Female Dog Names Beginning With E
Easter |
Ebbie |
Edina |
Edith |
Eevee |
Ega |
Eju |
Elaine |
Elara |
Electra |
Elexi |
Elexis |
Eliza |
Elizabeth |
Ella |
Elle |
Ellery |
Ellie |
Elsa |
Elsie |
Elvira |
Emilia |
Emma |
Emmy |
Emuna |
Enola |
Erika |
Eskie |
Esmerelda |
Esprit |
Ethel |
Etiene |
Etty |
Europa |
Eve |
Ever |
Evita |
Eyota |
Tips For Finding A Good Dog Rescue
Dog rescues number in the many thousands across the United States. Some are huge, others small. Some have fixed locations, while others rely entirely on fosters and online adoptions. Finding a good dog rescue is important, since it has a great impact on what your experience with your future dog will be like.
First, look at reviews for the shelter you're considering. What do the negative reviews say, if anything? Keep in mind that some negative reviews will be from people who were rejected for an adoption, likely for legitimate reasons. Some people like to leave bad reviews as revenge when they're rejected for an adoption. Pay attention to reviews that mention the state of the shelter, as well as any reviews that mention how the dog they adopted was not as the shelter described it. These can be huge red flags.
If the shelter has a fixed location, visit it when you can before settling on adoption. Take a look at the state of the location. Is it being well-maintained? Do the dogs live in good conditions? Are they walked and fed regularly, with constant access to water? If the dogs seem to be neglected in any way, don't adopt.
It's also important to ask whether the dogs at the rescue are given behavior evaluations. A good rescue should test for aggression and fearfulness. If the rescue does not perform these evaluations, or if they are unwilling to discuss a given dog's performance on them, avoid them. The last thing you want is to unknowingly adopt an aggressive dog.
The image featured at the top of this post is ©Shubhendu Mohanty / Unsplash.