Animal Rescue Stories

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

the Trouble with Tribble

the Trouble with Tribble

I had recently lost my best friend Tommy (turns out she was Tomassina) to cancer at 9-years-old. I was sitting in my second floor office when three raccoons tried to get through the window. I went to ask my vet if she knew anyone who did trap and release of wildlife. She said "No, but I have something for you" and thrust a tiny ball of black and white fur at me.

She was a stray the local TNR committee had brought to be spayed and released, but she was too young and small to let go free. They said her name was Bella, and she didn't like people. Turns out she didn't like women but was fine with me. She cuddled up on my neck and chirped just like the tribbles from Star Trek, so that was her name from then on.

When I took her home, she either avoided or attacked my wife and daughter for almost a year. She slept on my head, rode around on my neck, and when I got sick, she would sense an episode coming on and howl and jump at me until I sat down.

Sadly she passed away from squamous cell cancer about five years ago, and I still miss her.

Richard Q
Cote St. Luc, Canada

It was a golden autumn day...

It was a golden autumn day...

My dog Twinkie and I were going for an evening walk in our rural village. It was getting dark, so we were about to head home. That's when I heard a loud (but tiny) meow!

I looked over and there was a tiny orange kitten crying for help as he walked from the bushes. Twinkie, a Bichon mix who was on her leash, ran toward the kitten, who stood on his hind legs and spit with his claws out. Then he turned to slowly slink away. I grabbed him as his mother would, by the scruff of his neck, and put him in my coat and hugged him. He immediately started purring and did not try to get away.

I took him to the vet the next day. He had a goopy eye that was infected and a lung infection that took two rounds of antibiotics to clear up.

He has been the most loving cat I've ever had (I've had 13 cats), and he's now 7-years-old. Unfortunately, he has a nasal lymphoma and isn't expected to live much longer, but you wouldn't know it watching him hunt and play and eat.

He will be sorely missed by the entire village who has gotten to know and love him. I named him Golden because it was a golden moment when he found me. He has brought us so much love.

Cher Thoming
CORBETT, OR

Cinder Maybe Shadow

Cinder Maybe Shadow

In 2010, I was at my store nearing closing time when Kelly from next door came over and asked if she could borrow a card table. I told her I was sorry, that I didn't have one, but I asked her what it was for and she replied that she was having a fundraiser that evening for an animal rescue organization that she and her partner were starting up. Then she mentioned that she had a dog that had literally been forced on them the previous day at another fundraiser by a man that was really sketchy on details and she didn't know what to do with it because they weren't ready to receive animals yet! She told me it was part Border Collie, and that piqued my interest because I have a real soft spot for them.

I told her that I would like to take a look at the dog. I locked up my store and went next door to meet the dog that was to become Cinder. She was huddled and timid in their office, but I was immediately struck by how much she reminded me of our dog Shadow that had passed away from cancer two years before. They didn't look anything alike, other than being black, but there was something about the way she held herself that caught my eye! I told Kelly that I needed to do further investigation. I called my wife and had her come over to meet Cinder. No sparks, nothing. I wasn't willing to let this drop!

The next day, I called Joey who worked for us part time and was intimately connected to our dogs, as we brought them to work everyday, and had him come over to meet Cinder. He walked into the rescue, took one look and said that dog reminds me of Shadow! I was sold, I adopted her that day!

Cinder was about 6 months old when I adopted her and it quickly became apparent that she had suffered from mental abuse. That didn't happen at my house. This is where it gets sort of spooky. Thirty-six hours after arriving at my house, my wife took the dogs for a walk, Cinder included. There was a wardrobe malfunction when Cinder's collar fell off, and she escaped when they were blocks away from our house! My wife hurried back to the house frantically to get me to begin a search, only to find Cinder on the top step of the stairs on the sidewalk leading into the house!

Whenever strangers came to visit us, Cinder would hide and not come out until they were gone. A year later, my daughter came to visit us from Seattle and when I went to pick her up at the Charlotte airport, on the drive home I explained to her that she would have to get used to Cinder hiding from her. My daughter is a huge animal lover and she and Shadow had a very special relationship.

When I pulled up in front of the house, Cinder was at the front door going absolutely nuts. We have a full length glass storm door that we leave open for the dogs to see out. Cinder was jumping five feet off of the floor! When we went inside she was all over my daughter. This continued for her entire visit. You tell me, was this Cinder or was it Shadow?

