Free cat and dog adoptions at Woodbridge shelter; rescued hounds at Iselin hospital

by Sergio Bichao on Jul 20th | Email

A six week-old kitten, Tuesday, July 20, 2010, that will soon be up for adoption at the Woodbridge Animal Shelter & Pet Adoption Center. Staff photo: Jason Towlen

WOODBRIDGE, NJ – The windowless room inside the Woodbridge Animal Shelter is quiet enough to hear a mouse squeak. Until you walk in.

One by one the cats slip out of their slumber, stretch their paws through their cages and greet the human visitors with a heartbreaking symphony of meows.

Across town at the Iselin Veterinary Hospital, nearly a dozen hounds, ears drooping to the ground, look up with misty eyes.

Officials at both the public shelter in Sewaren and the private clinic in Iselin say the animals are receiving the best care.

But, as the Iselin Veterinary Hospital’s Linda Niedweske says, “It’s just not a home.”

This week the Woodbridge Animal Shelter is offering free adoptions to township residents and residents of the three municipalities that pay Woodbridge for animal control services: Carteret, South Amboy and Roselle Park.

On Saturday, the Iselin Veterinary Hospital has a special adoption day sponsored by Lawyers in Defense of Animals, a non-profit animal rights organization. People interested in adopting can call the hospital any day of the week to go see the animals.


IF YOU GO >>> WOODBRIDGE ANIMAL SHELTER
195 Woodbridge Ave., Sewaren. 732-855-0600 ext. 5007
Free adoptions: Wednesday, noon to 2 p.m.; Thursday, 1 to 3 p.m.; Friday, 1 to 3 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.


IF YOU GO >>> ISELIN VETERINARY HOSPITAL
450 Lincoln Highway, Iselin. 732-283-2110
Pet Adoption Day: Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.


Veterinarian Ira Niedweske helps rescue the dogs -- including bloodhounds, treeing walker coonhounds, bluetick coonhounds, redbone coonhounds and others -- abandoned in states such as South Carolina, Alabama and Michigan.

Last year the clinic found homes for four hounds. This year, more are available for adoption.

Adoption fees are $75 for a cat and $125 for dogs. The fee includes vaccinations, spaying or neutering and tests and treatment for parasites and diseases.

The animals at the township shelter also receive the same treatment, but at no cost this week. The shelter currently has about 75 cats and kittens and seven dogs.

“Our adoption rate is very, very high – 100 percent for cats and it’s about the same for the dogs,” shelter volunteer coordinator Marge Petrow said. “We don’t euthanize anything at the animal shelter that is adoptable. Since 2007 we have not euthanized one adoptable animal.”

Shelter animals, surrendered by their owners or abandoned on the street, are socialized by behavioral therapists.

Therapists spent months transform pit bulls that had been used for fighting in Carteret into safe pets, Animal Control Officer Heather Campione said. One of them, a gray 2-year-old named Annie, will undergo plastic surgery to remove the scar tissue covering the eye on the left side of her face.

Campione said a behaviorist is available to help any adopted animal that has trouble adjusting to a new home.