
Hi, my name is Hope. I had my 5 puppies in a burrow that I carefully dug underneath an abandoned trailer in Concho, AZ. A nice family found us and started to feed me...I was literally skin and bones. Now I'm in a foster home and my pups have all been adopted. As you can see from the photos, my pups were very fat and healthy. I'm a Sheltie/Aussie mix with a freckled nose. I'll weigh about 30 lbs when I get my weight back and I'm just 1 year old. I'll always stay petite and graceful. I'm very calm, gentle and quiet when I'm with people, other dogs and the cats. I've just started to play and find joy in the world again. Now I'd like to have a forever home. I have been spayed and am housebroken. I sleep indoors at night. I'm not a barker unless a stranger comes to the door. I'm very good with other dogs and assume a more submissive role when introduced.
Call Tamara @ (928) 337-2828 if you'd like to meet me.Spring 2008 newsletter is available here.
Thank you to Cindy Yurth for her series of articles in the Navajo Times in August, 2007, about the serious problem of thousands of stray dogs on the Navajo Nation. You can read these articles online. Part 1, Rez Littered with Stray Dogs. Part 2, The Lucky Ones.
Our Spring 2007 newsletter is here.
The veterinarians at Cedar Animal Hospital in Gallup have partnered with Blackhat Humane Society to reach out to the animals and people of the Navajo Nation. Generous donations from Blackhat supporters have enabled us to finance spay/neuter services for folks on the reservation who could never have afforded to have their animals fixed. Approximately every 6 weeks, Doctors Tess Langham, Cody Balok and Jessica Balok perform surgery on 40 animals. It is rewarding to see the affection that the owners have for their aniamls as well as the gratitude they show to the Blackhat volunteers who inform each owner of their animals progress throughout surgery and recovery. Thank you to the hardworking vets and vet techs of Cedar Animal Hospital in Gallup! |
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In 2006, Blackhat found homes for 234 dogs, 48 cats and 3 horses. In 2005, Blackhat Humane made a difference in the lives of 218 dogs, 64 cats, 2 horses and a rabbit.
Our Fall 2006 newsletter.
Our Summer 2005 newsletter.
Please help us pay for veterinary services for our foster dogs! There is an easy to use PayPal donation button below. We are an all-volunteer group, and 98% of our funds go towards the animals.
Blackhat Humane Society is a non-profit organization established in 2000. We are dedicated to rescuing and finding homes for abandoned animals and livestock. We are the only Humane Society on the Navajo Reservation (an area roughly the size of West Virginia). We have a tremendous problem with pet overpopulation. Cats and dogs are allowed to breed freely and survive on "what they can catch". Puppies and kittens are routinely dumped at local gas stations and grocery stores. Parvo, distemper, mange and untreated injuries are the cause of death for most companion animals. It is rare to see a dog or cat over 2 years of age. Once the backbone of the Navajo economy, horses, sheep and cattle now roam the open range, foraging for food.
Our goals include; education for all ages but concentrating on school-age children and a mobile clinic. We also need volunteers to help produce videos (in English and Navajo) which will be shown in the local chapterhouses and in our schools.
We are in need of volunteers and donations. Blankets, food, dog houses and crates, vet supplies and medications are helpful to our cause. If you are interested in visiting us as a volunteer, accomodations are available.
Rescued animals are fostered in the homes of our volunteers. Here, they are given vaccinations, spayed or neutered, and taught the "social graces" neccessary to living in our world. Please contact the foster family of the animal in which you're interested for information. Our adoption fee is $50. You may also want to check out the rescued animals @ www.kayentaanimalshelter.com.