Sadly, we lost Cinder to kidney failure in 2020, but the way I look at it is I had Shadow back for an extra 10 years.

Michael Atkins
HICKORY, NC

Top Gun Fighters

Top Gun Fighters

It started about six months after my precious Katie passed over the Rainbow bridge. I needed a new best friend. I had a chihuahua when I was 18, so I started looking for a chihuahua puppy. I came across a pair, one a dark brown and one a light brown, at Because of You Rescue. I contacted them late in the day and learned it was the last day to apply for adoption.

I quickly filled out the form and called a few days later, as I had not heard from them. I was told they had so many applications to go through but a decision would be made by the next day. Praise the Lord, I was chosen for the smaller dark brown pup. His name was given to him by the ER staff that both pups were taken to after being found in a dumpster, at only a few weeks old. His name was Maverick, and the light brown pup was Goose. They both had to be fighters just to survive!

Debra Dunn
YUKON, OK

How Rexie (as we affectionately call him) came home for good

How Rexie (as we affectionately call him) came home for good

It was a warm day in February of 2020, and I was sitting in my recliner at home just resting before I had to go back to work (I was working "split-shifts" at the time). I was just playing on my phone, because I knew that if I tried to take a nap, my husband probably was going to have trouble waking me up for my "other shift" (Once I go to sleep, I'm "out cold"). My phone rang in my hands while I was scrolling on Facebook trying to stay awake. It happened to be the lady that I had "given" my night shifts to before I ultimately had to leave that particular job (and Rex until that day).

At first we made some small talk and she asked me what I was up to at that time. I told her that I was just sitting in my recliner resting before I had to go back to work (it was around 3:30 and I had to be back at work around 4). After I said that, she said "Come get Rex". I told her that I would be there in five minutes.

Rex was so happy to see me. I told him to hop up in the truck and he did. By the time I got him home, it was the time that I was supposed to be leaving to go back to work (I worked in a convenience store). My husband (who was off work at his job at the time, but he's retired now) said to me "Don't worry. You just go on to work, I've got Rex for you. I'll get him settled."

Here we are just 2.5 years later (husband is retired and I'm in college now) and Rex is just the sweetest boy that you could ask for. Funny thing is, I'm still and probably will be his "favorite person" to this day and I'm so glad that he's my "child". Rex will always be my "rescue baby". I'm definitely glad that I didn't take a nap and answered my phone or Rex probably would've starved (apparently I was the only one besides my husband who could handle him when it came to meal time).

He knows he's home now and when he gets a chance, he likes to explore our property. We don't care though. He's good about staying close to the house.

Christina Brewer Ainsworth
BRONSON, TX

He Found Me

He Found Me

"Meoww....meoww...meowwww".

I'm sitting home alone on my day off. It's a weekday. I'm in my recliner watching some sort of mindless entertainment on television, all the while thinking that I should probably be doing something a lot more productive.

"Meowwww...meowwwwww...meowww", I hear coming from somewhere outside.

"What in the..." I thought, as I turned down the television to make sure I wasn't hearing things.

"Meowww...MEOWWWWWWWW!!!"

I got up and walked out on the front porch, looking to see where the noise was coming from. I didn't see anything.

Then I heard it again, coming from underneath my car. I walked to the car and got down on my knees, peering underneath, expecting to see a large, possibly wounded cat. Instead, looking back at me was a tiny grey tabby ball of fluff. I stuck my hand out, and called for him to come to me. After a minute or so of gentle coaxing, he finally came towards my outstretched hand, and I picked him up. He immediately began purring. "Oh you poor thing, where did you come from?" I asked, greeted by grateful purrs.

I hesitantly took him inside. At the time, we (my ex husband and I) had a full grown female short-haired Tabby named Kyra. She was the queen of the house and did not take well to strangers. Hell, she barely tolerated us.

As soon as I walked in the door, she started hissing and growling. I put the kitten down and quickly gathered her up, put her in the bathroom, and closed the door. The kitten wasted no time finding her food bowl and began ravenously eating, like he hadn't eaten in days, or EVER. He ate, and ate, and ate, for probably close to an hour. I started getting worried he would make himself sick, so I took up the food.

A short while later, when my husband came home, I was standing in the living room, with both hands behind my back. When he walked in the door he looked at me kind of strangely and asked, "What do you have?"

I brought my hands in front of me, the kitten in one hand and said the famous last words that make me laugh until this day.

