The Rehoming Process
Here at Dunrunnin, we pride ourselves on the care we take when pairing our dogs with their new owners. We welcome applications from all kinds of prospective home; we have successfully placed dogs in flats, with working families, with young children — even with house rabbits! Our belief is that matching the needs of the dog with the needs of their new family is the most important factor in a successful rehoming.
Steps in the journey to adopting a Greyhound
Is a Greyhound right for me?
The first step on your rehoming journey is for you to decide whether you are able to welcome a greyhound into your family and we have provided some information below to assist
Pre-adoption Application Form
This form is to be filled in with all details requested and allows us to match you with the right dog based on the information submitted
Virtual Home Visit
For your convenience we conduct the home tours virtually which is there to make sure the prerequisites needed are met
Pay us a visit
Should we match you with suitable dogs we recommend coming to visit with all the family and current pets to meet prospective Greys
Is a Greyhound right for me?
The first step on your rehoming journey is for you to decide whether you are able to welcome a greyhound into your family. Please explore our site to learn more about greyhounds and find out about our dogs who are waiting for a home.
We’ve collected some of our favourite information for new adopters in the following documents. We strongly recommend familiarising yourself with them before continuing to the next step:
Greyhound Trust official guide for looking after a Greyhound
To support you in your journey we are also here to chat with and walk through any questions or considerations notable to your situation.
Understanding your prospective or newly adopted Greyhound
As we look at life through the eyes of a Greyhound, the below excerpt provided by Kathleen GIlley provides a wonderful insight.
This breed has never been asked to do anything for itself, make any decisions or answer any questions. It has been waited on, paw and tail. The only prohibition in a racing Greyhound’s life is not to get into a fight or eat certain stuff in the turn out to the paddock.
Let us review a little. From weaning until you go away for schooling, at probably a year and a half, you eat, grow and run round with your siblings. When you go away to begin your racing career, you get your own “apartment”, in a large housing development. No one is allowed in your bed with you, and when you are in there, no one can touch you without plenty of warning. Someone hears a vehicle drive up, or the kennel door being unlocked. The light switches are flipped on. The loud mouths in residence, and there always are some, begin to bark or howl. You are wide awake by the time the human opens your door to turn you out. A Greyhound has never been touched while he was asleep.
You eat when you are fed, usually on a strict schedule. No one asks if you are hungry or what you want to eat. You are never told not to eat any food within your reach. No one ever touches your bowl while you are eating. You are not to be disturbed because it is important you clear your plate.
You are not asked if you have to “go outside”. You are placed in a paddock and it isn’t long before you get the idea of what you are supposed to do while you are out there. Unless you really get out of hand you may chase, rough house and put your feet on everyone and everything else. The only humans you know are the “waiters” who feed you, and the “restroom attendants” who turn you out to go to the bathroom. Respect people? Surely you jest. No one comes into or goes out of your kennel without your knowledge. You are all seeing, all knowing. There are no surprises, day in and day out. The only thing it is ever hoped you will do is win, place or show, and that you don’t have much control over. It is in your blood, it is in your heart, it is in your fate—or it is not.
When it is not, then suddenly you are expected to be a civilised person in a fur coat. But people don’t realize you may not even speak English. Some of you don’t even know your names, because you didn’t need to. You were not asked or told to do anything as an individual; you were always part of the “condo association”; the sorority or fraternity and everyone did everything together, as a group or pack. The only time you did anything as an individual is when you schooled or raced, and even then, You Were Not Alone.
Suddenly he is expected to behave himself in places he’s never been taught how to act. He is expected to take responsibility for saying when he needs to go outside, to come when he is called, not to get on some or all of the furniture, and not to eat food off counters and tables. He is dropped in a world that is not his and totally without warning, at that. Almost everything he does is wrong. Suddenly he is a minority. Now he is just a pet. He is unemployed, in a place where people expect him to know the rules and the schedule, even when there aren’t any. (How many times have you heard someone say, “He won’t tell me when he has to go out.” What kind of schedule is that?) Have you heard the joke about the dog who says, “My name is No-No Bad Dog—what’s yours?” To me that is not even funny. All the protective barriers are gone.
There is no more warning before something happens. There is no more strength in numbers. He wakes up with a monster human face two inches from his. (With some people’s breath, this could scare Godzilla.) Why should he not believe that this “someone”, who has crept up on him isn’t going to eat him for lunch? (I really do have to ask you ladies to consider how you would react if someone you barely knew crawled up on you while you were asleep?) No, I will not ask for any male input.
Now he is left alone, for the first time in his life, in a strange place, with no idea of what will happen or how long it will be before someone comes to him again. If he is not crated, he may go through walls or windows, or over fences, desperately seeking something familiar, something with which to reconnect his life. If he does get free, he will find the familiarity within himself: the adrenaline high, the wind in his ears, the blood pulsing and racing through his heart once again—until he crashes into a car.
Often, the first contact with his new family is punishment, something he’s never had before, something he doesn’t understand now, especially in the middle of the rest of the chaos. And worst of all, what are the most common human reactions to misbehaviour? We live in a violent society, where the answer to any irritation is a slap, punch, kick, whip, or rub your nose in it. Under these circumstances, sometimes I think any successful adoption is a miracle. He is, in effect, expected to have all the manners of at least a six-year-old child. But, how many of you would leave an unfamiliar six-year-old human alone and loose in your home for hours at a time and not expect to find who knows what when you got back? Consider that if you did, you could be brought up on charges of child abuse, neglect and endangerment. Yet, people do this to Greyhounds and this is often the reason for so many returns.
How many dogs have been returned because they did not know how to tell the adopter when they had to go out? How many for jumping on people, getting on furniture, counter surfing, separation anxiety, or defensive actions due to being startled or hurt (aka growling or biting)? So, let’s understand: sometimes it is the dog’s “fault” he cannot fit in. He is not equipped with the social skills of a six-year-old human. So it is up to you to help him/her live the life of a pet greyhound. Good luck, it’s easy really.
Virtual Home Visit
- To do this, we ask you to collect the following pieces of photo and video evidence:
- An image of your photo ID (passport or driving licence)
- An image of your proof of address (utility bill or similar)
- A video of the inside of your house, showing where the dog will be eating, sleeping and spending most of their time. Please show us where the dog will be eating, sleeping and spending most of their time. Please make sure that your floor coverings are visible and include all exterior doors.
- If you have a garden, a video of your outside space. Please make sure that all areas of your garden are clearly visible, including perimeter fencing or hedges, gates, access to/from house, side returns and the sides of any sheds or summerhouses.
- If you are not a homeowner, proof that you have permission to have a dog
Depending on your circumstances, you should have between three and five files to submit to us. There are three ways that you can do this. In order of our preference, they are:
- If you have WhatsApp, you can send them to us on 07760 440142. Remember to tell us your name so we know it’s you!
- If you have a Gmail address, you can use our file upload tool here.
- Otherwise, please upload the files to a file sharing service (WeTransfer, Dropbox etc) and email a link to the file to karen@dunrunnin.org