K
kez_s
I am slightly baffled, I came on this forum after spending weeks and weeks researching everything I could about guinea pigs and you've all been fantastic and offered great advice and info - so thank you!
But at the same time I came on here at first thinking I would buy two guinea pigs from a pet shop or a breeder and you all gave me great advice and showed me how much better it is to offer a home to guinea pigs that are in a rescue centre and looking at all the good work they do and reading so many upsetting stories this for me was def the way to go.
Since this time I have contacted my local rescue centre on several occasions by several methods and have yet to receive a reply. I am not really sure what to do next though a rescue centre further afield has offered for me to contact them if I have no luck with the one in my area.
I fully understand how busy they must be and no doubt have so much to do but at the same time if I am not the only person experiencing this then surely loving homes that could be given are then faced with the situation of what to do next and you don't want to keep bothering someone. I personally wouldn't contact a breeder or a pet shop but I think some people in the end may decide to and I just think this is where there could be a problem.
If you can't get a rescue centre to contact you then surely this causes a chicken and egg situation, a person who may have initially decided to contact a rescue centre can't get any response for love or money so in the end resorts to breeders/pet shops, etc., then could end up faced with a problem of a pregnant guinea pig, etc., and then has to try and find a solution to the problem, the pet shop/breeder always then has demand for them this in turn is never going to solve the problem.
It's slightly like the situation that I have been advised there are some rescue centres that won't home to forces families, if they are turned down purely because of statistics that a forces family may abandon their pet where do they then go if they know this won't happen? Not everyone is the same and surely with the current financial climate many people are abandoning their pets in choice of feeding their families over their pets the statistics for those are probably higher than that of a forces family abandoning theirs but yet a forces family may be turned down.
I know that I can offer a loving home, I may have small children and whilst the pets may be "theirs" in theory and in name, it's my husband and I who will have full responsibility for them, I know that I can financially afford to have pets and be prepared for anything that arises, I know that I have people to look after them in the event of a holiday or even could go to the rescue centre and use their boarding facility thus in turn supporting them in financial way which I understand is so very much needed.
It's just that right now I can see where at times it's not so straightforward for those wanting to adopt and may turn to other options of getting their pet and thus the problem continues.
But at the same time I came on here at first thinking I would buy two guinea pigs from a pet shop or a breeder and you all gave me great advice and showed me how much better it is to offer a home to guinea pigs that are in a rescue centre and looking at all the good work they do and reading so many upsetting stories this for me was def the way to go.
Since this time I have contacted my local rescue centre on several occasions by several methods and have yet to receive a reply. I am not really sure what to do next though a rescue centre further afield has offered for me to contact them if I have no luck with the one in my area.
I fully understand how busy they must be and no doubt have so much to do but at the same time if I am not the only person experiencing this then surely loving homes that could be given are then faced with the situation of what to do next and you don't want to keep bothering someone. I personally wouldn't contact a breeder or a pet shop but I think some people in the end may decide to and I just think this is where there could be a problem.
If you can't get a rescue centre to contact you then surely this causes a chicken and egg situation, a person who may have initially decided to contact a rescue centre can't get any response for love or money so in the end resorts to breeders/pet shops, etc., then could end up faced with a problem of a pregnant guinea pig, etc., and then has to try and find a solution to the problem, the pet shop/breeder always then has demand for them this in turn is never going to solve the problem.
It's slightly like the situation that I have been advised there are some rescue centres that won't home to forces families, if they are turned down purely because of statistics that a forces family may abandon their pet where do they then go if they know this won't happen? Not everyone is the same and surely with the current financial climate many people are abandoning their pets in choice of feeding their families over their pets the statistics for those are probably higher than that of a forces family abandoning theirs but yet a forces family may be turned down.
I know that I can offer a loving home, I may have small children and whilst the pets may be "theirs" in theory and in name, it's my husband and I who will have full responsibility for them, I know that I can financially afford to have pets and be prepared for anything that arises, I know that I have people to look after them in the event of a holiday or even could go to the rescue centre and use their boarding facility thus in turn supporting them in financial way which I understand is so very much needed.
It's just that right now I can see where at times it's not so straightforward for those wanting to adopt and may turn to other options of getting their pet and thus the problem continues.