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Pet of the Week: Meet Rizzo |
We may not be able to promise you a good deal on car insurance, but we can guarantee a lifetime of companionship and love if you adopt Rizzo (A327824), a gray and yellow jumbo leopard gecko. This lovely lizard loves to munch on insects and snooze during the day, so make sure you give him a nice tank to live in with plenty of hiding places to cozy up. Since geckos can live for up to 20 years, Rizzo is ready for an owner who understands that his care will be an important, lasting responsibility. Rizzo would be a great pet for the beginner reptile enthusiast, and he can’t wait to meet you today!
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If you’ve lost your pet, please visit Larimer Humane Society
in-person as soon as possible. Each month, hundreds of lost dogs, cats,
rabbits, reptiles, and even barnyard animals find temporary, safe
shelter with us.
Please do not email us for lost or found pets. Telephone the
shelter immediately at (970) 226-3647 if you have found a stray
animal.
If you’ve lost your pet, you must come to the Larimer Humane
Society in person to submit a lost report. Sending email or registering
your pet online will NOT put the information into our system.
NOTE: Proof of ownership is required to reclaim your lost pet.
View information on lost dogs
View information on lost cats
View information on other lost animals
Larimer Humane Society is open seven days a week. Click here for our hours and location .
Because we receive so many stray animals each month, we are unable to
verify by telephone if your animal is at the Humane Society. It is very
important that you visit the animal shelter in-person every two-three
days.
While at the shelter, be sure to check our Adoption Center as well
as our Lost & Found Center. Since stray animals brought to Larimer Humane Society are held for five days before being evaluated for
adoption, your pet may already be available for placement.
If your animal is at the shelter, you will be required to pay
impound and board fees. If the animal does not have a current Larimer
County license, you will also be required to purchase one. Fees vary,
depending on whether your animal is wearing a current license and how
many days they have been at the shelter.
If your pet is not at Larimer Humane Society, a staff person will assist
you in checking our found reports. Be sure to bring a current photo of
your pet to assist us with accuracy in breed and color(s).
You may also want to:
- Place a Lost Pet ad in the local newspaper
- Post fliers at local veterinary hospitals, feed stores and other
privately owned business that will allow it. Please note that posting
signage on public property is illegal
- Post a flier on the designated signage board at the dog park
- Notify your neighbors and ask for their assistance. If you’ve lost
a cat, ask your neighbors to check their garages, tool sheds, and barns
in case your pet is confined.
- Place
your cat’s litter box or an article of your clothing outdoors to help
your cat locate your home. Indoor-only cats may need assistance finding their way home.
- Call for your cat
in the evening or early morning hours when the neighborhood is quiet. Shy cats may need coaxing to come out of hiding.
- Be sure to contact or visit
surrounding shelters such as the Humane Society of Weld County, the
Cheyenne Animal Shelter, the Longmont Humane Society or the Humane
Society of Boulder Valley.
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Larimer Humane Society is northern Colorado’s resource for lost
and found pets. Each month, we reunite hundreds of worried
pet owners with their stray companions.
If the animal you have found is wearing a license tag, call us at
970-226-3647 and we’ll trace the owner’s contact information.If the
animal is not wearing an identification tag, you have three options:
- File a Found Report and care for the animal until an owner can be
located. To file a Found Report with Larimer Humane Society we will need to
know the animal’s species, breed, color(s) approximate age, sex, tail
length, approximate weight as well as where and when the animal was
found. You are welcome to bring the animal to Larimer Humane Society so we can
scan for a microchip (a permanent form of identification located under
the animal’s skin) and accurately complete a found report. Click here to file a Found Report. (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
If you will be keeping the animal at your home, please place a Found
ad in the newspaper, post fliers where the animal was found, and
contact veterinarians and feed stores in your area. Most newspapers
offer Found ads for free.
- Bring the animal to Larimer Humane Society. The shelter is open seven days a week and no appointment is necessary. Click here for our hours and location .
All stray dogs must be on leash and stray cats must be confined in a
box or carrier when entering the animal shelter. Larimer Humane Society is
the logical place for a owner to look for their lost pet. Stray animals not reclaimed by
their owners after five days are evaluated for our adoption program.
- Request Animal Control assistance for stray animal pick-up. Use
this option if you are unable to transport a stray animal or if you
feel the animal you have found may be a threat to people or other
animals. An Animal Protection & Control Officer will respond to
emergency calls 24-hours a day, but if possible (and safe), please
confine the animal and call during business hours. Call 970-226-3647 to Larimer Animal Protection & Control.
Please note: time-sensitive correspondence such as
Found Reports or requests for Animal Control assistance should not be
sent via Email. Please contact Larimer Humane Society directly at
970-226-3647 or fax us at 970-226-2968.
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Once you’ve found your pet, ensure his or her safety by
- Keeping a collar, license and identification tag on your pet at all
times. Lost animals wearing identification are usually returned
directly home.
- Microchiping your pet. Microchips are a painless, permanent form of
identification. The inert microchip inserted under your pet’s skin is
encoded with a number that is registered in a national database and can
traced back to you, 24-hours a day.
- Keeping your cat indoors. Cats allowed to roam outside don’t live
as long- it’s that simple. Consider building a safe enclosure for your
cat or only allowing her outdoors when supervised. It’s especially
important to confine your cat during early morning and evening hours
when coyotes, foxes, and hawks are looking for prey.
- Having your pet spayed or neutered. Altered animals are less likely
to roam from home and if they do, they don’t contribute to
pet-overpopulation.
- Upgrading your cat's lifestyle! Indoor cats live longer, healthier
lives. Welcome your feline friend into your home to show how much you
care.
- Confining your dog. If your yard isn’t fenced, consider investing
in a free-standing dog kennel. Tethering your dog is not a safe
alternative and will not protect him from other aggressive dogs,
wildlife, theft, or dangerous entanglement. If your dog is left alone
each day, consider doggy day care or a neighborhood cooperative play
group.
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