Five Acres News Archives - Five Acres Animal Shelter https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/category/five-acres-news/ Thu, 09 Nov 2023 21:10:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.3 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/app/uploads/2022/11/mstile-310x310-1-300x300.png Five Acres News Archives - Five Acres Animal Shelter https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/category/five-acres-news/ 32 32 It’s National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week! https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/its-national-animal-shelter-appreciation-week/ Thu, 09 Nov 2023 21:01:37 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/?p=5507 It’s National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week! The first week of November is dedicated annually by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) to celebrate the hard-working staff at animal […]

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It’s National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week!

The first week of November is dedicated annually by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) to celebrate the hard-working staff at animal shelters across the country. It serves as a moment to pause and reflect on the compassion, kindness, and care that animal welfare staff dedicate to homeless pets in need.

At Five Acres, we employ 22 team members who dedicate themselves to the cats and dogs in our care. We are a small, but mighty team! This year alone, we will help nearly 2,000 pets find the forever homes they deserve.

 

Five Acres staff members pose for a group photo at our 2023 Golden Paw Gala.

Working in animal welfare is hard. We balance the needs of our shelter pets daily, while simultaneously taking time to decompress and disconnect from the work we are so proud to be a part of. We experience many competing emotions, often in the same day– animals injured and abandoned in need of urgent care, pets that are young and fragile who are depending on us for life-saving treatment, as well as animals being chosen by a family to spend the rest of their life with. It is fulfilling, exhausting, inspiring, frustrating– all at the same time. 

If you are reading this, you likely have a connection to Five Acres – whether you volunteer, adopt, donate – or all three! Please know that your friendship, advocacy and support are what keep us moving forward as a shelter. While this work is not possible without a fantastic team of staff, you are the fuel that sustains us.

Please join me in thanking the Five Acres staff, today and every day, for working tirelessly to ensure our life-saving mission is fulfilled.

 

With wags,
Jeana Roth
Executive Director

 

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Thank You, Five Acres Volunteers! https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/thank-you-five-acres-volunteers/ Sun, 16 Apr 2023 17:09:36 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/?p=4358 Thank You, Five Acres Volunteers! by Kate Wall, Volunteer Manager National Volunteer Appreciation Week starts today, Sunday April 16 and runs through Saturday, April 22. As Volunteer Manager at Five […]

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Thank You, Five Acres Volunteers!

by Kate Wall, Volunteer Manager

National Volunteer Appreciation Week starts today, Sunday April 16 and runs through Saturday, April 22. As Volunteer Manager at Five Acres, I want to give a shout out to our amazing volunteer team who accomplishes so much every day!  ALL of us at Five Acres are so grateful for their support, especially the dogs and cats in our care.

Let me share with you a little about our amazing Five Acres volunteers:

102 volunteers have come to Five Acres in the past 6 months to walk our dogs. They run them, walk them, pick up after them, love on them, and try to teach them some good manners while they await adoption. Some volunteers opt to take them off campus for a car ride, a drive through Starbucks for a puppucino, a walk down the Katy Trail or Main Street in St. Charles. These volunteers are committed to getting the dogs out no matter the weather, and when the goal is to get them out of their kennels for potty breaks, enrichment, adoption events, or for play groups, these volunteers are our dogs heroes!  The amount of love, care and concern our dog volunteers share with the dogs so freely is heartwarming and reassuring.

92 volunteers have been to the Kitty Cottage in the past 6 months with the main goal of keeping the cats and kittens in the building healthy and safe! Our Kitty Cottage volunteers have the most amazing cleaning protocol, and they know more than anyone how important keeping the building and everything in the Kitty Cottage clean.  They also spend time socializing our sacred and shy cats, and provide enrichment to our younger kittens to keep them social and healthy while they are in our care.

We have 7 volunteers on our maintenance crew, making necessary repairs around the shelter, like replacing our entire deck and repairing the ramp when it was in need of care, taking on landscaping projects that keep everything looking so nice on our campus, cutting the grass in play yards, planting flowers and plants around our property to make it a warm and cozy environment, trimming/cutting trees, and so many other things that keep our facilities safe, secure and in good working order.

We have 13 volunteers who rotate volunteering on Saturday mornings in our AniMeals Pet Food Pantry, so that families who are going through a time of financial hardship can receive what they need for their pets. This program helps these families keep their pets in their home, taking away the threat of them possibly needing to surrender them due to not being able to provide basic needs.  This program has grown considerably in the past few years, and we are so grateful to the volunteers who find this work to be satisfying and productive.

