Animal Rescue Stories

Read heartfelt stories of rescue, and share your rescued animal stories with others.

He had been shot

He had been shot

My yellow lab had just died of an auto immune disease and I did not want another dog, but friends said I should just go and spend the morning visiting dogs at the rescue center. I could not believe the dog in the window! He was magnificent. He had just been brought in. They told me he was fine, but he was not. He was a Welsh springer spaniel and English Cocker and he had heartworm. My vet found buckshot in his chest when he x-rayed him. Clearly he was a working dog as he knew every command and performed it in a split second. Our lives together were too short. He developed anal adenocarcinoma, twice. The second surgery was not as successful. It spread. With love and good food he survived 16 months after getting a five week prognosis. We were one. He never took his eyes off me. Never. He became the therapy dog in the nursing home where I work, so we were together 24 hours a day, seven days a week. I never went anywhere without him. We were in love with each other and I miss him deeply. He was only seven when he died on July 25, 2020. The love of my life.

Janis Lasser
SAN ANTONIO, TX

Hearing the call

Hearing the call

I met Lou while buying a truck and was asked if I needed a dog..."maybe," I offered, walking to the shed where the puppies were. "This is the only one I'm giving away, though," the man offered. Oddly, this was the cutest one, with the bluest eyes that rivaled the Lookout Mountain sky.
We quickly found out why Lou was the only one given away...the half Austrian Shepard and half Catahoola hound was, and is, deaf as a rock (he has reacted to ungodly lightening strikes, but that is about all).
Still, we took him to obedience school, where oddly enough the teacher was ecstatic. She gladly accepted the challenge of trying to teach a dog sign language. Lou excelled (the other barking pups did not distract him as his attention was riveted on his teacher, with us learning as well).
He now knows "come", "sit", and "good dog", and, somewhat, "stay". "No" can be a problem.
He has been known to see the command, look away, then shortly look back...if "no" is still given he will snap his head to the side, pretending he didn't see it. He can, at times, be sort of like a problem teenager.
But a more loyal and loving dog I have never seen, sleeping with you or at your feet. Outside he is a shadow, herding the cattle, and a confident watchdog on the porch (maybe he cannot hear, but he watches extremely well and barks at any suspicious movement). Other senses kick in too...open any food, and Lou is the dog with "the nose that knows."
I bought that truck, and sold it several years later.
But there is no amount of money that I would take for Lou.
When we all go through the Gate of life, I expect to see him again, and finally call out to those floppy ears, now hearing...but I fully expect he will give me that look of "I heard you all the time... with my heart."

Mike Chambers
RISING FAWN, GA

My Fergie my heart and soul

My Fergie my heart and soul

My Fergie came to me at 14 years old. She was timid and afraid, so I sang to her and made her a beautiful good dog. She stomped her feet when I was late feeding her, and her most famous word was "ma." She didn't like it when I fussed; she gave me a sad-eyed look. She was 14 years old she got sick and wouldn't eat, and anyone who knew Fergie she was always hungry. Nothing worked; she couldn't keep the medicine down no matter how hard it was, so I made the decision to put her to sleep so she wouldn't suffer anymore. She had a bad ear and UTI infection and something wrong with her stomach, and Wednesday, November 18 2020, I put her to sleep. I wish she was here and I miss her dearly. The other dogs don't understand why she isn't here with them. She can now run free and eat whatever she wants to. So sorry, I am still grieving for her.

Janice
PETERSBURG, VA

Millie

Millie

My neighbors' granddaughter found a tiny black and white kitten in the yard of an abandoned house. I said I'd take it, and immediately took it to the vet. It was loaded with fleas and they immediately gave it a flea bath. I held her wrapped in a towel while we waited to see the vet. She weighed one pound three ounces, and fit in the palm of my hand. She is still the smallest of my five cats. And as I type this she's sitting on my lap and across one arm. Her nickname is Brat Cat. She has something against all black cats and is constantly attacking her older all-black sister and a rescue black cat who is currently living behind my couch. (There are days my spray water bottle gets quite a workout.)
Her name is Millie and she loves to play fetch.
But my neighbor has also seen her sitting in my bay window with Smoky (from behind the couch) basking in the sunshine.
One paw pad on each of her feet is pink while the others are black.
She also loves to watch action videos on the computer, and is partial to Mary Poppins videos.
Actually all but one of my cats is a rescue. I found my two three-year-old girls with their brothers under a lilac bush in my back yard when they were tiny. I brought them in and they lived in my bathtub for a few days until I could get them to a vet. I kept the girls and found a wonderful home for the boys.

