Holiday Pet Tips & Hints

This time of year people think that it might be a good time to add a new pet to the family or to give one as a gift.

Although the Home for the Holidays Program has been pretty successful, for most people the hectic season and additional financial demands of maintaining another household member makes it a poor time to add and integrate an animal into a home.

One of the biggest mistakes people make is to buy a dog for a friend or family member.

Why is it a mistake?

A new pet is a personal decision that demands research, resources, and that places additional responsibility on the new pet parent.

It is best to let each person make that commitment instead of surprising someone with a live present that may end up abandoned or relinquished when it is not a good fit or the recipient cannot adapt to the demands of pet parenthood.

Instead, create anticipation with a cascade of gifts that will create excitement and anticipation surrounding the possibilities.


If you don’t want to wrap a bunch of gifts (but personally I think more can be fun) you can create a nice basket of supplies by using a dog or cat bed and then filling it with the items that will be needed when a new pet is selected and wrapping it up as one big present.

Take the bed and then fill it with toys, treats, collar,leash, brush or comb, toileting aids (pet clean up aids doggie toilet or cat litter box) and gift certificates for puppy preschool or kitten kindergarten.

Certificates for grooming, pet sitting, and veterinary wellness exams or pet insurance make great additions to this present.

Help in the selection of pets by giving a book about selecting the right dog or an encyclopedia of the different cat or dog breeds. Above Photo: Puppy Care Package – Medium Puppy Starter Kit

Here are a few to consider:

Feeding Pets of the Homeless

Above: Homeless Man with Dog by Copyright by Kirsten Bole

I met Genevieve Frederick, the founder and director of Feeding Pets of the Homeless in Las Vegas, Nevada at a pet industry trade show.

Her cause caught my attention because I had been homeless after an accident rendered me unable to work. I was suddenly jobless when the facility let me go while I was still disabled.

Fortunately for me, my pets and I were taken in by a kind hearted person I had met at church–but others are not so lucky and every time I looked at a homeless person during that time I would think, “There but for the grace of God go I.”

Most people never really look at the homeless. It is disturbing to see but there is a large number of homeless people on the streets and it can happen to anyone in the twinkling of an eye.

I was able to move forward but the stress was incredible and the biggest cause of my stress during that time?

It was my concern over the health, welfare, and feeding of my dog and parrot.

I talked at length to a homeless man about his dog and how he managed to feed the both of them and included the story in What Animals Can Teach Us About Spirituality: Inspiring Lessons from Wild and Tame Creatures during my stint on the fringe of similar circumstances.

It would have been nice to know about programs such as Feeding Pets of the Homeless at the time. Feeding Pets of the Homeless is a nonprofit member organization that provides pet food and veterinary care to the homeless in communities across the United States and Canada.

Feeding Pets of the Homeless Mission Statement

We will do our part to help reduce hunger in pets who belong to the homeless and the less fortunate and provide medical care for those pets in communities across the country.

We believe in the healing power of companion pets and of the human/animal bond which is very important to life.

Our actions will include the following:

1. Promoting to veterinarians and pet related businesses the importance of joining the program.
2. Speaking out on the issue of pets of homeless and the disadvantaged.
3. Campaigning to food distributing organizations the importance of distributing pet food to the less fortunate.
4. Providing grants to licensed veterinarians and other nonprofit organizations that meet our objectives to administer medical care to pets of the homeless.

Currently Feeding Pets of the Homeless operates out of Carson City, Nevada. The 501(c)3 group collects cash donations and then distributes grants to veterinarians and other nonprofit organizations that meet their objectives.

Approximately 90% of cash donations goes to the Feeding Pets of the Homeless Grant Program to administer basic physicals, vaccinations, flea and tick applications to pets of the homeless while 10% of all cash donations go to help with the organization’s operational costs.

Members of Feeding Pets of the Homeless collect pet food and deliver it to food banks and soup kitchens that have agreed to distribute the food to the homeless and impoverished.

You can become a member or sponsor of Feeding Pets of the Homeless here or find a Feeding Pets of the Homeless member in your state here.

The group has also started a Cafe Press online store for goods that help promote their work.