Disaster Tears as Dog Adopted After 900 Days in Shelter Is Returned Within Hours

Article Archive

Tears as Dog Adopted After 900 Days in Shelter Is Returned Within Hours​

A dog who was adopted after spending over 900 days in an animal shelter has suffered the heartbreak of being returned just 24 hours later.
Sora first arrived at the Valley Animal Center in Fresno, California, just over two and a half years ago, having been surrendered by her owner. The Valley Animal Center is the largest no-kill animal center in the Central Valley.

For over 900 days, Sora struggled to attract much in the way of attention. That's not entirely surprising given the circumstances, with a 2014 study published in Applied Animal Behaviour Science highlighting how the average shelter visitor interacts with just one dog per visit and that these interactions last just eight minutes.
But staff at the shelter knew Sora had all the attributes necessary to make a great pet.

"Sora is a high-energy dog who loves to play and gets super excited anytime she gets to go on walks," Sim Kaur from the Valley Animal Center told Newsweek.

"She is great on walks and hikes, making her a good traveling companion. She also loves playing with tennis balls. She is lovable with humans and has tested well with children over the age of five."
Despite being overlooked for so long, Sora's luck looked to have changed recently after she caught the eye of a prospective pet owner visiting the shelter. Eventually, they decided to adopt the pup, and it seemed like Sora's story would get the happy ending it so richly deserved.

Then, every shelter pet's worst nightmare happened. Just a day later, her new owner called to say they would be returning the rescue pup. Sora was understandably heartbroken upon her arrival at the shelter, with a video posted to TikTok by @jjack.iie capturing the shelter dog looking especially sad to be back in familiar surroundings.

This development was a source of some frustration to Kaur who felt Sora's adopters should have given her more time to settle before making their decision.

"Being in a shelter for many years affects the mental health of our adoptables and it is no different for Sora," she said. "Sora did not get enough time to decompress in her new home and was introduced to new family members too quickly."

She hasn't given up hope of finding Sora the perfect home, though, and has already got a pretty clear idea of the sort of home that would suit her best.

IMG_7274.jpeg

Kaur said: "Although Sora does well with other dogs at the shelter, she is dog-selective, so we recommend she go to a home where she is the only pet. With her high energy, her future home will need to spend dedicated time with her for training."

Despite this setback, she remains as sure as ever that Sora will find her true forever home in due course.

"With patience and guidance, we know Sora can be a great addition to anyone's family."

Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@newsweek.com with some details about your best friend, and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.
 
Last edited:
I will give it to this shelter, they at least say pit bull mix on the dogs. Some shelters will say "mixed breed" or "terrier mix" to trick retards into getting a shitbull.
Hate to tell you this but lots of shelters have straight up taken to naming it a completely ridiculous breed based on coat color.

"Oh this precious pitty is black and white! Let's say it's a border collie mix!"
High-energy is code for wild, uncontrollable, and shitty. Pay attention to how these psychotic beast-peddlers describe their merchandise. It's just like how someone selling a tiny, cramped house will refer to it as "cozy" rather than "unacceptably small."
1000022219.jpg
 
I met a whole litter like that once, years and years ago. Dobermans, of all things. I was still handling dogs in the show ring then, I was still a kid. My parents had let a breeder they knew train me in ringcraft because they had the notion I'd get paid and they could take the money. I'd come over a lot after they were just born to do their early socialisation and bonding shit, so they formed this idea I was one of the litter, or something. So I saw them grow up from birth.
Dobermans have a lot of psychological/ physiological issues that responsible breeders are still trying to fix. The breed standard focused too hard on narrow heads for too long that their brains would literally grow larger than their skull and they’d go psycho.
 
Out of curiosity of what the dog actually looked like I found the original article then decided to post it here.
news articles that use stock photos to show the exact opposite of what the article is talking about is my biggest pet peeve so thank you
And another about returned animals.
FREEZE
shelter1.png

ENHANCE
shelter2.png

so, just another tatted up sheboon trying to push the destructive consequences of her actions onto other people. figures
 
A reputable shelter shouldn't shit on people returning dogs.

I returned a dog to the shelter and I regret nothing.

Better to give it back than dump it on the side of the road.
When I did rescue we always requested dogs be returned to us. Usually they did. Had one come back after 13 months.

Then again we also would offer boarding services among the foster homes for a donation (no set amount, just a donation) because we'd rather take care of a former foster than have them get lost due to irresponsible dog sitters or traumatized by kennels. At times over the holidays the house might be a bit full, but the dogs were happy, ate well, and there was a definite "whew" when the extras went home.
 
I doubt it was an attack. They probably wouldn't of been so nice as to have brought it back to the same no kill shelter if that was the case. I'm guessing it was just an impulse decision and after a single night of the dog keeping the owner up/chewing furniture/pissing itself they just decided to bail. Alot of people get surprised by animals being animals.

That or they saw the price of dogfood in this economy and flinched.
 
Dobermans have a lot of psychological/ physiological issues that responsible breeders are still trying to fix. The breed standard focused too hard on narrow heads for too long that their brains would literally grow larger than their skull and they’d go psycho.
They're also prone to a blood clotting disorder. Really sad how messed up the breed is.
 
so, just another tatted up sheboon trying to push the destructive consequences of her actions onto other people. figures
10 CoachCoins says the sheboon's probably breeding the dogs herself or has a "cuzzin" doing it.
 
They're also prone to a blood clotting disorder. Really sad how messed up the breed is.
Von Willebrands, yep. UK Dobermann club requires all members to show paperwork for any stud or dam that they have been tested for VWD.

I didn't know the thing about narrow heads. I grew up with them in the house, so the mad litter I mentioned were really freaky to me. Like, I had known dozens, hundreds of Dobermanns by that point, and these were the weirdest, scariest Dobermanns I had ever met. They were extremely fucking Not Okay. I'm thinking about them now, and I remember them all having nice head conformation. Not too narrow. Good ear placement. They were a very handsome litter, which is why despite being absolutely fuckmental, they did well at show.

The funny thing is, they all had the most innocuous names. The girl who started the attack that killed her mother was called Angel, ffs. The alpha girl was called Stacy, and the girl who wouldn't show was Barbie. My youngest sibling named ours, and called him Teddy of all fucking things. People must have thought they were seeing things when this wee lassie is out walking in the woods, shouting for Teddy and Angel and Barbie, and these fucking murder weapons in their studded collars appear. Teddy honestly weighed about eight stone, and all of that was muscle. The fucker rippled when he walked like one of the aliens off Alien 3. Much the same size of teeth.

I have no idea what the adults involved were thinking, letting an anorexic teenage lassie have sole charge of these beasts that I clearly could not have prevented eating somebody.
 
Back