We have had 17 volunteers step up to help in our spay/neuter clinic! These volunteers help with cleaning and repackaging surgical tools, helping with pets pre and post-surgery by getting their weight, clipping nails, watching them as they come out of the anesthesia to make sure they are recovering and put them back in their carrier, helping to enter their surgery info into our animal care management software so their record stays up to date, and helping with laundry.  They do not stop moving and helping the entire time they are here, and we are so grateful for all our clinic volunteers. Many of them have nursing or health care experience so it is a perfect fit for them.  For others, they just wanted to help in a purposeful way, and few things are more connected to our mission than spaying and neutering all animals who come through our shelter!

8 volunteers have taken the lead with our Five Acres Gift Shop, making sure it is stocked with an amazing inventory of items that they take time to look at retail cost  before marking it down 50%! We have an entire Gift Shop stockroom that the volunteers manage. In 2022, the Gift Shop brought in over $22,000 for our shelter pets.

Our Front Desk volunteers (15 in the past 6 months!) have what I consider to be one of the most interesting volunteer roles at Five Acres. These volunteers field questions from members of our community ranging from what time we are open to the public, to what they need to do to surrender their dog or cat. They welcome guests to the lobby and help unload donations. They are the volunteers who know so much about what is going on at the shelter day to day and get to witness families finalizing the adoption of their new dog family member! So grateful for their patience and dedication to taking care of the people who support us, adopt from us, or are interested in learning more.

Our foster families help Five Acres welcome in pets that need dedicated love and attention in a home environment. Our foster families take in dogs and/or cats who need a quiet home to stay while mama gives birth, or until puppies or kittens are old enough to get a few rounds of vaccines, or to give dogs a safe space while they go through heartworm treatment, or they adjust to life without the people they have known, or, hardest of all, they take in a dog or cat who we know is very ill and has little time left with us.

Last but not certainly not least, we thank our volunteer Board of Directors. These 10 community members help advocate for our mission, provide support through fundraising, governance, and strategic planning. We are grateful to have a strong board who believes whole-heartedly in our mission.

If you have spent time volunteering with Five Acres in any capacity, please know that you make a difference. The love that each of these groups of volunteers so freely share is admirable and while it is said all the time that we could not do what we do without volunteers, we literally would not reach near the number of positive outcomes, or have the amount of smooth days, or clean buildings, or animals who find a friend in you, and we are so grateful that they have you on their side. You all are an incredible community of people, and we thank you!

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Meet Wally, Our Survivor https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/meet-wally-our-survivor/ Fri, 03 Mar 2023 19:09:28 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/?p=4137 by Jeana Roth, Executive Director Five Acres proudly teams up with shelters, rescues and animal control facilities across the state to help reduce unnecessary euthanasia. About once a week, we […]

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Meet Wally, Our Survivor

by Jeana Roth, Executive Director

Five Acres proudly teams up with shelters, rescues and animal control facilities across the state to help reduce unnecessary euthanasia. About once a week, we welcome a group of dogs or cats to our organization from this network of partners. We provide them the veterinary care and attention they need, until they find their forever homes in our community. We know that collaboration like this is key to saving lives in our state– and beyond.

At the beginning of February, our team welcomed four dogs from a transfer partner we work with in Sullivan, Missouri.

One very special puppy in this group from Sullivan was Wally, a 4-month-old mixed breed pup with the sweetest eyes. After a couple days at Five Acres, our team started to notice that Wally wasn’t acting like a typical puppy. He was turning away his meals, and wasn’t feeling playful and spunky. He was tired, sad, and uncomfortable.

After a quick medical test, we diagnosed Wally with canine parvovirus. For many puppies, this diagnosis can be deadly.

We rushed Wally to the Animal Emergency Clinic in O’Fallon, where he stayed for five days in intensive care. Daily fluids, medications, and a feeding tube proved to be the life-saving protocol he needed to conquer his illness.

Treating parvovirus is incredibly expensive. In Wally’s case, it cost Five Acres $5,000 to provide him with this emergency care so that he could survive. This is only possible through donations to our Shadow’s Fund– our medical fund that covers the expenses of urgent and emergency veterinary care. 

Donations to Shadow’s Fund are at a critical need, as we look ahead to a busy kitten and puppy season. Please make a donation today to help us provide pets like Wally the care they need to survive.

In happy news– Wally is officially out of his quarantine period and is ready to finally be adopted into a loving family. Wally is our survivor, thanks to Shadow’s Fund donors. Join this team of life savers with a donation now.

PS– Wally is anxiously awaiting families to adopt him! If you might be interested in giving Wally a home, please fill out an adoption application here

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Rehoming Pets: What You Need to Know https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/rehoming-pets-what-you-need-to-know/ Tue, 06 Dec 2022 20:24:39 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/?p=830 Rehoming Pets: What You Need to Know At Five Acres Animal Shelter we believe that pets belong with people. Our mission is to make sure every pet is able to […]

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Rehoming Pets: What You Need to Know

At Five Acres Animal Shelter we believe that pets belong with people.

