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> Out of the Cage! > Fall/Holiday
2007 > Fall Adoption Events Create Happy Homes
Fall Adoption Events Create Happy Homes
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Sabrina Mashburn met her true
love Baci, a ten-month-old German Shepherd rescued by
Stray from the Heart, at a Mayor's Alliance/Maddie's
Pet Adoption Festival.
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Beneath a clear blue autumn sky, Mayor's Alliance
Participating Organizations brought dogs and cats for adoption to
Union Square Park on Sunday, October 21, for the final Mayor's
Alliance/Maddie's Pet Adoption Festival of the 2007 season.
Some of the dogs for adoption and volunteers were decked out in
Halloween costumes, while event-goers met new furry family members,
had their dog or cat microchipped, and met best-selling author Lee
Harrington, who gave out autographed copies of her book: Rex
and the City: A Memoir of a Woman, a Man, and a Dysfunctional Dog,
for a donation to the Mayor's Alliance.
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A human-sized cat welcomes
Adopt-A-Cat attendees to Madison Square Garden while
a video featuring cats for adoption plays on the giant
outdoor plasma screen.
(Photo by Rick Edwards)
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Just a week before, hundreds of adopters turned
out for the annual Adopt-A-Cat event, which ran in tandem with the
Cat
Fanciers' Association (CFA)-IAMS Cat Championship at Madison
Square Garden on October 13–14. Several hundred cats and kittens
from twenty-five APOs found loving homes during the two-day event,
while outside the Garden, event-goers and passers-by toured the
Code
3 Associates Big Animal Rescue Truck (BART). BART is the mobile
emergency animal hospital that responds across the country to disasters
involving animals, and was featured in a NY 1 news segment earlier
in the week. Its presence, arranged by CFA President Pam DelaBar,
who serves on Code 3 Associates' board, raised awareness among New
Yorkers of the importance of preparing for pets in an emergency
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Banners promoting the Adopt-A-Cat
event were hung from lamp posts throughout the high-traffic
Madison Square Garden/Herald Square area. |
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This year's Adopt-A-Cat event received plenty of
pre-event promotion when, for the first time ever, outdoor banners
advertising the event were displayed from light posts throughout
the surrounding blocks and across 34th Street to Fifth Avenue. (The
banners were later offered to all the shelters and rescue groups
that participated in the event.) Additionally, in the days leading
up to and during the event, a mesmerizing video of cats and kittens
for adoption, created by Rational
Animal, captured the attention of thousands of New Yorkers from
the huge plasma screen outside the Seventh Avenue entrance to Penn
Station and Madison Square Garden. Our thanks to the Cat Fanciers'
Association and the ASPCA for partnering with the Mayor's Alliance
to have these promotional materials produced.
In mid-September, late-summer adopters came out
in force for the Mayor's Alliance/Maddie's Pet Adoption Festival
and low-cost microchipping clinic in Central Park. Plenty of cats,
dogs — and even rabbits — found homes at the event,
while the Maddie's Fund mascot strolled the park and surrounding
area, making new friends and directing people to the event.
Miho Sakai, a television producer with NHK Enterprises,
brought a film crew to the event to capture it as part of a documentary
for Japanese television.
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A couple fills out an adoption
application for their newfound love at Adopt-A-Cat.
(Photo by Rick Edwards) |
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While adoption events are among our most important
activities to "bring the animals to the people" outside
the shelter setting, Mayor's Alliance microchipping clinics, which
are featured at all Mayor's Alliance/Maddie's Pet Adoption Festivals,
are becoming more in demand throughout the city. This year the Mayor's
Alliance was invited by numerous organizations to stage low-cost
microchipping clinics at neighborhood events, including AKC Responsible
Dog Ownership Day, the Battery Park Block Party, the Central Park
Conservancy PAWS Country Fair, Marine Park in Brooklyn, Dogswalk
in Flushing Meadow Park, and It's My Bark Day in Rockaway Beach,
Queens.
If your neighborhood group, block association or
dog park group wants to include a Mayor's Alliance low-cost microchipping
clinic at your 2008 event, please e-mail info@AnimalAllianceNYC.org.
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Beth Joy Knutsen and
Bella Starlet Dog share the spotlight with the
Maddie's Fund mascot on the animal float in the
Village Halloween Parade.
(Photo by Elizabeth
Riley)
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Maddie's Fund Mascot and Mayor's Alliance Groups
Star in Village Halloween Parade
For the second year, the Maddie's
Fund mascot rode atop the dazzling animal float in the
ever-popular Village
Halloween Parade in October. The animal float was given
a prestigious number two spot in the parade line-up. Representatives
from nearly a dozen Mayor's Alliance Participating Organizations
escorted the float, walking behind the Mayor's Alliance banner
and displaying their own group's banner. Thousands of onlookers
lined the streets as the parade wound its way uptown, and
cheered the animal presence in the parade.
Thanks to Diane West of New
York Tails, and Beth Joy Knutsen and Bella
Starlet Dog, who invited the Mayor's Alliance and the
Maddie's Fund mascot to participate in this highly visible
event!
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