Angel’s Dog Rescue
Community Service/nonprofit. Trained Animal Response Technicians helping bring animals home safely
06/07/2026
LOST DOGS NEED YOUR HELP!
💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥
Sharing this very important post!
This is such a powerful and necessary reminder. It’s completely counter-intuitive to our human instincts—when we see a dog in trouble, every fiber of our being wants to call out and run toward them to help.
Rescue advise against chasing, whistling, or calling for missing dogs.
Panicked dogs in survival mode view any approach as a threat, causing them to bolt, enter traffic, or run further away.
To help, simply observe, do not approach, and immediately report sightings (date, time, location) to the provided contact numbers.
Why Chasing Harms Rescue Efforts
🐾Panic Mode: A missing dog is in "flight mode" and will run for its life, often leading to it becoming terrified, unpredictable, and potentially dangerous to itself.
🐾Irreversible Distance: Every attempt to catch or entice the dog teaches it to run farther, reducing the chance of recovery.
🐾Setbacks: Chasing can push a dog out of its safe zone and delay rescue efforts by days.
🐾Triggers: Calling a dog's name, even by owners, can trigger a flight response if previous strangers have already chased it.
What to Do If You See a Missing Dog…
🐾Do Not Call, Whistle, or Yell: This is crucial, even if you are trying to help.
🐾Do Not Chase or Follow: This includes on foot, by car, or ATV.
🐾No Eye Contact: Avoid staring at the dog.
🐾Report Immediately: Call the number on the missing dog's poster.
🐾Provide Details: Note the date, time, exact location, and direction of travel.
The goal is to let the dog relax and establish a pattern, which allows for safe capture.
Sharing this specific "fire drill" logic is huge for education because most people don't realize they are actually triggering a survival flight response. By trying to be a hero, they inadvertently become a "predator" in the dog's panicked mind.
Key takeaways for anyone reading this:
🐩Silence is safety: Don't use their name; it’s likely already become a trigger for "bolt."
🐩Body language matters: No eye contact, no moving toward them.
🐩Let them settle: A relaxed dog stays in one area; a chased dog runs for miles.
🐩Report, don't react: Call the rescue team or owners immediately with the location.
Thank you please share… the Rescue’s goal isn't to be "bossy"—it's to bring dogs home faster and prevent them from running into traffic.❤️🙌🐾🐩
06/04/2026
506-871-3924
506-378-1559
Need Help locating a Lost Dog. Missing 14 days.
If spotted, please do not approach him. He’s terrified and in fight or flight. Please call us ASAP to report any sightings. Thank you very much to the general public for all the kindness and support
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.