Adopt

My name is Ruby!

Posted 9 hours ago

Cared for by Farfel's Rescue

My basic info

Breed
Dachshund/Chihuahua
Color
Black - with Brown, Red, Golden, Orange or Chestnut
Age
1 year old, Young
Size
Small 25 lbs (11 kg) or less (when grown)
Weight
12 lbs (current)
Sex
Female
Pet ID

My details

Checkmark in teal circle Good with dogs
Checkmark in teal circle Spayed / Neutered
Checkmark in teal circle Housetrained

My health

Checkmark in teal circle Shots current

My story

Here's what the humans have to say about me:

Ruby is a stinkin' adorable, super silly, short legged, 1 year old, 12 pound Dachshund / Chihuahua mix. She was rescued from a dog hoarding situation in New Mexico where she lived with 30+ dogs and sadly never (until now) got treated right, loved, or shown what it means to be someone’s cherished pet.

Ruby must go to a home with at least one other small, confident dog. Ruby is much more confident and happy with doggy friends around her (that is all she's ever known!) and we want to do what is in Ruby's best interest when finding her a forever home.

From Ruby's foster:
* * * *
"Ruby is an incredibly sweet girl and once her personality comes out, you'll see that she really is just a sweet, young puppy!!! She has made a complete 180 since the day she came home with me. When she first came home to foster, she was straight from the hoarding home to the shelter, to me... so life was scary back then! But now Ruby is a complete puppy!!! She is so silly, playful, loving, and friendly!!! She loves me and my husband, follows me around the house, kisses us on our faces, sits on our laps, and snuggles us at night.
She just took some patience in the beginning, and had to learn that she could trust us. I think no humans had ever treated her right until now. But I do think that her transition into an adoptive home will be much faster / easier since she isn't in such a scary place of life anymore. She has totally blossomed into an amazing, silly, happy dog!

Assuming there will still be a slight adjustment period in a new home, I will let you know how her integration into our home went so potential adopters can know sort of what to expect (though again, I think she will warm up a lot faster now that she is a happy, puppy dog).
When Ruby first came home with us, she was very shy and a bit fearful when it came to human touch (i.e. she would run from us if we tried to pet or touch her) but other than around being touched, she’s actually been quite confident from the beginning. From the second day home, she was already playing with toys, relaxing on the couch, playing with my dogs, jumping into bed at night, getting the zoomies around the living room, and would even crawl all over us if we’re eating in front of her (she has no shame there, haha - she LOVES food!)

Just for the first about 1 and a half, maybe 2 weeks, Ruby was very hesitant of being touched by us. She would touch us no problem (like crawl onto us when we were eating), but did not want us to touch her. For the first maybe week and a half, she would run and hide under our couch when we would reach towards her. So we basically ignored her besides feeding her and giving her treats for the first week and let her come around to us on her own terms. You cannot gain trust when you do not respect their boundaries! We let her come around to us on her own terms, and boy did she ever come around! I'm telling you, seeing the dog she is now, you would never believe she was so timid at first!!

When Ruby came home with me, she wasn't crate trained or potty trained, but she is SO stinking smart that she picked up on both of these SO fast! She is super food motivated so that helped a lot.

She's been with us for a month now. For the first 2 weeks, since she was still decompressing from her old, scary life, I didn't take her outside to the yard (I didn't trust that she would follow me back inside so didn't want to risk her getting stuck in our yard!) so we used potty pads for the first 2 weeks but she knew already to potty on those which was great.
After 2 weeks home with me, as she started to be comfortable around me, I started letting her come out in the yard with me and my dogs, and in literally 4 days she picked up potty training. Now we are days without an accident, and she goes outside every time! We leave a bag of treats outside and right when she potties I say "yes!!" and give her a treat.
She also gets a treat when she goes into her crate, and when I open the door to the room with our dog crates, she runs right into her crate. She stays in a crate when we leave the house. I have had her loose (the first 2 weeks she was home) when I left the house, and she did fine loose, but our house is very dog-proof so there's nothing she could get in to. But she never chewed on anything.

Ruby is definitely a young dog with puppy energy. She needs some basic training, but is SO smart and trainable. She can be kind of mischievous, but no more than any other young dog. She likes to jump from our couch onto the coffee table, she thinks the mulch pieces in our yard are fun toys, and she would eat our food out of our hands if we let her. (Have I mentioned she loves food? haha)
But she's just a baby!! Luckily, she's never chewed on anything in our house but the dog toys.
She also needs to learn how to walk on a leash. She clearly has never been on a leash in her life. Because she doesn't know how to walk on a leash yet, she should go to a home with a yard, otherwise she may regress with her potty training. But again, she is so smart and trainable. She will learn fast!

Just prepare for an adjustment period for the first week or so, and be patient at first. Ruby is SUCH a good, sweet, smart little dog and that will show once she feels comfortable and safe."
* * * *

We'd like to place Ruby in a home where she'll get the training and stability that she needs. Positive reinforcement training promotes great behavior, bonding and confidence for a young girl whose self-esteem will fly high while she masters her skills. Training is so important in the future behaviors of every dog. It's for this reason that we're unwilling to adopt to a family that doesn't make this loving choice. Farfel's is happy to provide a list of both in-person and virtual positive reinforcement / force- free trainers in your area.

Ruby has been fully vetted, and she is in great health and up to date on her vaccines. She is spayed as well.

Farfel's Rescue is a fully foster based rescue, and offers a one week trial with every adoption. We feel that this is much more beneficial to not only the dog, but the adopter too. We believe that only getting 20-30 minutes with a dog before deciding on a lifetime commitment is not a fair amount of time to the adopter, or the dog. Therefore we give adopters one week with the dog to assure it is the right fit, and offer a full refund of their adoption fee should it not workout within the week trial.
Farfel's Rescue has been doing adoptions this way since 2005 and is thrilled to adopt out ~400 dogs each year.

If you are interested in adopting from us, please be sure to fill out our adoption application at http://farfels.com/farfels-rescue/adoption-form/ .
Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
Contact
Address
906 Pearl Street, Boulder, CO 80302
Donation

Their adoption process

Additional adoption info

Farfel's Rescue is a fully foster based rescue, and offers a one week trial with every adoption. We feel that this is much more beneficial to not only the dog, but the adopter too. We believe that only getting 20-30 minutes with a dog before deciding on a lifetime commitment is not a fair amount of time to the adopter, or the dog. Therefore we give adopters one week with the dog to assure it is the right fit, and offer a full refund of their adoption fee should it not workout within the week trial.

An Adoption Application and an Adoption Contract must be completed before any dog can begin their one week foster. Our average adoption fee is $695. This amount serves to cover vetting, spay/neuter, all vaccinations, temperament testing, transport, a microchip, harness, food, and treats.
Our dogs come from Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and rural Colorado.

Adoption application

Go meet their pets

Pets are transported from the southern states every week. Almost 100% of the time, the dogs are spoken for as a result of adoption applications that can be referenced under Adoption at farfelsrescue.com. We study the applications. If the app indicates there is a match, followed up by a home visit and reference checks, the process moves to the next step. The adopter is committing to a one week foster (of course the dog can be returned at any time prior), and can then choose to finalize the adoption.

More about this rescue

We own a pet boutique named Farfel's Farm & Rescue on Pearl Street in Boulder, Colorado. We have had the good fortune to find our niche in the Boulder community and experience success. We felt it very important to "pay it forward" in gratitude. We couldn't think of a better endeavor than to save dogs who were out of time in the southern states, yet had been identified with great temperaments. We dedicate our efforts to their good health and ultimate wonderful, permanent homes.

Other pets at this rescue