Our mission is to make sure every pet is able to find a home, but our mission is also to help keep people with their pets. We know that situations arise that make it difficult to continue to care for a pet. Whether it be a change in living situation or a family emergency, we know that there are circumstances when keeping a pet is no longer an option.

 

Five Acres is proud to partner with Adopt-a-Pet to support a new rehoming process that helps community members find new homes for their pets, rather than needing to surrender them to a shelter. Here are the benefits of rehoming your pet:

  1. No one knows your pet better than you, so you know what type of home is best for them! When you look for a new home for your animal, you’ll be able to provide medical history, any quirks or behaviors exhibited, what your pet likes and dislikes, and anything that is going to make a new home successful.
  2. The shelter is scary and stressful for animals. There are so many unfamiliar sounds, smells, and situations that can all make animals feel on-edge and maybe even lash out, making it harder to be adopted.
  3. Rehoming your pet also saves space in the shelter. We get calls everyday from other rescues asking if we can take in animals from them. The more animals we have to take in from homes, the less we can say “yes” to these rescue partners.

Keeping pets in homes and out of the shelters not only helps that pet, but it very well may help save the life of another animal in need! When you choose to rehome your pet through Adopt-a-Pet there is no fee, and applications are managed by the qualified staff at Adopt-a-Pet. You will be able then to see the applications and possibly meet the adopters. Adopt-a-Pet also has many resources to be able to help you through this big decision. 

Our wish is that all pets are able to stay with their families, but when life happens we are here for you! We hope you will consider rehoming your pet if the situation arises.

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Welcome Jeana Roth, Our New Executive Director! https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/welcome-jeana-roth/ Tue, 06 Dec 2022 20:26:08 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/lorem-ipsum-dolor-sit-amet-consectetur-adipiscing-elit-4/ We are excited to announce that after a nationwide search, we have hired Jeana Roth as the new Executive Director at Five Acres Animal Shelter. Jeana brings over 10 years […]

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Welcome Jeana Roth, Our New Executive Director!

We are excited to announce that after a nationwide search, we have hired Jeana Roth as the new Executive Director at Five Acres Animal Shelter.

Jeana brings over 10 years of animal welfare experience leading community programs, fundraising efforts, and volunteer programs. Most importantly, Jeana shares our passion for serving people and pets in need. With our new focus on the Human Animal Support Services (HASS) model of animal sheltering, we are excited to expand our impact in the St. Charles community by building new programs to keep people and pets together. Read below to learn more about Jeana! 

1.  How did you get started in animal welfare?

My career path in animal welfare began in 2012, when I was hired as the very first volunteer coordinator at the Animal Refuge League of Greater Portland (ARLGP) in Maine. I had been an adopter, donor and volunteer of the organization, and was excited to make a difference as a staff member.

Over my 10+ years with the ARLGP, I advanced through the organization in various roles. For the past 6 years, I have served as Director of Community Engagement, overseeing marketing, communications, fundraising, humane education and the organization’s community-facing departments and programs.

2.  Why Five Acres?

When I researched the mission of Five Acres and learned about their organization’s values and goals, I felt that my sheltering philosophy and background would be a good fit for the community-centered animal welfare model they are embracing. Five Acres is at a very exciting point, and I am thrilled to join their dedicated and compassionate team to support pets in St. Charles– and beyond!

3.  What excites you most about this opportunity?

To work alongside the Five Acres team, and to learn about what the community needs from their local shelter. I whole-heartedly believe animal shelters are much more than an adoption center, they play a very important role in their community– ensuring pets are happy and healthy, and that their families are supported through programs and resources.

4.  Tell us about your family (including pets):

My husband and I are both born and raised Mainers, relocating from the northeast to Missouri for this exciting opportunity with Five Acres. We have three adopted shelter pets: a senior cat, Melman, a hound/lab mix, Otis, and a pit bull/bulldog mix, Marvin. It’s a full house!

5.  What attracted you to making the move to the St. Louis community?

When visiting St. Louis, we felt the historic charm and warmth that the city provides. We are excited to get settled in and establish roots here. We can’t wait to explore the area, hike the Katy Trail and learn all about what makes this community so special.

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We’re Hiring! https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/were-hiring/ Mon, 18 Apr 2022 19:26:08 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/lorem-ipsum-dolor-sit-amet-consectetur-adipiscing-elit-6/ We are always looking for new additions to our team! If you are interested in working at Five Acres Animal Shelter, please send an email to info@fiveacresanimalshelter.org with the following information: Current […]

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We’re Hiring!

We are always looking for new additions to our team!

