24.10.22

Feeding the Fish Farm Dogs

Do you remember the "Fish Farm" doggies? 

HOPE has been providing these fishy doggies with canned food and kibbles since 2014!

Read their story :

http://hopedogrescue.blogspot.com/2014/01/dogs-grew-up-on-fish-food.html

http://hopedogrescue.blogspot.com/2021/01/fish-farm-dogs.html


We chanced upon them one day long, long ago and found out the poor doggies grew up on fish food! That’s how we started supplying them with dog food.


So happy with life on the farm


Worker, Uncle Segar, who loves the very much 


What a handsome doggy <3 

There used to be a lot more dogs but because we sterilized all of them, we managed to keep the population under control. Today, there are only 10 left; many have died from old age, illness or bitten by snakes – that’s the sad reality of a stray.


Handsome black boy <3 


Loving their freedom


They get cooked food when we go visit and Uncle Segar occasionally cooks for them too

This week we are visiting them to make them happy!

We will be bringing 15 cartons of Nature’s Gift canned food and 6 big bags of ANF kibbles (15kg each bag) and our volunteers will be cooking up a storm for them, to give them a feast. 

We are sure you wouldn’t want these sweet doggies to be eating fish food, so why not help buy some canned food for them? This amount of food would last them 2 to 3 months, before we visit again. 


This handsome one has lost vision in one eye



To buy food for the fish farm doggies, you may drop us a private message or contact our regular pet food supplier, Peggy (Pet HQ) at 96616103. Peggy has been very supportive of our work for than a decade, often providing us with food even when we couldn’t afford to pay her in the early days.

All you need to do is : text Peggy, tell her how much you wish to contribute and do a bank transfer to her. Peggy will help us accumulate everything and deliver all the food to us by Friday, in time for us to bring to the fish farm.

Thank you <3 

Holly, a gentle soul (1st update)

Holly, a sweet, tired soul.

Eyes that no longer sparkle 


Holly has been at the vet since her rescue. Poor Holly must be terrified to be in a strange environment with strange humans handling her that she has been trying to bite; we don’t blame her. The staff had to sedate her in order to draw blood and do a skin scrape; we wanted to ensure she has no contagious diseases before she goes off to a foster home, which she hasn’t found.

In summary :

  • Female / 16Kg (underweight / ideal 18 to 20kg)
  • Anemic
  • Heartworm (Larvae and Babesia)
  • Tick fever (Ehrlichia / Anaplasma)
  • Severe Demodex infestation

Basically poor Holly has the whole package ☹

Exhausted from years of running & living on the streets 



Avoiding eye contact, not too used to humans and attention


Many of you have been asking about her puppies. The vet has confirmed she is not lactating / nursing, and has no puppies. Her dangling tits are from having given birth countless times. 

Such is the sad life of a stray. We will sterilize her when she is stronger.

Their sufferings are so hard, it is only something we can imagine

When our volunteers visited her at the vet, she was curled up in a corner of the cage, exhausted from years of running and living on the streets. Her eyes stared blankly ahead, eyes that no longer sparkle.

Holly allowed our volunteer to stroke her head, and we sensed that she liked it and it was the first time that someone had ever touched her or shown her love. Poor Holly, her entire body is bleeding from severe skin problems, and to think she has been living in this state for years.


Her very first human touch <3 

We hope to be able to find her a foster home within a week, while she is still recuperating at the vet; a family that has time for her, to cure her skin and heal her broken soul. The foster family might initially need to separate the dogs (if they have a resident dog) while Holly learns to trust, and also to help apply meds on her skin etc. 

Holly has just started on her heartworm treatment. There is a risk that she may not survive the treatment. We have no choice, but to proceed with it, before it gets even worse.

Please help Holly. Foster, share her post, or help with vet bills.

Email hopedogrescue@singnet.com.sg

22.10.22

Holly - The Camp Dog

 Teamwork!


We got the camp dog!

A friend, Karen, had linked us with Ling from SOSD and after Ling contacted the relevant army personnel with suggestions on how to assist in trapping the dog, their team were very helpful in luring the dog into an escape proof enclosed room. Ling and trapper Mark then managed to secure the dog; a tired, battered soul, she was.


We would like to thank the military personnel for their kind assistance in this matter. We apologize if we unintentionally got people into trouble.




We have named her Holly.

