March 2016 Newsletter

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The Brittany Advocate Volume 8, Issue 1 B U S I N E S S

~ A dog owns nothing, yet is seldom dissatisfied ~ March 2016

N A M E

President’s Corner

by Sue Spaid

I wanted to take this month’s column and explain to the NBRAN faithful, HOW our organization does the good work it does. We have a good operating structure that I’m very proud of. We have Regional Directors, who are our Board Members, and they manage specific areas of the country and the Canadian Provinces. The states/provinces within those regions have one or more coordinators responsible for those states/provinces. These coordinators report to the regional directors for help, ideas and support. The fosters and other volunteers in the states work with the state coordinators. We have a transport team that works with the state coordinators to move the dogs across the country and that system never ceases to amaze me. Our process of “doing rescue” is a good system that serves us well. Our leaders, the board and state coordinators, are professional and empathic folks who work very hard to save every Brittany we can. I’ve never known us to turn away a dog. Sometimes we know we are facing a big vet bill and perhaps a not so happy ending, but we take the dog in and do what is best. The state coordinators and Regional Directors process dogs coming into rescue by finding foster homes and getting the dogs ready for adoption by securing proper vetting and behavioral assessment. We have a policy of holding all adult dogs for at least 3-4 weeks in foster for proper assessment and vetting. Pups can go sooner- they usually don’t have any baggage that needs to be addressed. Once applications come in for a dog, the state coordinator where the adopter lives takes the lead in interviewing the prospective adopter, doing the veterinarian interview and arranging for a home visit. The adopter often talks to the foster parent several times and once they are all cleared to adopt, the coordinator in the state where the dog resides in foster care sets up the transport. Our foster homes are amazing. These folks evaluate the behavior of the foster dog and learn all about his or her quirks. They take these pups into their homes and make them part of their pack in order to properly assess them and learn about them. They make sure they get proper vetting and nurse pups after neutering and many other procedures we often have to have done for our dogs. We have foster homes that will put dogs through heartworm treatment, which is not an easy task. I have a special awe and respect for those folks. We have an unwritten policy, which I think is a good one, that the foster gets the final say on the placement of a dog. Our fosters often spend many hours talking to adopters and learning about their behaviors and quirks too! It’s important to be honest and up front with our adopters and our fosters do a great job. Inside This Issue Sometimes, a dog won’t exhibit a behavior until they’ve been in their new home for several months and feel safe, but our fosters try to identify potential issues before we adopt our 2-13 Readers Letters & Pictures dogs. Because we are dealing with dogs, Brittany’s, it’s not always as easy as it sounds. 14-16 Over the Rainbow Bridge Anyone who has owned one of these amazing dogs knows they all have their own unique 17-18 Annual Fund Raising and special personalities. I’m blessed and very grateful to work with everyone who has a part in our rescue. Directors, coordinators, fosters, transporters, shelter pull folks; everyone plays an important role in what we do. If you don’t volunteer but think you might want to help out in some capacity, please go to our website, hit the contact us link and email your state coordinator. I’m sure they would love to hear from you. There are many ways people can help.