If you are interested in working at Five Acres Animal Shelter, please send an email to info@fiveacresanimalshelter.org with the following information:

  • Current resume
  • A description of why you are interested in the position
  • A summary of your relevant animal experience

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Minnie’s Story https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/minnies-story/ Tue, 06 Dec 2022 20:26:08 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/lorem-ipsum-dolor-sit-amet-consectetur-adipiscing-elit-5/ Minnie was a dog who came into our shelter confused and scared of people. She would take a long time to warm up to new people and would sometimes lash […]

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Minnie’s Story

Minnie was a dog who came into our shelter confused and scared of people. She would take a long time to warm up to new people and would sometimes lash out in fear. She was adopted a few times, but was quickly returned to the shelter each time.

Until Greg & Debra came along. These two took a chance on a dog who did not immediately come running up to give them kisses and tail wags. Instead, they saw through her fear, and saw a dog that just needed a chance. This story is a great example of what can happen with a lot of patience and a lot of love for a dog who just needs someone to have faith in them.
 
 
Read below to hear about Minnie’s story from her adopters, Greg & Debra!
 
 
1) What drew you to Minnie? When you heard about her behavioral challenges, what were your thoughts?
 
We were looking for a dog to foster, and thought Minnie would fit in well with our other two dogs that are her age and size. When we found out that she had been adopted twice, only to be returned, her story pulled at our heart strings. We felt she deserved a chance to find a permanent loving home. We are long-time dog owners and felt we had the experience to deal with her introvert/aggressive behavior.
 
 
 
2) How was Minnie when you first met her? What kept you motivated to keep coming to see her?
 

Minnie was shy and hid behind her handler the first time we met her. On the second or third visit we introduced her to our other two dogs. She played well with with them and warmed up to us a bit; I think mostly because we had treats. We could tell that she got along well with the Five Acres staff and felt like we could help her trust all humans again. We just couldn’t get over the thought that she had been returned to the shelter twice! We felt it was our job to socialize her so she could find a loving home.

 
 
3) How was Minnie when you first brought her home?
 

She seemed scared and nervous at first. We were forewarned that she was very protective of her space and probably shouldn’t use a kennel; but since she wasn’t potty trained yet, we decided she needed to spend the night in a kennel. She growled and tried to bite us when we tried to get her out of the kennel for breakfast or to go out to potty. But, after 3 weeks of fostering, we saw how much she improved around us. She had won us over, so we officially became foster fails!

 
 
4) Has Minnie made progress? How is she now? 
 
She has turned into a big love bug and just absolutely loves attention. She loves wrestling and running with her dog sisters and going to the dog park. She is absolutely fascinated with anything that squeaks or bounces. She’s still a little shy around strangers, but it doesn’t take her long to warm up to you.

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FOSTER FAMILIES https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/foster-families/ Tue, 06 Dec 2022 20:26:08 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/lorem-ipsum-dolor-sit-amet-consectetur-adipiscing-elit-7/ We are so grateful for the incredible response from our Volunteers and members of our community who have stepped up to foster almost all of the animals in our care! […]

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FOSTER FAMILIES

We are so grateful for the incredible response from our Volunteers and members of our community who have stepped up to foster almost all of the animals in our care!

This has allowed us to have minimal staff at the shelter to honor social distancing and ensuring the safety of our staff and our community, all while our animals are being provided care in line with Five Acres high standards.

 

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Why Two Kittens are Better Than One https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/why-two-kittens-are-better-than-one/ Tue, 06 Dec 2022 20:26:08 +0000 https://www.fiveacresanimalshelter.org/lorem-ipsum-dolor-sit-amet-consectetur-adipiscing-elit-8/ It is a fact that some things just come better in pairs, but did you know that kittens actually qualify as one of those things? Well, it is true. Kittens […]

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Why Two Kittens are Better Than One

It is a fact that some things just come better in pairs, but did you know that kittens actually qualify as one of those things?

Well, it is true. Kittens that grow up together actually end up gaining a lot from each other, which just leads to a happier and healthier life for them overall. Here are just a few of the reasons why two kittens are simply better than one:

  • Cats that have a playmate are more socially well-adjusted and have less behavior problems such as:

    • biting of the hands and other appendages
    • scratching
    • hissing
    • hiding
    • overall shyness

  • They end up being much less aggressive than kittens that grow up alone
  • Studies show that animals living alone have smaller brain than their streetwise counterparts, so mental stimulation throughout the day is very important
  • Having another cat to play with reduces their risk of becoming overweight and then suffering from related health issues
  • Destructive behaviors due to boredom and attention seeking are less common when they have a buddy, which means less:

    • scratching on furniture
    • getting into places they shouldn’t
    • chewing on wires

  • Cats take comfort in the simple presence of another feline, so when you are gone they will have each other for company and won’t be lonely
  • They remain more playful and youthful well into their senior years when they have a feline friend
  • The work load of having two cats versus only one is virtually the same, bu the benefit of not having to be the sole attention provider actually makes having two even easier than only having one
  • You don’t even need to have more space for a second cat
  • Because….two is better than one! For the humans, for the cats, and for the pet overpopulation crisis!

 

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