"Don't get attached, because we're NOT keeping him!"

That was about 13 years ago.

I halfheartedly tried to find a home for him, all the while growing more and more attached every day. He quickly became a part of our little family. We couldn't agree on a name for him and kept calling him The Boy, since we had a female cat already. Pretty soon that got shortened to Boy, and it stuck.

He had the exact opposite temperament of Kyra. While she was ornery and skittish and ran and hid whenever there was a visitor or a storm, Boy was always the center of attention. He was laid back, and personable, and he worshiped the ground that Kyra's four paws walked on. Almost every time he would get near her, she would hiss and growl and bat her claw-less paws at him. He would just sit there and take it, never flinching, and would just look at her with little hearts in his eyes.

A lot has changed since then. I moved to Beaufort when my marriage ended. When I came down here, I moved in with my Daddy while I was trying to get back on my feet and start over again. He told me the only way I could bring either cat was if they stayed outside. He was vehemently against animals in the house because of a little shedding white fluffy dog he had for a very short time. And since both of my cats were raised indoors, I had to leave them behind.

About seven months after Daddy passed away two years later, I decided I wanted to bring my Boy to Beaufort. My ex moved and couldn't take the cats with him. And sadly, Kyra got spooked during the move, got loose and was never found. I would like to think that some nice family with no other cats or kids that loved ornery claw-less cats took her in and gave her a good home, but I'll never really know for sure.

When it came time to get the Boy, I met the ex in Santee, which is about half way between Beaufort and Patrick, the town I had moved from. I was a little worried that he (the cat, not the ex) wouldn't remember me and would have trouble adjusting to a new home. After all, it had been a year and a half since he'd seen me. But all those fears were put to rest when I got him home. It was like no time had passed between us.

We were both happy to be together again. Not long after I brought him to Beaufort, a friend of mine commented that he looked kind of like a big furry sumo wrestler, because he was so fat. That nickname stuck and I began calling him Sumo Kitty. It seemed fitting, and it was a new name to go with a new start and home.

Over the next six years he was by my side, in my lap, or at least within six feet of me at any given time while I was home, especially if there was food involved. He kept me company, made me laugh, and brought more comfort and joy than I could ever give thanks for.

Around the first part of May last year, he began acting like he didn't feel good. He was moping around a lot. He stopped sleeping with me, which he had always done, and he wasn't eating as much, which really worried me. He had always been a healthy eater. Healthy as in, that cat loved to eat more than he loved me, and that was a heck of a lot.

The last week in May, I took him to the vet and they ran tests over the next few days and treated him for what they thought was just severe constipation and dehydration. But the day before I was scheduled to bring him home, they noticed fluid in his abdomen after they gave him a hair cut. I agreed to let them do exploratory surgery the following morning to find out what was causing it. I went to visit him before the surgery and got to hold him, love him and spend time with him. I am so glad that I did.

The vet called me during surgery and said his stomach and some other organs were full of hundreds of tiny tumors, they were cancerous, and that even if I decided to bring in an oncologist and tried to do treatments, he would probably only live a few more weeks at most. So while he was still under anesthesia, I made the unimaginable and gut wrenching decision to not wake him up. The vet agreed that it was the kindest thing to do, and that if it were her animal, she would have done the same. I loved him way too much to let him suffer any more than he already had.

When people would ask me where I got him or where I found him, I would tell them the story of how he somehow wandered into my yard and under my car. And that day, he also wandered into my heart and will live there forever. And looking back at all of the years he was a part of my life, I firmly believe that me finding him wasn't an accident, because I didn't find him. He found me.

Tina Griggs
BEAUFORT, SC

The Story of a Stray Named Roxy

The Story of a Stray Named Roxy

We rescued Roxy on a main town road in the middle of the day. She was walking in the middle and did not seem to know where she was and was very thin and humped back. Turns out she cannot see or hear very well and, for the most part, was starving.

We could not locate an owner but by the looks of her, she would not have been returned anyway. I kept a constant vigil on her and was her new companion for 2-3 weeks. Our bond remains after almost 5 months! I named her Roxy, and although she is a senior pup, I love caring for her and watching her recovery!

Roxy is my new best friend. I have two other rescues whom I love dearly! She is able to run and play at times and loves to eat! Roxy also enjoys ear rubs and getting tucked in at night in her warm soft blankie!