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Christmas Cards

19 Coordinator & Volunteer of the Quarter 20 Directory of Officers/Stats


In Memory of Kevin by Joan Higgins

Kevin was a husband, father, grandfather, outdoorsman, musician, and a Brittany lover. From the beginning of our 50 year journey together, there were always dogs in the picture. The first was a mutt named Wallace, then came Sorrowful (adopted from Angel Memorial in Boston), and Lady and Kasey and Jessie the Dalmatian, and Mrs. Brown who was named in honor of the song. It was a toss-up at times whether there were more children or dogs in our household. As the boys grew older and followed their dad with trips to Maine for deer hunting, bird hunting soon followed. After spending weeks/months researching bird dogs, Kevin decided that a Brittany fitted their needs. Our 1st Britt was Barney who killed in a freak accident when a woman drove down a street that was closed down for repairs because she did not want to go around the long way. Barney always went to work with work Kevin. As a professional land surveyor, most of the time Barney romped in the woods and had a grand old time for himself. Our 2nd Brittany was found in a Boston Globe ad. Belle was no longer wanted. Off Kevin went to Newbury, MA to purchase her. She was not a very good hunter but she could find water no matter where you took her and promptly jumped in. Kevin then found a litter of puppies in Chester, VT so off we go. We purchased a pup, named her Bonnie, and she stayed with us for 17 years. Kevin bred Bonnie to a Field Champion and she had 8 pups. We kept the last male and named him Buck. Are you seeing the trend with B is for Brittany names? Buck stayed with us for 14 years. After Bucks’ mama died, he was quite lonely, so time for a new puppy. I myself was thrilled we were down to one dog and no children. It was not to be. Bridey came home with us on a lovely Sunday afternoon, stuck in beach traffic and vomiting all over me. So now we have two but the economy is bad, no one is building, and Kevin opts for early retirement. Somewhere in the mix, Kevin meets Nancy Harris and Nancy sends us her Brittany named Mark. One of the strangest Brittanys we ever had. He spent most days staring at the ground. Playing on the computer most of the day, Kevin stumbles onto NBRAN. Every day I would get home from work and he would have pictures of Brittanys to show me. I try to tell him that we are getting older and taking care of lots of dogs is iffy. His response “but I’m here all day, I can do it”. It started with transporting and kudos to Nancy Walker (the FAA should hire her and put her in a control tower) who has done a fantastic job mapping out routes to take the fur balls across the country. Then the question came, “Would you like to foster?” Our 1st foster was Zoe, a French Brittany. She is living like a queen now up in Vermont. Then came Willow, an older dog with heartworm, who needed her treatments and to be kept quiet. She paired up with a lovely older couple from Cape Cod. After her was Sally renamed Abby (now in Somerset, MA), Bella (now somewhere in South Carolina), Caroline who chewed through 3 crates, dug holes to China and then dug under the fence so she could dig holes in the neighbor’s yard. Her adopted owners say she is the best behaved dog they ever had. Caroline needed constant one on one treatment to be happy. Lexi and Trixie (2 very overweight dogs). Remember that we are still helping on transports. Kevin encounters Lisa Langeneckert. A dog in the midwest named Fuzzy Wuzzy was sick and needed experienced foster care. With a name like Fuzzy Wuzzy, I am all in. The next day Fuzzy succumbs to Parvo….but Lisa has another dog named Cowboy who needs fostering. Well Kevin was a big AZ fan (Cowboys and Indians, etc.) so Cowboy is on his way to RI. We meet up with the transport in Auburn, MA. Cowboy is the last to exit the vehicle and the transporter says “who gets this one?” I raise my hand and as she hands me Cowboy, she says a very fervent “good luck”. Cowboy looks like Bambi on ice. All legs and he is definitely exceeding the breed standards. Cowboy does not like being in the back of the Jeep. I keep shortening the lead on him but he wants no part of being in back. I decide that maybe I should sit in back with him to help alleviate his anxiety. In order to The Brittany Advocate Page 2


climb in back, I have to loosen the lead and he promptly jumps in front, manages to down shift into neutral (thankfully) and proceeds to ride home in the front seat. I get to sit on the floor in back. Cowboy was renamed Beau and entered our household in 2010. The following year Kevin was diagnosed with lung cancer. We slowed down doing the transports but managed to take in one more foster named Jake. We never changed his name and he is still residing here with Bridey and Beau. Jake is not a hunter but he is a loving dog and that’s all he wants out of life. Beau is still the class clown and Kevin said the reason he put up with his nonsense was because Beau could always make you laugh. Kevin lost his battle with cancer on October 22, 2015 (on his son’s birthday). I want to thank NBRAN for helping sustain Kevin through some difficult time during his illness. I am closing with a song he wrote about his clown. BRITTANY BEAU I’ve a Brittany, name is Beau He’s got one speed and that ain’t slow Just crank him up and watch him go Hi Ho Brittany Beau Beaus’ always got dirt all over his nose Likes to drink from the garden hose He’ll bite your fingers and step on your toes Hi HO Brittany Beau Big as a pony and twice as strong Just grab his lead and he’ll drag you along If you think he’ll change then you’d be wrong Hi Ho Brittany Beau He chews on sticks and chews on leashes Chews on anything his nose reaches He left the bathroom sink in pieces Hi Ho Brittany Beau He can’t hide even though he tries Hard to do if you’re that size And he’s got the devil in his eyes Hi Ho Brittany Beau He’s got a grip like a big bear trap Makes you want to give him a slap Then he hops into my lap That old Brittany Beau.