Nancy
RIVERVIEW, MI

My love story with Baby Bear

My love story with Baby Bear

It was a beautiful sunny November afternoon that day when I came home from work. As I was walking towards the house, I noticed something on the walkway. At first I thought
it was a dead squirrel. As I got closer I realized it was a tiny kitten. His eyes were half shut, the little ears were barely visible and the tiny tail was sticking straight up. He was meowing at the top of his lungs yet is was barely audible. I knew where he came from. The people a few doors down left their cats outside and every year they had litters. Either the mother was in the process of moving them and I'd startled her, or he wandered into my yard by himself. To this day I like to believe he found his way there on his own. I took him in the house and gave him some water in an eye dropper. I had a small rabbit cage which I lined with towels and put him in. Then I went to Walmart and got some powered milk and a small bottle to feed him. I prayed that night he would make it. He was so tiny. A few days later I saw his mother in my yard looking for him. I felt bad. For a moment I considered giving him back to her but I knew he would have a better life with me than he would living outside. Sadly a couple months later his mother was hit with a car. I was now officially his mommy. On his first visit to the vet, he was only 0.6 pounds. He was with me for 19 years through some of the best and worst times of my life. He never left my side. He crossed the bridge last year in December, and I stayed with him to the end, talking to him and singing him the songs I sang to him when he was a
baby. I miss him every single day. But I will forever be thankful for that November day when he found his way into my yard and into my heart.

Diana Marsh
EVANS CITY, PA

Cats in the attic

Cats in the attic

I heard some noises in my attic and I initially thought it might be squirrels. I saw momma cat going up into my attic from the top of my fence through a soffit vent that I didn't know was open. After hiring a company to come to my house to set traps, it turns out there were two baby kittens that were likely born in the attic. They were in my attic for two and half weeks until they were trapped and brought down. It took eight days before the second one to come down would let me touch him. I kept them in the garage for months since I had no intention of keeping them; I had an 18-year-old senior cat already. I finally started to slowly let them in the house, and I ultimately named them and decided to keep them. Seven and a half years later I still have them and they're fantastic pets. They bring a lot of joy.

Jay
CYPRESS, TX

follow up story of Lefty

follow up story of Lefty

Lefty, our 'TriPawd' Orange Tabby is now about 7 or 8 years old and is still a Lil Holy Terror! He still continues to amaze us with his antics.....jumping straight into the air and attacking NOTHING! Running through the house at full speed chasing NOTHING. Then he settles in on the lap of which ever Hooman he deigns to honor as a Hooman Cat Bed. The lil guy is still enjoying life at the fullest, even with just 3 legs!

Reggie Grothe
GROVER BEACH, CA

Mother and Son

Mother and Son

Smokey showed up on our doorstep with his pregnant mother Callie. We reached out and found his owners, and they insisted they wanted to keep the cats. Flash forward a bit and winter hits full force, negative temperatures every night. My mother found Smokey under our porch with his back half completely frozen. A few days later, we let Callie into our house and she had her kittens in my mother’s closet. When we talked to the owners, they made a comment about “we thought she went into labor somewhere and froze to death” but they wanted her back “when we got rid of the kittens”. Long story short.... it’s been five years and we still have Callie and Smokey. We think Smokey might be mentally slow because of being severely inbred (their owners technically occasionally fed them but their cats were basically a cat colony with the amount and treatment of them). Callie was the mother of most of them and had likely been having kittens since before she was a year old. They now both live as lazy, happy indoor cats. Smokey still has a lot of health problems and he’s a frequent flier in the vet due to bladder issues. Callie has some serious arthritis in her back and she has a few old injuries from her time outside. They’ll never be outside again if we can help it.