Mary Jane MacArthur
MILTON, FL

Gutter Dog

Gutter Dog

In September 2009, I saw a little dog in the gutter. I turned the car around and drove back by the dog to see if it moved. I took it home to check it out. When we got home, I had my husband sit in his recliner as I checked out the pup.

There were grazes on the scalp that I believe came from a car or truck driving over the pup. Took it to the vet who said it was fine and we made an appointment to have him fixed. I named him Chico and he was with me till June 2022 when he was 13.

He wasn't thriving and the vet said he missed his canine friend who had been put down the previous fall because of cancer. I had tried different foods besides the dry he couldn't chew because of loss of teeth, but there was nothing to help him.

He now lays in the ground where he is free from pain. Having crossed over the rainbow bridge he in playing with his friend Junior. Rest in Peace Chico. Mama loves you!

Linda Bruntlett
MANSFIELD, WA

His name is Malachi

His name is Malachi

Diane's love of 15 years died of cancer and she was crushed. Her little shiatsu had been her whole life. Vowing never to have her heart broken again, she said she did not want another dog.

Until she decided she did.

The shelter was absolutely full. She wanted a small dog as she was disabled and could not do long walks or have a dog needing a lot of activity. There were so many. I took one row and she took another, then we'd meet at the end to compare notes. She was not there 10 minutes later and I looked down her row. She had opened a kennel and was sitting with him.

He was scared. Shaking and miserable. Before I could get there, a shelter worker was at the kennel talking to her. Malachi had been returned to the shelter three times and was awaiting placement at a no-kill shelter. She was not encouraging about adapting Malachi out. He was just so damaged. I'm going to break your heart, so if so sensitive, you may want to stop reading here.

Malachi was rescued when a mentally unstable man was institutionalized after neighbors complained he had been burying dogs in his backyard for years. The police found 11 dogs, all lab/pit mixes, in various stages of malnutrition. Some had scars from recent fighting. One had a freshly blinded eye. The humane society was called in, and the dogs were taken to the shelter for immediate medical evaluation. Three were euthanized due to advanced health issues.

One of the humane society rescue volunteers decided to walk through the house to make one last check for any dogs they may have missed. It was then she heard him.

Malachi was huddled under a bed, fur matted so badly he couldn't see. She crawled under the bed and when she gripped him, he screamed in fear. She quickly gathered him in her arms and held him close. Malachi had lived his entire 5-year life under that bed. The other dogs didn't tolerate him and he was so starved, every bone in his body showed through, even through the years of matted fur. He would sneak out from under the bed at night and eat what the other dogs may have left. If anything.

Diane listened to the story as tears streaked down her face. She looked at me and said. "We're taking him home".

The attendant took him up front and I helped Diane back into her wheelchair and we followed the worker to the front. They didn't even charge us an adoption fee, sure that we would return him just as others had.

It was a long, long road for Malachi. He found places to hide in our house and at first, I began to understand why others returned him to the shelter, but Diane refused...

"No." she said. "We are going to heal him".

And we did.

At first, we put his food at the foot of the bed he hid under. For two weeks we cleaned up after him and reassured him with soft, soothing voices. About the time we decided we were going to bring him out and close that bedroom door, we caught him peeking out at us. Diane coaxed him to come closer, but he looked at me with apprehension. It was a man that had kicked and abused him so terribly, he was deathly afraid of men.

Diane wheeled herself over to him and he cowered as she bent to pick him up. She held him close, singing to him and reassuring him that he was safe.

Malachi licked her hand. Malachi was home.

A dog wants to love. They are born with an innate loving nature and Malachi just took a while to find his. Unfortunately, I lost Diane a year ago, so it's just me and Malachi now. He is my constant companion. We drive two hours each way on the weekends to spend time with my new partner and will be moving there at the end of September. He absolutely loves Lisa and she loves him. Idiosyncrasies and all.

Ken Starks
SAN MARCOS, TX

Halloween's boy.

Halloween's boy.

It was Halloween in Del Mar, California. People were taking their white husky trick or treating. They had spray painted spots on him and super glued s crown to his head. The crown wouldn't stay on so they stapled it to his head. Someone called the Humane Society. They located the owners of the poor husky and rescued him.

We found Koa at Husky Rescue. He was our boy for another 14 years. He passed away two weeks ago aged 15 years. My life is empty without Koa. I still walk to the dog park several times daily and speak to Koa. I know his spirit is with me. And my eyes have teared up as I finish this post. I love you, Koa.

Jason Denaro
KINGWOOD, TX