The history of an adopted pet is often unknown,
so make sure you take these important steps of pet ownership:
Visit your veterinarian
Have your dog examined by a veterinarian as soon as possible.
This is especially important if you have another pet at home
in order to help prevent possible transmission of disease.
Make sure your current pet(s) are up-to-date on all vaccinations.
If you currently have other pets in your household, it is always
wise to keep them separated from your new dog in case they are
incubating a contagious disease.
As with people, prevention is the best medicine. Consider
this: the average life span of a pet is approximately 12 years.
If you take your pet to the veterinarian every two years, 20%
of your pet's life has passed between visits. That's the equivalent
of a 74-year-old person not seeing a doctor for 14 years!
Your veterinarian will give your pet a thorough physical exam,
vaccinate your pet and provide information on any pet health
questions you may have. Your veterinarian can be your best friend
and advocate in helping your new family memeber settle in.
Socialization
Introducing your new dog to your current pets may be traumatic
at first, but be patient. It may take a week or two for your
new friend to become comforatble with your current pets. Initially,
do not allow unsupervised interaction between the "new kid
on the block" and your other pets. If cats are involved,
be prepared for hissing and chasing, this is part of the "getting
to know each other" process.
Licensing requirements
Make sure your new dog complies with all the animal regulations
of your city, county and state. Requirements vary from one community
or state to another. Be aware of your community's leash and pooper-scooper
laws. A current ID tag is also extremely important. Until the
new guy "learns his turf", getting lost is a very real
danger.
Wait! There's more!
jump to our other "what to expect"
links:
Your
New Dog's First Days | Your Dog's
1st Few Weeks | Patience
Yields Rewards | Grooming Your Cocker
Information on this page was exerpted from a
PetSmart
advertising flyer promoting their Pet Adoptathon '99.
Thanks PetSmart, for helping homeless animals make a second
chance in life!
This page updated 4/9/06
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