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A letter to Foster Dad Dave: Update on Angie Time flies so fast! It is hard to believe I've had my little Angie for a year already. Angie has been a delightful adventure. She's my constant sidekick and has truly become a "mama's girl"! When I travel, she refuses to get in bed with my sitter, but prefers to sleep next to the bedroom door - presumably waiting for me to return. She is definitely happy to see me come home from one of my two day trips!! Every evening, she curls up right next to me on "her" pillow on the couch to watch the news with me. She gets a long great with her brothers and certainly holds her own with them as well. The 'adventure' part has been she can be a nipper. She's very protective of her yard and territory, but I've learned her triggers so we just avoid/manage them. She did give me quite a scare in the spring when she woke up one morning crying in bed and wouldn't move. I rushed her to the emergency vet who after extensive testing diagnosed an idiopathic joint inflammatory disease. It took about a week for her to be able to walk again. I'm happy to report she hasn't had any more episodes. Now I'm working with a holistic vet to support her joints so she's on fish oil, joint supplements and vitamins. She is the first in line morning and night to take her meds with peanut butter. I'll never forget to give meds as she is very vocal about knowing what time they must be administered! LOL! Along the way, she developed some incontinence too...not a surprise for an older spayed female. We've gotten that under control with Proin, but I did buy her a bassinet for next to the bed as we tried to manage it. She loves sleeping in the bassinet right next to me so I've left it up for her. I must admit, I've had a lot of questions from people who've seen it in my house. Of course, everyone immediately understands the crazy dog lady's reasoning once questioned. All and all, Angie has been a great addition. Thanks so much for fostering her. Know that Angie is loved to pieces and keeps me on my toes daily!!! Thanks, Cindy

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Joyful Jill This is Jill, we adopted her about two years ago. She was a breeder’s female for about five years and was very shy and scared of thunder and other strange noises. She was delivered to us in North Carolina by the wonderful NBRAN volunteer drivers. She may have had

a

rough life but now she is enjoying the good life. She

is

so sweet and our twelve

year adopted boy loves her. They are a great

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Sweet Lucy Lucy was adopted to Bruce by NBRAN 6 years ago. In that time, Lucy developed into a part time hunter and full time companion to Bruce. Life was great up until a couple of years ago when Bruce was diagnosed with cancer. Bruce fought the hard fight and Lucy stayed at his side at whole time. Unfortunately, Bruce lost his battle and passed away last spring. While Bruce’s wife, Kathy, enjoyed Lucy’s company, she just could not provide the companionship and devotion that Lucy expected. She made the hard decision and returned Lucy to NBRAN so she would have a chance to find that love and devotion with a new family. Kevin and Joan had adopted a Brittany from NBRAN the previous year and were very happy with their new girl. One day they left home to run some errands and came home to discovered that she had unexpectedly crossed the bridge. There was no indication that she was suffering from any medical ailments and it was a shock to lose such a young girl. Naturally they were devastated as it was so unexpected and they had only had her such a short period of time. After a period of mourning, they began their search for another Brittany, as a house is not a home without a resident canine. It was about this time that Lucy returned to her foster home. After spending a month with her foster family, she was deemed ready for a new home. Foster dad Dave had also adopted to Kevin and Joan and knew they were looking for that special girl to replace their Missy. After a number of phone calls to share Lucy’s story, Kevin and Joan decided to move ahead and adopt Lucy. As you can see in the picture below, Lucy has integrated nicely with them and she enjoys spending time with her new dad and mom. She is adjusting nicely and doing very well on her twice a day walks. She has been almost perfect in her new home other than getting into Joan’s yarn and playing with it. She gets along great with everyone she meets and the grandchildren love her. They say she is a special dog and her former ‘dad and mom’ did a great job training her. She has lost about 3 pounds with the increase activity and is looking great as well. They felt bad that they ended up adopting Lucy due to the death of Bruce, but they are thankful that two sad situations turned into a joyful one.

