Adopt a Pet

My name is Jolene!

I'm being cared for by
Survivor Tails Animal Rescue

Facts about me

Breed
Pit Bull Terrier/Boxer
Color
Brown/Chocolate - with White
Age
4 years 2 months old, Adult
Size
(When grown) Large 61-100 lbs (28-45 kg)
Weight
(Current) 68 lbs
Sex
Female
Pet ID

My info

Small red x Not good with dogs
Small red x Not good with cats
Small blue checkmark Shots current
Small blue checkmark Spayed / Neutered
Small blue checkmark Housetrained

My story

Name: Jolene

Sex: Female

Breed: Boxer/Pit Mix.

Age: 3 yrs

Weight: 68

Needs PET FREE home



We believe Jolene is a Boxer and Pit Bull mix. She has a litter of puppies who have all been adopted and now it’s her turn to find her own pet free home as she isn’t a fan of other pets. Jolene is a super sweet snuggler who loves to be near you at all times. In fact, she will literally sleep right on top of you! She's fully potty-trained and will let you know when she needs to go out – her way of saying “I got to go, I got to go” is by stomping her paws.



If you are interested in adopting, please fill out an application at survivortails.org or email adoptions@survivortails.org with any questions.
Rescue

Survivor Tails Animal Rescue

Contact info
Pet ID
Contact
Phone
Address
Boston, MA 02045
Donation

Their adoption process

Additional adoption info

We thoroughly screen all potential adopters. We require an adoption application, phone interview, personal and vet references, in-person interview with home visit, and then signed adoption contract and fee. We do our best to complete the adoption process within seven days.

Our adoption fee is $500 for dogs and $200 for cats

Go meet their pets

Check our website for the most current events!! www.survivortails.org!

More about this rescue

Survivor Tails Animal Rescue is a 501c3, non-profit, all-volunteer organization that exists to rescue, rehome, and rehabilitate homeless, unwanted, abused, and neglected dogs and cats and place them in loving and responsible forever homes. More than 4 million cats and dogs die each year in animal shelters across the country due to overpopulation issues. That's why we're here. Our mission is twofold: to find these unwanted animals loving homes of their own and to work with communities and like-minded organizations to stop the issue of overpopulation from the top. We don't want to just put a bandage on the issue, we want to prevent animal homelessness from the getgo.