Holly is at the vet and will have blood works done as well as a skin scrape to ensure she does not have any contagious skin issues before going into a foster home. From the looks of it, she just has extremely bad skin and had scratched herself till her skin bled. Her thin frame is a bag of bones.☹️

Holly will stay at the vet for 2 days, as we buy time looking for a foster. HOPE does not have a shelter and we rely on fosters to care for our dogs till they are adopted.




We need the following help urgently :

1) Foster – please fill this foster form http://goo.gl/forms/2SF2X06AMh

2) Help with dog trapping and vet bills



Our email hopedogrescue@singnet.com.sg if you wish to contact us.

You showed your concern in our earlier post and now we need your help for Holly.

*Photographs courtesy of Ling


19.10.22

Fostering for HOPE

Taking care of senior dogs is not easy. But, it would mean the world to them.

You may have seen our constant posts for fosters, and some of you have written in. Yet, we continue to post for fosters, because we can't find the right fit.


Pet fostering provides temporary care to rescue dogs who get to live in a safe home environment and begin their rehabilitation. It can be from a few months, to years, depending on when the dog gets adopted, and the foster's tenacity. Our minimum fostering period is 4 months as we try not to disrupt the dog's schedule by moving from one place to another as this might make them anxious especially since many of them were abandoned / given up.


Here are some facts to consider if you are thinking of fostering:


1. Many are senior dogs – so they should not be left alone for more than 3 hours a day. Some have poor vision, and may not be able to find the water bowl, or pee / poo all over. There are others who need to go down to pee, require medications/ wound cleaning, or small meals throughout the day.


2. Some, like Malcolm, have severe separation anxiety and will go berserk if left alone for long hours. Some may even destroy things in the house trying to get out or to their human.


3. Our foster must be willing to provide at least 2 to 3 home-cooked meals a day, and monitor fluid intake. Some dogs may be intolerant to certain foods so their diet has to be very specific or they may develop other health issues which then need to be treated. Senior dogs also generally have to be coaxed to drink and can quickly become dehydrated.


4. Some dogs require experienced fosters who can provide injections or subcutaneous fluids (subcut).


5. We work closely with the foster who is expected to observe the dog and give feedback constantly. This is especially so for sick dogs, like Olive & Chloe who have cancer.


6. We would need the foster to pay for food, while HOPE pays for the vet bills, although any help from the foster is very much appreciated.


If you have the above criteria and wish to help our dogs, please email hopedogrescue@singnet.com.sgor fill out this form - http://goo.gl/forms/2SF2X06AMh 


18.10.22

Helping an old JRT, Apple


Apple wandering off on her own (Photo taken by a passer-by)

Last week, we were informed that there was an old lost dog wandering the streets under a block at Petir Road. When we found the dog we noticed that her nails were really long and curled up (this can be very painful for dogs). From our past experience, sometimes the dog could belong to older persons who let their dog roam and expect the dogs to come back and are at times not even aware that they need to groom the dogs and clip the nails. 


Of course, also sometimes it could be that they may not have the financial means to do so or sadly at times, they just don’t prioritise it, at the expense of the well-being of their poor dog. 

Eventually, we were able to track the owner after her dog had been returned to her. We managed to find out that a neighbour had bought the dog kibbles because sometimes the family forgot or could not find the time to feed.

Apple at the vet with a volunteer

The dog’s name is Apple, a 15 year old white Jack Russell Terrier and she belongs to an 80 year old lady. Apple was given to her by her daughter in law, when she got married. 

Our volunteer approached the family and offered to take Apple to the vet, and HOPE would help with the vet bills – for a basic blood test and a much needed nail clipping. After some persuasion, the owner agreed.

Extremely overgrown nails

We took Apple to the vet, together with the owner, for blood tests and her liver readings were a bit high and she needs supplements for this. Her neighbour has agreed that she will go over daily to feed the supplements. 

Huge growth on her right paw

Apple also has a rather large growth (visible, pink, and big) on the right front paw and she needs a minor surgery to remove it. We have yet to arrange as we are truly concerned that the family may not be able to provide the post-surgery care and that may result in the surgical site becoming infected. 

In the meanwhile, we will try to persuade the old aunty to surrender the dog to us, because we truly think that it is a very sad life to live in a home that allows you to roam, not bother if you come home or not and occasionally forget to feed. We don’t yet have a foster, but we are worried that Apple could end up getting hit by a car as she is currently allowed to roam in the car park. We hope to be able to help her. 


Eye appears abnormal

A sore on her left leg

Apple’s vet bill from her last vet visit was $285. If you would like to help, please email us at hopedogrescue@singnet.com.sg