@gik21679:

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Thursday 02 April 2026 13:46:56 GMT
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user9322776869621
барсова.#🐈‍⬛ :
ты тогда 1000000000000/10
2026-06-23 14:14:47
7
kpytble676767
черкашки🤙🏿 :
когда будет 2 часть этого фильма???
2026-06-27 17:24:06
0
zeffos444
zeffos :
не
2026-04-02 17:23:57
3
ari.sha670
Ari.sha🪽 :
Дададад
2026-04-02 16:24:53
3
nast.shka38
NASA :
@@ Кáшизки кýрука*🪷 @маргарин
2026-06-27 02:37:18
2
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🚨ORVILLE SCHEDULED FOR EUTHANASIA 6/26 @ 11AM FOR SPACE🚨 Orville is one of those dogs the shelter environment has failed to show fairly. When he first arrived as a stray, staff documented serious kennel reactivity. Growling, lunging, snapping at the kennel door. The kind of behavior that makes people keep walking. But what happened when someone gave him a chance outside of those bars? A volunteer who had watched him lunge and bare his teeth through the kennel door came back the next day with patience and treats. Orville accepted the treats. He calmed down. When the leash came out, there was no aggression. The volunteer was able to open the kennel, leash & walk him outside, spend time with him, and return him to his kennel without any issue. What Orville is showing is something we see all too often in shelters: a dog struggling to cope with confinement, noise, and stress. Orville has shown reactivity and has been involved in an altercation with another male dog (both intact). He may ultimately do best as an only pet or with an experienced adopter willing to give time to decompress and do slow, proper introductions. Neutering him may help. But behavior challenges should not automatically be a death sentence. Orville deserves someone willing to see beyond his kennel presentation and recognize that there is a dog underneath who can walk calmly on leash, learn quickly, accept handling, and respond positively to patient guidance. The shelter has seen both sides of Orville. The frightened, reactive dog trapped behind kennel bars and the calmer dog who emerges once he’s given space and understanding. Now he needs someone willing to give him that chance permanently. ⸻ Orville #A1288208 • Intact Male (DAS will fix), 3 years, 67 lbs • HW unknown (unable to get a sample), vaxxed, dewormed, microchipped, on prevention 📍Dallas Animal Services 1818 N Westmoreland Rd, Dallas, TX 📩 Email ASAP with a callback # & subject: “URGENT — Orville #A1288208” Adopt (fee waived): dasadopt@dallas.gov Shelter Foster (local): dasfoster@dallas.gov Rescue: dasrescue@dallas.gov Out of state adoptions are possible. ‼️The Dogs Need Our Help is a volunteer-run networking page‼️
🚨ORVILLE SCHEDULED FOR EUTHANASIA 6/26 @ 11AM FOR SPACE🚨 Orville is one of those dogs the shelter environment has failed to show fairly. When he first arrived as a stray, staff documented serious kennel reactivity. Growling, lunging, snapping at the kennel door. The kind of behavior that makes people keep walking. But what happened when someone gave him a chance outside of those bars? A volunteer who had watched him lunge and bare his teeth through the kennel door came back the next day with patience and treats. Orville accepted the treats. He calmed down. When the leash came out, there was no aggression. The volunteer was able to open the kennel, leash & walk him outside, spend time with him, and return him to his kennel without any issue. What Orville is showing is something we see all too often in shelters: a dog struggling to cope with confinement, noise, and stress. Orville has shown reactivity and has been involved in an altercation with another male dog (both intact). He may ultimately do best as an only pet or with an experienced adopter willing to give time to decompress and do slow, proper introductions. Neutering him may help. But behavior challenges should not automatically be a death sentence. Orville deserves someone willing to see beyond his kennel presentation and recognize that there is a dog underneath who can walk calmly on leash, learn quickly, accept handling, and respond positively to patient guidance. The shelter has seen both sides of Orville. The frightened, reactive dog trapped behind kennel bars and the calmer dog who emerges once he’s given space and understanding. Now he needs someone willing to give him that chance permanently. ⸻ Orville #A1288208 • Intact Male (DAS will fix), 3 years, 67 lbs • HW unknown (unable to get a sample), vaxxed, dewormed, microchipped, on prevention 📍Dallas Animal Services 1818 N Westmoreland Rd, Dallas, TX 📩 Email ASAP with a callback # & subject: “URGENT — Orville #A1288208” Adopt (fee waived): [email protected] Shelter Foster (local): [email protected] Rescue: [email protected] Out of state adoptions are possible. ‼️The Dogs Need Our Help is a volunteer-run networking page‼️

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