PetsWeekly.com

What to Do with a Found Dog

An old hound dropped off at the Hopalong Animal Shelter, a foster-care based shelter in Oakland, Calif., left a lasting impression. The dog had no tags but was clearly someone’s beloved pet that had gotten lost and couldn’t find its way back home. The shelter staff scoured the lost-and-found ads in the local newspapers and on websites. They also reviewed posters for lost dogs collected by area shelters — all to no avail. After staying at the shelter for a few months unclaimed, the dog was facing possible euthanasia.

“One of my board members just loved that hound,” recounts Sarah Cohen, Hopalong’s executive director. The board member searched the lost-and-founds one last time. The effort paid off: the dog’s picture was found on an old “lost dog” poster from a nearby community. Dog and owner were reunited. “The message for people is to never give up looking,” Cohen says.

Not all lost-dog stories have such a happy ending. A study published in January 2007 in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (JAVMA) found that only 71 percent of lost dogs were recovered during a four-month period in Montgomery County, Ohio. In other communities, the reunification rate is even lower. So what should you do if you find a lost dog? According to experts, there are steps you can take to improve the odds of bringing a family back in touch with a pooch who went astray, or to help it find a new home.

Learn more about animal rescue: