A GIFT WITH HEART WARM VALENTINE LATEST PET PROJECT.Byline: Dana Bartholomew Staff Writer VAN NUYS - Valentine's blooms wilt in the vase. Cupid's candy can bring on the blahs. But love - true romance - is forever warm and fuzzy. Pet Orphans Fund of Van Nuys invites lovers to think outside the candy box this Valentine's Day with the gift that gives back - a pet. ``Your dog, your cat, will love you no matter what - through thick, through thin,'' Adam Toss, a POF POF - Pakistan Ordnance Factory POF - Payment for Order Flow (stock exchange) POF - Permanently Oil Filled POF - Physics-Of-Failure POF - Piano dell'Offerta Formativa (Italian school document) POF - Piano dell'Offerta Formativa (Italy) POF - Pillar of Fire (church in Denver, CO, USA) PoF - Plane of Fear (gaming) POF - Plane of Focus (photography) POF - Plastic Optical Fiber POF - Point of Failure POF - Polymer Optical Fiber adoption counselor, said. ``Their love is the ultimate Valentine.'' Pet Orphans, one of the San Fernando Valley's oldest nonprofit humane shelters, will waive adoption fees for ``Ultimate Valentines'' - animals 5 years and older - through Wednesday. Each dog or cat - saved prior to execution at the pound - is spayed or neutered and comes with a complete battery of shots. Adoption fees, which normally range from $65 for cats and $150 for dogs, are written off to Cupid. ``It's difficult to get a lot of senior dogs adopted out because people want a puppy to grow up with their children,'' Toss said, walking through a maze of dogs eager to be touched, petted and taken home. ``But what people don't realize is that senior dogs are more stable with children - puppy energy and child energy don't mix real well.'' ``Pre-owned'' pets, given up then adopted by new loving owners, can be more loyal than puppy-raised pets, humane experts say. They generally behave. And they're wont to do their business outside, not on the carpet. The animals' faces, however, tell their story. Forty-two dogs, some with senior schnozes, eyebrows up to say ``Are you for me?'' Fifty cats, some with graying whiskers, noses down to say ``Am I for you?'' Dogs bark. Dogs bounce. Dogs whimper for attention. Cats lie in wait. Those available include: --Dandy, 6, a sweet shepherd mix found dodging cars on a 405 Freeway on-ramp in Granada Hills. --Beth, 7, a sad German shepherd German shepherd, breed of large, muscular working dog perfected in Germany at the turn of the 20th cent. It stands about 25 in. (64 cm) high at the shoulder and weighs from 60 to 85 lb (27.2–38.5 kg). Its double coat is composed of dense, woolly underhair and a medium-length, harsh, straight or slightly wavy outercoat. Although it may be any color except white, it is usually black and tan, black, or gray. with the face of Rin Tin Tin, abandoned at a veterinary hospital with her female pup. --Boo Boo and Buddy, 10 and 7, two feisty Chihuahua-pinschers given up to suit a new condominium homeowners association. --Bliss, 10, a sweet-but-shy cat with the look of Sylvester. There's one thing Saints Valentine and Francis can shake on: Pets need loving homes, and loving homes need pets. Pet Orphans, a no-kill shelter that's placed 15,000 animals since 1973, matches both - with a ``Happy Tails'' bulletin board to prove it. When filling out a pet application, Valentine's recipients must: Participate in their dog's or cat's selection to prevent another unwanted pet; prepare a place for the animal, in order to integrate it into the family; make a lifetime commitment to care for their pet. ``Frankly, we're not enthusiastic about dogs and cats as gifts,'' said Tom Hubbard, 45, of North Hollywood, a Pet Orphans Fund volunteer who adopted Belle, a 9-year-old Jack Russell terrier, two years ago. ``We live in an economic culture that values disposability - if you want a new one, trade it in. That means appliances. That means furnishings. That means even spouses,'' he said. ``We are swimming upstream and working against that, in trying to treat animals as family members, rather than objects.'' A new pet, properly adopted, however, can be the love of the family. ``It's unconditional love,'' said Pet Orphans Fund community outreach coordinator Mychelle Blake. ``Take home a pet to love on Valentine's Day.'' The Pet Orphans Fund shelter is open between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. seven days a week. For information about adopting a pet or making a donation, call (818) 901-0190, or consult www.petorphansfund.org. CAPTION(S): 2 photos Photo: (1 -- color) Kennel attendant Dale Holland gives a haircut to Toby, a sad-faced cocker spaniel cocker spaniel, breed of small sporting dog developed from English cocker spaniels brought to the United States in the 1880s. It stands from 14 to 15 in. (35.6–38.1 cm) high at the shoulder and weighs about 25 lb (11.3 kg). Its silky, flat, or wavy coat is moderately long and forms fringes, or feathers, on the underside of the body and on the legs, chest, and ears. who needs a new home. (2) Tom Hubbard pets Beth, a German shepherd mix, who's available for adoption fee-free through Wednesday. Michael Owen Baker/Staff Photographer |
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