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Beautiful Bella Bella is home and settled in with our two dogs. Her tail has not stopped wagging. I cannot thank the transporters enough! I am so grateful to the NBRAN volunteers who spent their Saturday helping transport the dogs and it amazes me that you do this on a regular basis. A special thanks to Nancy Walker for orchestrating the transport. I am very impressed with the timing and the flawless execution. Bella is a sweetheart - right now she is napping on a bunch of blankets on the couch. She is getting used to the new surroundings and is always wagging her tail which I take as a good sign. She seems OK with the wireless fence, which is good. Jeff Kuse

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ella resting ON THE SOFA with Connor. She's pretty pleased with herself for sneaking up when I wasn't in the room!

Ella on “her� bed

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Courageous Gus...in his own words I am a Britt who had very sad eyes and never wagged my tail because I was an outside dog for 4 years, without enough water and no shelter from the hot Georgia sun or cold rainy nights. Heartworm positive, untrained, intact, not socialized, neglected, no one played with me or called me by my name. In May 2012, I was surrendered by my owner. NBRAN rescued me and my whole life changed. They treated my heartworm infection. Shortly after my 3rd heartworm treatment, I became deathly ill and was hospitalized with hemorrhagic gastroenteritis (HGE). As I was recovering from HGE, I stopped eating and all I wanted to do was drink water. My caretakers said this is a condition called PSYCHOGENIC POLYDIPSIA. My water intake has to be constantly monitored or I will drink too much which will result in me in vomiting and peeing at the same time. I will then fall down and cannot standup because of too much water. You can die from drinking too much water. I will drink from anything and everything. Then when things were looking better, I got out and was lost only to be found by a good samaritan. I had been hit by a vehicle. And all this in the first 5 months of being rescued. In 2013, I got sick from urinary tract infections. The antidepressants to help control my psychogenic polydipsia made me so lethargic and dehydrated that I lost 10 pounds. It was suspected that I might have cancer. In December 2013, after extensive tests I was diagnosed with Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus. My kidneys do not respond to the antidiuretic hormone (ADH) produced by the pituitary gland that tells the kidneys to concentrate urine. In other words, I urinate a lot and need to drink water often. There is no cure for Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus but it is manageable with diuretics taken 3 times a day (it tricks my kidneys into concentrate urine especially, at night) and prescription Hill’s HD low sodium dog food. My Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus is compounded by the PSYCHOGENIC POLYDISPSIA. The antidepressants were stopped. I continue to receive 2 -3 quarts of water per day depending on my activity. In 2014, one year after being diagnosed with NDI, my blood work was within normal range and my weight was 53

pounds. In 2015, I suffered from an acute staph infection called moist dermatitis that continues to flare up in raining weather. However, the great news is for the second year in a row, my blood work is within normal range due to the prescriptions meds and food. My weight is down 3 pounds and my water intake still needs to be monitored every day.� My ongoing medication, prescription food and vet care is expensive. If you would like to help NBRAN pay for my expenses, please click the donate link on the NBRAN webpage (www.NBRAN.ORG). Thanks for taking the time to learn more about me. Life was lousy, but things are now so much better thanks to the kind people at NBRAN!!! Love, Gus

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Rockin’ Ranger Ranger was my very first shelter pull here and was a great save. He’s a beautiful boy with a wonderful personality and will always have a special place in my heart. If there’s such a thing as a perfect Brittany, Ranger comes very close. This is why we do what we do. Denise Turgeon

Greetings from Tony & Susan Versley Denise - we thought that you would like an update on Ranger. He and Mingo are getting along great. He has taken to Susan like a shadow and is beginning to get more and more comfortable with me. But Susan is his gal. I put some photos here on this note so that you can see how happy he is now that he realizes that this is his forever home. A very large new dog park recently opened here in the Villages. We take the dogs there 2-3 times a week. Ranger does love it and runs like crazy and Mingo joins in. They both get along well with other dogs at the park. We use the 30lb and up section. He enjoys going for walks and car rides, and playing with toys. Thanks again for helping us in this adoption