Brooke
DANVILLE, IL

Half-Pint Became a Misnomer

Half-Pint Became a Misnomer

First and foremost, all of our furbabies have been rescues, beginning in the 1970s. They see us coming from a mile away, turning on the charm and reeling us in from afar.

Half-Pint was a different and much more disturbing experience. On Father's Day, 2016, my husband and I decided to drive up to a local lake to take in the spectacular spring beauty. Living in a very rural area of the Sierra Nevada foothills, there were plenty of back roads from which to choose.

About a third of the way up the road, we stopped at a favorite photo op location. Very quickly we heard what sounded like a small, wounded bird. We didn't see anything (and were looking in the wrong direction) then I looked down. There lay two adult felines who had died recently and a very tiny kitten, nestled in some weeds. How long she'd been there was uncertain. Drop-offs on country roads are not an unusual occurrence.

In sad shape and looking very sick, we picked her up and raced down the road to a local country store. A can of food and some water were the first order of business but she was too weak to eat or drink. The mornings had been cooler than usual with a late starting spring and she sounded congested as well.

We bundled her up and took her home, hoping to save her. She finally tried to eat and drink but her eyes were matted shut and her breathing difficult. Off to the vet she went, coming home with antibiotics and eye drops to hopefully take care of her physical ills. She did fine for a couple of days then started crashing. Back to the vet for stronger antibiotics, which this time did the trick.

Since then, Half-Pint has flourished and grown into the most beautiful feline I've ever had in my home. When my husband died last year, she was lost for awhile but has since decided that I rate her attention and affection. She's been by my side, giving me comfort in the worst of times and being quite the good friend.

And she's much, much, much bigger now. People tell me that maybe Half-Pint wasn't the best name but I haven't come up with a better one and she seems to like it. We'll stick with each other as long as possible and keep the name, too!

Denise Roberts
DOYLE, CA

My Life With Henry

My Life With Henry

CHAPTER 1

After living with roommates for many years, I decided to move into my own apartment. I was single and for the past year had been living with a roommate and her boyfriend in Marina del Rey, California. Living together as roommates, like in the 70’s TV show "Three’s Company," worked out better than any of us expected but I knew they were going to get engaged soon and probably wanted to live alone as a couple. Plus, I was ready, for the first time ever, to live alone. I also really wanted a pet but my roommate was adamant about not having animals where we lived. She was scarred by past roommates who didn’t clean up after their pets. In a way I couldn’t blame her but this was my life too and I really wanted a pet.

One day I was walking with a friend and her dog and we passed an apartment building with a "For Rent" sign. It was for a studio apartment in an older building with large trees and a lion fountain in the front. We called the manager of the building and went inside to take a look. I was pleasantly surprised! The studio was perfect. It was large with huge windows and trees outside. I filled out the application and credit check form. The next day, I got a call from the manager of the apartment building. He told me the studio was mine if I still wanted to rent it. I immediately said “yes!”

CHAPTER 2

A week after moving into my own apartment, I was looking on Facebook and came across some pictures of a kitten my friend Nancy was fostering from the animal rescue where she volunteered. I always loved animals and had both cats and dogs growing up. The pictures were not of a sweet, docile kitten, but he looked like a baby tiger with milk all over his face and his paws up like he was ready to attack. He was adorable and looked harmless because he was so little. For some reason, the minute I saw the pictures of this kitten, I thought “this is going to be my new pet.” I immediately contacted my friend and asked her about the kitten that she was fostering until he found a permanent home. She said he was only 2-3 weeks old when he was discovered by a woman in Los Angeles who heard a constant meowing in the alley behind where she lived. When the woman went out to see what was making all that noise, she found a tiny kitten all by himself. She brought him to an animal shelter so he would hopefully find a home. Kittens this young are a lot of work. They are too young to eat regular kitten food and need to be bottle fed kitten formula every few hours to provide them with the nutrients they need to grow. They would normally be nursing from their mothers at this age. Because of the expense and time to care for young kittens, they are sometimes euthanized after they are dropped off at a shelter. Fortunately for this kitten, a rescue took him out of the shelter just in time.

