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Life Line Animal Project

Saturday, February 23, 2013

LifeLine May Run DeKalb Animal Shelter

LifeLine Animal Project has already secured the contract to run the Fulton County shelter and is the only bidder for the DeKalb shelter.

LifeLine Animal Project, a private no-kill animal shelter based in Avondale Estates, is rapidly expanding. LifeLine already obtained the contract to operate the Fulton County shelter and is seeking the contract to run the DeKalb shelter. Both shelters have been criticized for high euthanasia rates and conditions. Rebecca Guinn, Lifeline executive director, hopes to change that. "It's our goal to move both toward no-kill," Guinn said, "but that's not something that can happen overnight." Guinn said LifeLine was the only bidder to run the DeKalb animal shelter, where LifeLine already provides veterinarian services. The DeKalb Board of Commissioners meets Tuesday but it's unclear if the board will make a decision then. "DeKalb has not …

A Decatur Mom

2:00 pm on Saturday, February 23, 2013

My daughter has volunteered with Lifeline and it's an impressive organization. Hope this works out.   more ›

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Affordable Pet Vaccine Clinic Jan. 26

The clinic will be held from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at LifeLifeline Animal Project in Avondale Estates.

Monday, November 26, 2012

A Place For Nugget The Puppy

As an unwanted puppy, Nugget was smaller than a cup of soda. Now she's a young dog looking for her perfect home.

Mickie Blair attracts homeless dogs. She's mostly a cat person (good thing too, because she heads up most of the feline care and cat-saving operations at LifeLine Animal Project in Avondale Estates) but homeless dogs consider her irresistible, too. "They find me," she says, "no matter where I go." One day last year she was picking up a community cat that had mistakenly been taken to animal control when she was approached by a man in the parking lot. "Want a puppy?" he asked. "What kind of puppy?" Blair asked back, stalling for time while she tried to figure out where this exchange was leading. The man explained that his sister had gotten a pup from a neighbor who didn't want it, but his sister couldn't keep the dog either. Blair listened …

emani grant

4:49 pm on Friday, March 29, 2013

how can i contact you for nugget   more ›

Monday, November 19, 2012

No More Cleft Palate For Cliff The Dog

When a homeless animal is rescued, it's great news. Adopted? Even better. But given a whole new life through reconstructive surgery? Extraordinary.

Patch readers will remember Cliff the dog from an earlier story as the pit bull mix who was rescued by LifeLine Animal Project, then placed into a loving home, but remained in danger from a birth defect that often kills dogs before they reach adulthood. Cliff had a cleft palate, a condition that usually causes puppies to slowly starve to death because they can't feed normally from their mothers. Even if they do manage to get some nutrition from their mothers, or are fed by humans from a tube, liquid will often leak into their sinuses or lungs and cause pneumonia. At over a year old, no one knew how Cliff managed to survive into adulthood. He was rescued by LifeLine after being tied to a tree and left on an abandoned property. Soon after …

Angelica Peach

2:33 pm on Wednesday, November 21, 2012

That is amazing! Bravo ~ to Dr. Julie Duvall at Georgia Veterinary Specialists for being humane and empathetic to Cliff's plight. "A truly Happy Thanksgiving!"   more ›

Monday, November 12, 2012

Save A Shelter Pet, Save Money This Month

Pet adoption options at LifeLine include no-fee adoptions for veterans all year and, through Nov.18, cat lovers can adopt a new feline friend for only $9.

Up to 80,000 puppies, adult dogs, cats and kittens are euthanized in shelters in the metro area each year, making Atlanta one of the biggest "kill cities" in the nation. Why? The reason is singular, stark and heartbreaking. These thousands of pets are killed simply because they don't have homes. Not only can you save two lives when you adopt a pet from a shelter (the life of the dog or cat you adopt and the life of a homeless animal who gets the space that your new pet once occupied) but at LifeLine Animal Project this month, there are extremely affordable options for adoption. Veterans and current enlisted military can always adopt for free at LifeLine as part of their Pets Helping Vets program and, up until November 18, cat lovers can …

Monday, November 5, 2012

Owning A Cat Could Save Your Life

Adoption fees for felines at LifeLine Animal Project are 90 percent off Nov. 16-18. You can save money and, according to studies, owning a cat might just save your life.