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Happy Baby I just wanted to give you an update on Baby. She had her yearly Vet check recently and got rave reviews! She weighed in at 39.8 pounds and the vet said she was the perfect weight! She had no health issues and her attitude was marked as "bright and alert". She is just such a sweet girl. I just love her. Her favorite "toy" is a knotted rope that she shakes and throws around the house and that she loves to play keep away with. Sometimes it goes flying all the way across the living room! She still is in the habit of turning her behind to you...not sure what that is all about. She loves anyone who will pet her. Just wanted to let you know how great she is doing and what a great dog she is. Thanks to you and NBRAN for bringing her to me. Rhonda Wortman

***************************************************************************************** Iggy

Iggy, Thunder, and Gus

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Click: A Brittany’s First Day in the Field Click: a sound that emulates a feeling, particularly to canine owners. Shrouded with emotion when not predicted or controlled, the thought of your dog escaping the front yard or getting away from you during a hike in the woods can resemble what a rock would feel like if inserted into the pit of your stomach. Contrarily, that same Click, when made consciously, on a well-trained pup, emulates owner pride, a sense of accomplishment, and equates into one happy dog. It provides the freedom that many Brittanys crave and thrive from. In 2014 we adopted a purebred Brittany and our first bird dog. Our plan was to have a companion dog with no real intentions of field trials, show rings or championship letters. After spending more time, than one should, researching the breed, we brought home the most perfect dog for us. About a year in I found myself on Google, searching words like futurity, field trails, and confirmation classes. I was drawn in, and then hooked. I joined The Pennsylvania Brittany Club in July 2015 not knowing what it was about. I presumed I would attend a few summer picnics with my pup, receive newsletter updates and perhaps gain a friend or two. With an insane year – a marriage and a honeymoon in the books – I never made it to the club grounds until late fall. When the First Annual Chuckar Shoot was announced for November, I promptly reserved my birds, but still wasn’t sure what I was going to do with them. Until this point Utley had never been off leash. Surrounded by fellow bird dog enthusiast, I asked to borrow a Garmin GPS Tracking Collar for our second time out in the field. An item which was happily shared, and came with expert field advice by friend Brian Riggle, Bird Dog Trainer Extraordinaire, I promptly placed it around Utley’s neck. Rounding the corner of the field, away from the main club house, Brian let Utley off leash. I think I held back tears as the following words sprang through my head. Wait. What? You didn’t .. . What if he doesn’t come back? I’m going to have to camp in Polk, PA in NOVEMBER to find my dog. I’m never leaving my dog with this man again. He hasn’t been trained on an e-Collar. But a few quick moments later, Utley started to respond to recall. With very little training, not only did Utley come back to me, he found birds. Birds that we didn’t even know were left in the field. He pointed. He retrieved. And we even let him have some fun. That single Click was the gateway for me. It solidified that I want to be part of this bird dog community and that surrounding myself with like-minded people through my local Brittany Club was the right step. Not only have friendships bloomed, I have one of the happiest Brittanys in Western PA. He’s pretty darn attractive, too. And by the way, I'd leave Utley with Brian again, any day of the week. Utley (Wild Mtn Chasing Bandit) lives in Pennsylvania with his mom and dad Cassandra and Steve McClintock and their 13 yearold barn cat, Igby. Utley is preparing for a successful season of hunting in 2016 and is starting to flirt with the show ring.

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Harley who is ‘swimming’ in a sea of Brittanys

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jack the French Brittany meeting his new dad, mom, and brother who is a Cavalier King Charles spaniel.

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Just wanted to send a recent pic of the crazy Britts!! Jumping on tables! (Remi learned from Heidi). So much of our snow is melted. We had four feet piled up all over the yard. We had to snow blow walking (running!) paths for them!. When the snow is light and fresh they have a blast jumping into it. I love to ski, but for the dogs sake I am looking forward to Spring so that they have something to sniff down and run after. The only thing we have now are bunnies and they are hard to find !!