The rescue workers named the new kitten Meow because meowing so much is what saved his life. I went to see Meow at Nancy’s house in the valley. He was the sweetest, cutest kitten I had ever seen. He was so small that he could fit into the palm of my hand. I knew he needed a new name. Meow was not my idea of a good name for a male kitten. Ironically, the same day I saw his picture on Facebook, I saw another posting with the name Henry on it. I always thought it was cute when animals had people names, especially since he was going to be my new roommate.

CHAPTER 3

I came home that afternoon carrying an animal crate and my new kitten Henry. My first thought was “where can I put the litter box so I won’t have to see it and smell it?” I would clean it a lot, but still, I didn’t have many choices in my 600 square foot studio apartment. Even though my apartment is small, it took Henry a long time to walk across it so I had to find a location central enough that he could make it to the litter box in time to use it. I decided to put the box under the vanity table where I put on my makeup. That was the perfect spot, close enough to the bathroom so I could clean it out when I needed to and no one would notice it when they walked into my apartment. I showed Henry where his litter box was. He got the concept of using it very fast but since he was only consuming a liquid diet at this point, everything that came out of him was runny and stinky. Because of the smell, I gave him the nickname Stinky.

It was a good thing I didn’t have a job yet because Henry woke me up every few hours to eat. He was relentless in waking me up, acting as if he hadn’t eaten for days. He would paw at my face and arms until I got out of bed to feed him. Not only did I have to get up in the middle of the night but I had to stand in my kitchen, prepare his kitten formula and bottle feed him. It was like having an actual baby. Sometimes he would grip the bottle himself and drink his formula until I could tell his belly was full and he had enough. When I was finally able to start him on regular kitten food, I felt a sense of relief. I thought that I would finally get some sleep because I wouldn’t need to bottle feed him anymore. I left a small bowl of food out for him so that when he was hungry, he wouldn’t have to wake me up. He could get food whenever he wanted. This idea didn’t work out like I thought it would. Henry still thought it was fun to jump on my nightstand, then walk on me or paw at my face and arms until I got up and showed him to his full bowl of food! I kept thinking “What did I get myself into?”

CHAPTER 4

I found out early on that Henry had a lot of personality and was very entertaining. One day, when he was still very small, he decided to jump from my bed onto the glass coffee table. He landed on a stack of magazines and went surfing across the whole length of the table on them. I couldn’t help but laugh out loud! It was one of the funniest things I had ever seen, especially the look on his face as he was doing it.

He likes to play hide and seek. He hides behind a door frame and when I’m getting close, he jumps out to scare me. Then it’s my time to hide and as he gets close to me, I jump out. He jumps about 3 feet into the air and runs around my apartment. He likes to play this game with unsuspecting guests who come over, usually when they are coming out of the bathroom!

Another favorite game is our version of basketball with Q-tips. This has become a nighttime ritual when I get home from work. I know he wants to play when he meows and then starts walking toward the bathroom, wanting me to follow him in so we can play our game. He sits by the trash can and I try to throw a Q-tip into the basket while he blocks the throw with his paw. He's good at not letting me make a basket but sometimes he decides to start eating the soft, cotton part of the Q-tip instead!

CHAPTER 5

Despite all the trials and tribulations of raising Henry from such a young age, he has brought so much love and laughter into my life. I never feel alone in my apartment with him there. He makes his presence known by meowing whenever he wants something, whether it be food, to play or just for me to pet him. Every day, when I come home from work, he greets me at the door and flops on the floor for a belly rub. And every morning and night when I’m watching TV, he cuddles up next to me on the bed and purrs while I’m petting him. Cats, like other animals, have their own unique personalities and give unconditional love. If you love and take care of your pet, they will be your most loyal friend!

Lynne Glass
EL SEGUNDO, CA