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Rescue Groups We Love

Deceased Pet Care is about helping you care for and honor your pets-this process starts the day you get them! We’re celebrating “gotcha days” with a list of our favorite shelters and rescues.

Animal rescue groups in Georgia work exceptionally hard every day to save the lives of homeless, neglected, and abused pets around the state.  They provide shelter, food, and medical attention to animals that would otherwise have lived on the streets or in hopeless conditions in neglectful homes, giving these pets the helping hand they need while searching for loving families with which to unite them.  We have several rescue groups in the area that we love, and we know you will too.  Take the time to read about them, and keep them in mind the next time you’re considering adding a four-legged friend to the family.

Atlanta Humane Society

The Atlanta Humane Society is Atlanta’s oldest private charitable organization.  It serves as a pet adoption center, animal clinic, and a dog training and educational facility.  They never euthanize for space or time considerations, and they offer a welcoming and friendly environment for those interested in adopting to meet and play with the animals.

Forgotten Paws Pet Rescue

Forgotten Paws Pet Rescue goes beyond the typical shelter functions of housing and adopting.  They are an extremely active rescue organization that provides a variety of services to endangered pets, such as rescuing pets that owners plan to euthanize for convenience, transporting pets from kill shelters to no-kill rescue centers around the country.  Their activities are vast and varied, so this is a wonderful organization for which to volunteer.

Good Mews

Good Mews is a rescue organization that caters specifically to cats.  They are a no-kill shelter that provides their residents plenty of space and freedom in addition to play and cuddling in order to foster healthy and friendly cats.  They receive no government support, so your donations are especially welcome and needed.

Gwinnett Humane Society

The Gwinnett Humane Society is not a shelter but rather an organization dedicated to preventing animal cruelty and pet overpopulation.  They offer education about proper care and treatment of pets as well as the importance of spaying and neutering.  In place of a shelter, they operate a network of private volunteer foster homes to care for adoptable animals.

The Humane Society of Cobb County

The Humane Society of Cobb County is a no-kill shelter that also offers educational outreach and spaying/neutering programs to the Cobb County area.  Additionally, they provide pet crisis and grief counseling, pet-assisted therapy, and assistance for pet owners who have fallen into hard times.

Each of these incredible rescue groups provides an extraordinarily valuable service to the animals of Georgia, and none of them could survive without the generous donations of time, money, and wish-list items from people like you.  Volunteering at any of these groups is a highly fulfilling experience that will be greatly appreciated by the organizations and the animals they serve, and it’s a wonderful way to spend an afternoon or weekend in the Atlanta area.  Be sure to give your favorite rescue group a call to find out what they most need for their animals, and remember them the next time you or a friend are considering a pet adoption.  Visit Deceased Pet Care's blog for more upcoming pet events/information to help you with your pets during the summer, or join us on our facebook page.

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ScottRAB June 3, 2013 at 05:51 pm
Many people confuse older styles of circular intersections with modern roundabouts. East coastRead More rotaries, large multi-lane traffic circles (Arc D’Triumph), and neighborhood traffic circles are not modern roundabouts. If you want to see the difference between a traffic circle, a rotary (UK roundabout) and a modern roundabout (UK continental roundabout), go to http://tinyurl.com/kstate-RAB to see pictures. And here’s another site that shows the difference between an older rotary and a modern roundabout: http://tinyurl.com/bzf7qmg The FHWA (http://tinyurl.com/fhwaRAB) has a video about modern roundabouts that is mostly accurate (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uhHzly_6lWM ).
John Oh March 30, 2013 at 01:47 am
Walking home from church this evening a young woman's German Shepherd lunged at my wife and me,Read More growling fiercely. I was afraid for a second the owner would lose control of it. Our 'pit bull', fearsome *looking* as she is, would *never* do that to anyone. Every human is her friend in her mind, though she knows she has to be specially polite with new friends, and extra slow and gentle with little friends (kids). To me it's always like entering the Twilight Zone when the 'pit bull' haters on the web get going with their ridiculous broad brush statements. In the real world all kinds of dogs can have human aggression problems, and it's *always* about the owners. For example in the case tonight, I doubt this apparently middle class 'respectable' young lady *trained* her German Shepherd to be that way; it's a low crime urban area and even if it weren't human aggressive dogs are a *very* dubious way of defending oneself IMO. But whatever the origin of that dog's behavior, the owner needs to get *immediate* professional training help to reverse it. But I wonder if she will. And unfortunately a certain class of very irresponsible owners are specially attracted to 'pit bulls', people who don't see anything wrong with dog behavior like that, or *do* encourage or even explicitly train dogs to be that way. But the idea that it's inherent to just one vague category of dog ('pit bull' isn't even a breed) is just nonsense.
RoastPuppy March 30, 2013 at 06:01 pm
If pit bulls aren't "human aggressive," why were they responsible for 65% of theRead More deaths-by-dog in the US last year and 100% of such deaths so far this year? In recent years, pit bulls have dismembered and/or scalped several adults (and even more children) in the US. Name another breed/type dog that has dismembered or scalped an adult in the US in recent years. Want to see what a pit bull can do to a child in two minutes? Google "Amaya Hess" and look at the once-beautiful little girl turned into a one-eyed monster by the "BEST dog out of all dogs."
RoastPuppy March 30, 2013 at 06:02 pm
Pete Sparks was called the “dean of Florida pit bull breeders” and he measured aRead More puppy’s value by its fighting spirit and the power in its jaws. In Sparks’ own words, “If he [the pit bull] can’t punish the other dog, and he doesn’t have the biting power, then he’s not going to be what you call a top dog.” Florida Humane Society officials blamed Sparks, along with other pit bull breeders in Florida, for vicious attacks by pit bulls on humans, and animals. Marc Paulhus, director of the Tallahassee office of the Human Society of the United States, said “Mr. Sparks really is the problem, he and people like him. For many years, he was perhaps the most visible advocate of dog-fighting in this country.” Paulhus said most of the pit bulls which have attacked people in Florida are descendants of fighters bred by Sparks. “If a pit bull attacks you,” Paulhus said, “he’s going to do damage, severe damage.” While Sparks denied breeding human-aggressive pit bulls, he conceded, “There are screwballs and some of these dogs are emotionally unstable.” Today’s pit bulls are descended from dogs bred for their "fighting spirit" and the “power in their jaws” and no one knows if their pit bull is descended from a “screwball” or “emotionally unstable” dog.