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In Memory at The Rainbow Bridge

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In Memory at The Rainbow Bridge

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In Memory at The Rainbow Bridge

Aspen came to us as a rescue dog and was the sweetest most obedient dog we ever had. She loved to be with people and spent much of her indoor time on the couch where she could watch everyone. She often snuggled up on the couch with our cat. We miss her enthusiastic greeting when we arrive at home after our day's activities. One of her favorite activities was riding in the car and meeting new people or old friends along the way.

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Christmas Cards 2015

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Volunteers of the Quarter The Board of Directors have selected Ron and Jana Markham as the Volunteers of the Quarter. Ron and Jana had recently adopted Rocco from NBRAN and had just been approved to volunteer for the organization when an emergency transport was initiated to rescue three young wild brittanys. They stepped up to the plate and hit a home run! They picked up the dogs, kept them overnight at their place, and then drove them from Georgia directly to Virginia. There was an extreme probability one of these wild children would have gotten loose during a transfer on a multi legged transport so their willingness to drive this transport in one leg likely prevented an escape and subsequent search for a lost dog. Their entrance into the volunteer fold was a “baptism by fire” and they came through with flying colors! Congratulations and sincere thanks go out to Ron and Jana for being selected as the Volunteers of the Quarter. Your sacrifices are appreciated by all of us at NBRAN! ———————————————————————————————————————————————————————

Coordinator of the Quarter The Board of Directors selected Jackie Cave as the Coordinator of the Quarter. Jackie is willing to go above and beyond to help. Even though she may have a full house, she can always find room for one more dog needing fostering. Gas stations love her as she will drive hundreds of miles to help on transport and even to personally deliver foster dogs to their new forever homes. She also does a lot of ‘behind the scenes’ work to support NBRAN. Her exuberance and passion for helping the dogs sometimes results in her putting the needs of the canines ahead of the needs of her fellow man, but we always know she loves helping our dogs and will not let anything get in the way of doing so. Congratulations to Jackie on being selected Coordinator of the Quarter!

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NBRAN Officers Sue Spaid, President, sspaid@verizon.net Susan Guthrie, VP, susanguthrie@comcast.net William Canney, Treasurer, Qebh1977@att.net Dave Voeltz, Secretary, dvoeltz@pie.midco.net

NBRAN Board Members Sue Spaid sspaid@verizon.net Susan Guthrie susanguthrie@comcast.net Dave Voeltz dvoeltz@pie.midco.net Gaye Bricker beaubritt2@aol.com Nancy Walker nwalker@capecod.net William Canney Qebh1977@att.net DeniseTurgeon brittsnbits@gmail.com Chris Eddinger ceddinger@verizon.net Lon Peck lpeck3@verizon.net Sue Janowski brittanyrescuemom@hotmail.com Sandra toal sandratoal18@gmail.com

Support NBRAN while doing your online shopping. Use the link below and a portion of your purchase is returned to NBRAN to help support the dogs. It costs you nothing, yet you are supporting your organization. Please use and share the link below today! http://smile.amazon.com/ch/06-1624968

Facebook coordinator Neca Hudgins neca0402@gmail.com

RescuesGroups training or issues Sue Spaid sspaid@verizon.net

NBRAN Newsletter

Editor - Dave Voeltz dvoeltz@pie.midco.net Layout Design - Kelly Killeen kak0402@optoniline.net

Microchips

David Sattler dave90771@gmail.com

Online Store <Vancant>

Transportation coordinator

Do you want to share your pictures or story? Contact Dave Voeltz at Dvoeltz@pie.midco.net and email your story and pictures. We love sharing your story and pictures about the newest member of your family!

Nancy Walker nwalker@capecod.net

Web team Development Want to get involved? Contact us to let us know if you would be willing to help with ideas and design.

Ombudsman If you have a concern of any nature and want to report it, contact Dave Voeltz at dvoeltz@pie.midco.net for a confidential means of doing so.

Go to www.NBRAN.ORG and see how you can become more involved in Brittany Rescue. Foster, transport help, financial assistance, home visits, or vet checks, there are many ways you can help. Volunteer now and make a difference!

Intakes

Placements

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

293 428 521 618 590 390 283 328

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

234 360 407 535 537 472 264 314

2015

361

2015

371

Through Feb 29

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53

Through Feb 29

66


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