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I love, I love, I love my Calendar Girl...

Petaluma-based Basset Rescue Organization Transforms Once Ailing Hound Into A Pin-Up Girl

 

Golden Gate Basset Rescue, based here in Petaluma, has just published a full-color 2013 Calendar featuring dogs it's rescued over the past year.

The non-profit organization, which has been in existence for 16 years, finds homes for basset hounds in abused, unwanted and abandoned situations in Northern California.

A Patch Contributor from the Bay Area is sharing the story of one dog adopted from the organization who overcame tremendous challenges, found a loving home and is now a calendar "pin-up" girl.  Here's Daisy's tail-wagging tale.

 

She's a saucy, low-hung pup with a distinct swing to her waddle and for the last week she's had a special glow about her.

Daisy, a 6-year-old rescue dog who joined our family in February and goes everywhere with us, has systematically won the hearts of dog lovers in our community ever since.

Now she's also become a local celebrity, of sorts, as "Miss August" in a full-color 2013 calendar just published by Golden Gate Basset Rescue, the Petaluma-based Northern California repository for wayward hounds in need of homes. (Calendar ordering information can be found here.)

Daisy's back-story reads like a Cinderella tale. She was found at the end of last year, with two other dogs, wandering in traffic in a small Northern California town. Concerned citizens called animal control and the three dogs were rescued from the street and taken to the pound. All three had apparently been negligently let to run loose by their owner.

The other dogs were quickly adopted by loving owners, but Daisy was very ill. She was emaciated, weighing under 40 pounds, and she was full of worms, had kennel cough, suffered with painful foxtails in her ears and had a large bladder stone. She was also in heat and had obviously had puppies in the past. So sick, with no control over her bladder and in need of expensive surgery, she might have been deemed unadoptable and euthanized.

But representatives from Golden Gate Basset Rescue were contacted by the animal shelter holding her and she was given emergency veterinary care and placed in the home of loving, experienced foster parents by the rescue group.

Their care of her paid off and several weeks later she was ready for adoption.

Our family found her by chance when we attended a pet adoption fair at the East Bay SPCA/Citizen Canine parking lot in Oakland where many rescue groups were on hand.  (We had owned two basset hounds earlier in our marriage who lived to a ripe old age, but they passed away. We were open to getting another hound, but told ourselves we were just "looking,"  not adopting, that day)

Those plans took a sudden turn, however, when sweet little Daisy arrived on the scene with her foster parents and the vet who had operated on her. She was still somewhat thin, you could see her ribs, and she had fresh stitches the full length of her belly. But she was wearing a pink scarf emblazoned with the words "adopt me" and her sad eyes melted our hearts. She ran immediately over to my husband, jumped up on him in greeting and claimed him as her doggie dad. The deal was sealed.

After completing an on-line application to adopt her, undergoing a home visit by her foster parents to screen us,  and working closely with Golden Gate Basset Rescue to make sure her health issues were indeed completely resolved, she was finally ours.

Today she has picked up weight on a special prescription diet, loves sunbathing on our patio and tracks squirrels (on leash) like nobody's business. You would never recognize her as the thin, forlorn pup abandoned and left to dodge cars less than a year ago.

She now also belongs to a doggie play group, attended a round-up with 43 other basset hounds in the Sierra foothills and has a regular following of fans in our neighborhood who look forward to her visits. She just picked out the Halloween finery she will wear later this month for a pet costume contest. (Yes, I admit, it's adorable ... she will be a weiner on a bun — what else?)

Every day we say "hot diggity dog" that she came into our lives. Everywhere we go with her we make sure to sing the praises of rescue organizations like Golden Gate Basset Rescue, and the many other groups out there giving dogs a fresh start.

Hand-me-down, rescued, recycled, adopted — whatever you want to call them —I'm convinced love is really lovlier the second time around when you bring a pet in need of a home into your life.

Daisy never met a person she didn't like. She is the easiest, sweetest and most well mannered dog we've ever owned. Adopting her has brought us more happiness than we ever could have imagined. And she seems content, as well, to be alive and safe in her forever home, at last.

You can learn more about Golden Gate Basset Rescue, find available dogs in need of fostering and adoption and donate to it here. You can reach it at 707-765-2690 or by e-mail at info@ggbassetrescue.org .  Calendar information can be found here.

Carol Parker December 20, 2012 at 08:21 am
The first edition of this calendar sold out, but more were printed. You can order yours here! http://myemail.constantcontact.com/Re--Golden-Gate-Basset-Rescue-Calendar.html?soid=1101550482707&aid=NWN4arI-70o
Carol Parker January 6, 2013 at 11:20 am
Happy to report that Build a Bear Workshop has just granted Golden Gate Basset Rescue a $2,000 award to further their work helping dogs.
Carol Parker January 6, 2013 at 11:24 am
Here is another article about a dog Golden Gate Basset rescued that appeared recently in Rosemont Patch. You can read Dexter's heartwarming story here. http://rosemont.patch.com/articles/dog-with-addisons-disease-finds-new-home-near-rosemont

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