 17, 2015

Have You Adopted a Pet? Only 4 Days Left to Order Your ‘I Rescued My Best Friend’ Unisex T-Shirt: Only 50 Being Made – Order Yours Today!


Help raise $850 for Animal Allies. Your purchase will help care for homeless and abandoned animals.

Animal Allies is dedicated to rescuing homeless and abandoned animals. They could use your help to care for the animals. Please help by purchasing this great t-shirt for $17. Only 50 being made, so order yours today!

All funds will go directly to Animal Allies of Fairfax, Virginia. 

More about this campaign

Animal Allies, a nonprofit, all-volunteer no kill organization dedicated to the rescue of homeless and abandoned animals. We are a registered 501(c)(3) organization incorporated in the State of VA. Founded in 1984, Animal Allies is devoted to curbing the irresponsible breeding of pets in an effort to end the overpopulation of homeless animals.

Animal Allies volunteers work to rescue lost, abandoned, or stray animals and find loving homes for them if possible. All animals in our system are vetted to check for disease and spayed and neutered to stop the cycle of unwanted animals.

Through a detailed process, we do our best to make sure each animal goes to a suitable home where they can enjoy love and shelter and the necessities for the rest of their lives, and provide their human companions with love in return. Our organization is funded solely through the generosity of the public and countless hours put in by our volunteers.

Ready to order your shirt?

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Saturday, May 16, 2015

Texas Tornado: How to Help Animal Victims


(EMERGENCY ANIMAL RESCUE) TEXAS — On Sunday, a tornado struck Van, a town in eastern Texas, killing two people and injuring 43. This disaster not only resulted in human casualties, but it also destroyed a large percentage of the land, flattened homes, and led to flooding.

Efforts to recover the tornado victims have been ongoing. Texas Game Wardens from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, along with their K-9s are actively searching the Van area for people and pets who may be stuck under debris or in need of care.

Game Warden John Thorne recently stated:

“It’s very deliberate work in the sense that we’re trying to clear each and every one of these brush piles. There could be a victim in here that we wouldn’t be able to detect without the use of one of these dogs.”

Although search-and-rescue dogs are critical in helping people affected by the tornado, efforts have also been made to rescue animals who were tornado victims. While some families evacuated the area with their beloved pets, other pets were separated from their guardians in the midst of the disaster.

To read more on this story, click here: Texas Tornado:How to Help Animal Victims
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Adopt a Golden Organization: Now Accepting Adoption Applications for 36 Golden Retrievers from Turkey Rescue


Dozens of abandoned golden retrievers are adjusting to their new lives in metro Atlanta after a rescue took place in Istanbul, Turkey.

The Adopt a Golden organization helped bring 36 purebred golden retrievers to Alpharetta, Georgia last weekend. This is being called the largest international golden rescue ever.

The dogs arrived at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport late Saturday night. They were taken to Pet Lodge pet resort.

According to Adopt a Golden, the dogs range from 6 months to 10-years-old.
“Our guiding motto is that we never say no to a Golden Retriever in need. These dogs are in need because the novelty of having a Golden Retriever in Istanbul, Turkey, as a status symbol wore off, they were abandoned and are now living in crowded shelters, in the forests or in the streets,” explained Lauren Genkinger, founder and president of Adopt a Golden Atlanta, Adopt a Golden is calling these dogs “Freedom Goldens.” Each dog has been given a patriotic name, such as “Liberty” and “Glory.”

“I want these Golden Retrievers to be happy and have a better life,” explained Yasemin Baban, the lead shelter volunteer in Istanbul who was instrumental in helping Adopt a Golden Atlanta rescue the dogs. “I want them to find love and affection, a home to live in, and a cushion to sleep on,” she added.

The dogs have never heard English and have their own interpreter in Fulton County. The only commands they know, if any, are in Turkish.

"From a behavior standpoint, we didn't really know what we were getting in to," Genkinger told FOX 5 Atlanta. "They're very social though, since they're used to begging for food on the streets."

The dogs will be medically screened, taught to walk on a leash, be housebroken and of course will receive lots of TLC.

Adopt a Golden is now accepting applications for adoption.











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