That is just way cool. Thank you for what you do. I'm glad for the critter and for the owner who brought this beautiful fella to y'all as opposed to the alternative like I've seen some wandering on the side of the road. You made my day. God bless y'all and good luck finding him a new home. Love n prayers, Tony Walkingstick 🙏 ❤️
People like you are my hero’s. I’m about to buy a large rural property and want to get into wildlife rehab. (Going slow, want as much training as possible). 🤞
@@t.l.1610 I learned under a friend of mine who rehabilitated, owls, hawks ,raccoons etc. it is very rewarding. I couldn't release my fox in the wild so I let her go to a red fox sanctuary owned by another friend of mine. It was a sad day but she was happy to be with others of her kind and that made it easier for me. She imprinted on me. I still get to see her, she is old now but she still knows who I am. They always say to that which you tame , you owe your life. The other saying is , one spirit cannot touch another without leaving it's mark.
How many wolf dog’s are surrendered to you and do you keep them or find homes? I saw the new wolf dogs and they are beautiful. I totally love wolves 🐺 💗🥰🙏🏻💕🫂🌈🫂💞💓
I get calls all the time but I only have one extra space to keep them. I find homes for them or with this little female, Im hoping the owner takes her back.
@@dhand34 female cool my 115# Akita great I'll take but then there is factors of containment my property. It's kinda set up but not really a wolf dog, jump fence and gone, we don't want that.
She was in a rental car in Denver with no where to stay if this is the same one from last week i saw. I was about to foster it if it came down to it "im just North of the springs". She was supposed to fly back to Tennessee & was out of money. She was saying it was Tamaskan/ hybrid.
Very glad that things ended up to be a positive experience for this guy & a better chance at life. It seems like he was well socialize which is the hardest thing to teach post puppy in my opinion. My guess is around 25%-40% probably a Tamaskin & LC mix And the degree of his muzzle forehead slant tells me it's a little higher content than just your average Tamaskan. Wolf content within registered Tamaskan Dogs ranges from 0% to 30%. The TDR and ITR passed a rule in 2018 that limits the percentage of Gray Wolf in new Outcross Dogs to approximately 30% or less. The rule applies to Tamaskan Dog litters too - no litter may be produced that would create Tamaskan Dogs who are 30% or higher in Gray Wolf content. Outcross Dogs, which are pure breeds or mixed breeds outside of the Tamaskan Dog breed, are considered and approved on a case-by-case basis by each individual registry. It's very confusing lol😅 Some breeders specifically focus on producing litters of registered Tamaskan Dogs that have 0% wolf content, as verified by Embark Vet DNA testing and the UC Davis wolf hybrid genetic test. & that is why Tamaskan's are the hardest tell visual
Beautiful baby! So sad he was homeless and living in a car. Lucky to have you. You said at 30-40% that’s low content? What do you consider high content?
I have base work for containment a female to rescue. Need to build better for. My akita 115# like a friend, why not wolf rescue? I'll drive you to check out.
@@dhand34 cool, she seems sweet & good fit. Until snow melts be very hard to build proper containment yard here. Just saying. Expected 10-20" more next few days.