Imagine if, at your next check-up, your doctor said, "Adopt two cats and I'll see you in six months." There may not be a single one-size-fits-all remedy for modern malaise and physical ailments but there is one thing that many people, from the scientific community to your local community, often agree on: pets are good for human health. Pets provide a companionship connection and ease lonliness. Dogs and cats have long thought to help human health by reducing stress and anxiety. And while it's certainly true that if you adopt a homeless cat from your local shelter you have the satisfaction of knowing you saved a life, is it possible that adopting that cat can save your own life too? Studies say yes. One Canadian study in 2006 determined …

Keith

11:37 pm on Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Its true our cats provide hours of companioship and laughs. Plus my pillow is always warm when i get home.   more ›

Monday, October 29, 2012

Clea The Classic Beauty

"Mackerel," "Spotted," "Ticked" and even "Patched" are names for markings on tabby cats. Homeless Clea is a "Classic."

Question: What's the most common type of cat that isn't really a breed of cat of all?  Answer: The tabby cat.  "Tabby" doesn't mean a certain breed or even a particular color of cat, but refers to distinctive feline coat markings. Tabbies can be orange, brown, ginger or grey or a combination of colors. Because most domestic cats carry the tabby gene, even some solid-colored cats display faint tabby markings that are visible if you look closely or study them in the sunlight. When people think of tabbies, it's most often the cats with coats of stripes, swirls and dots, the eyes that look like they are wearing eyeliner and the distinctive "M" on their forehead. Popular cat lore says that M is a blessing from the Virgin Mary. Others say it …

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Therra C. Gwyn

8:29 am on Monday, October 29, 2012

Hi Tracy! As Ralph said, LifeLine is located in Avondale Estates. They have a no-kill Kitty Motel (where Clea lives) and a no-kill Dog House. They also run a low cost spay/neuter clinic in the same facility as well as a clinic in College Park. Clea really IS a beauty, you are right. She's so pretty, and her personality totally matches her looks. She's friendly, laid back, sweet. When I met her, I…   more ›

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Pets Helping Vets and Vice Versa

Maverick went from stray on the streets to safe in a no-kill shelter. Now he's in training to be of service to a veteran with PTSD--Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs announced that as of October 5, they would no longer cover the costs involved with assigning service animals to war veterans with mental disabilities. In an announcement made in September they stated the VA would continue to provide service dogs for people with visual, hearing or mobility impairments but cited lack of data that service animals supply any real medical benefit to vets battling mental issues, including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). "Real world" data would tend to contradict the new VA policy on this subject, but nevertheless, if a veteran with PTSD wants or requires a service dog, they are now responsible for the cost themselves. However, in Atlanta, for one vet battling a …

Monday, October 15, 2012

The Best Mother In The World

Patra is a homeless cat who feeds and cares for abandoned kittens, including one named Echo who was born without eyes.

Remember when you were a kid and there was that one mom (it might have been yours) who fed and looked after all the kids in the neighborhood? In the cat world, in Avondale Estates, that super-mom is a homeless 2-year-old Tortoiseshell named Patra. Patra was living on the streets trying to keep her own four kittens safe when she was rescued by LifeLine Animal Project. Due to the rigors of street life and the vulnerability of kittens who are born homeless, only two of her babies, named Rita and Beanie by rescuers, survived. Some mother cats will shun kittens that are not their own, some will welcome and adopt them. Soon after losing two of her own, Patra adopted three very needy weeks-old kittens that came into LifeLine abandoned and hungry…

Monday, October 8, 2012

Help Needed For Cliff's Cleft Palate

Ever seen a dog with a cleft palate? Probably not, and there's good reason. Almost all die as puppies. Cliff has beaten huge odds and surgery will ensure his survival.

Cliff is a beautiful, beefy pit bull mix who loves to go on runs, has never met a stranger, adores cats and if your lap is empty he considers it a place he'd like to sit. He's very much like millions of other dogs in neighborhoods, homes and shelters the world over. Except he's not. Cliff is a very rare canine. He's an adult dog with a cleft palate. Far from being a simple cosmetic issue, when a dog is born with a cleft palate it's usually a death sentence. They are not able to feed normally from their mother because they are not able to latch on and create the suction needed to nurse. Imagine trying to drink through a straw without being able to close your mouth around it. Even if they do manage to feed or are fed by tube, liquid will …

Overgeneralizations

5:26 pm on Friday, October 12, 2012

Tabrizi, F., Buhlin, K., Gustafsson, A. Klinge, B. 2007. Oral health among monozygotic twins with and without coronary heart disease: a pilot study. Journal of Clinical Periodontology 34(3):220-225. Ritter, A.V. and Southerland, J. 2007. Heart diseases and oral health. Journal of Esthetic and Restorative Dentistry 19(4):233-234. Janket, S.J., et al. 2006. Salivary lysozyme and prevalent coronary …   more ›

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