Adopt

My name is BRENDA!

Posted 7 hours ago

Adoption process
1

Submit Application

My basic info

Breed
Border Terrier
Color
White - with Tan, Yellow or Fawn
Age
2 years old, Young
Size
Small 25 lbs (11 kg) or less (when grown)
Weight
25 lbs (current)
Sex
Female
Pet ID

My details

Checkmark in teal circle Good with kids
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:

BRENDA" Border Terrier mix • Spayed Female • 2 years old • 25 lbs

Brenda is a calm, low-energy sweetheart with a gentle, independent personality. She has a peaceful presence and is the kind of dog who simply enjoys being near her people without demanding constant attention.

She gets along beautifully with other dogs and rarely barks. Brenda has never shown any signs of aggression—she is truly sweet, docile, and very well-mannered. She walks nicely on leash, rides calmly in the car, and is fully house trained, making her an easy and enjoyable companion.

Brenda would thrive in a loving home looking for a quiet, balanced dog who brings warmth and companionship without high energy demands. She is a happy, easygoing girl ready to be someone’s loyal best friend.

If you can offer Brenda the loving home she deserves, please contact Reyna:

miracledogrescue@gmail.com

323-383-8883
Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
Contact
Phone
Website
Address
6639 AJAX AVE Bell Gardens, ca 90201, California, CA 90201
Donation

Their adoption process

1.

Submit Application

Additional adoption info

The adoption process is:

1) Application

2) HOME CHECK

3) Interact w/ pooch

4) Adoption contract

5) Adoption fee which covers Neuter Spayed- all vaccines- and microchip

6) Follow-up

Go meet their pets

WE WILL POST THE EVENTS.

More about this rescue

WHO WE ARE

The Miracle Dog Rescue Program was founded in the year 2006 to help rescue abandoned dogs from Southern California and surrounding areas and Baja California to adopt them out in the United States.

When we began our program in 2006, we had only a few dogs. The principle then was the same as it is now; each dog is spayed or neutered, given a complete physical by a local volunteer veterinarian, and given the food, shelter, medicine, love and encouragement he or she needs in rescue foster homes while suitable permanent homes are found in the Southern California area.

When we started, we soon realized we had underestimated the task, and we felt overwhelmed. It sometimes seemed as though there could be no solution to the monumental problem of spaying or neutering every pup or dog our volunteer foster owners wanted to rehabilitate. We wondered if we could really make a difference in what seemed an out-of- control situation.
But it turned out that the answer was, and remains, YES. By approaching the situation as a series of single challenges instead of trying to "fix the whole problem," we have now saved, treated and adopted out hundreds of dogs and puppies that would soon have died as sick, hungry, abandoned and helpless animals in the streets or homes.

Other pets at this rescue