AR-News: (CT - US) Newtown Businessman is Dogs' Best Friend
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Mon Feb 16 18:42:12 EST 2004
Newtown Businessman Has Become A Dog's Best Friend
By Dottie Evans
Ingrid and Matt DeAngelis of Sandy Hook are fostering Jake, a shepherd mix,
until the right home can be found for him. --Bee Photos, Evans
Matt DeAngelis, six-year Sandy Hook resident and new owner of Yankee Discount
Liquors, is a dog's best friend in the most profound sense of the word.
In a way, he is their last friend because he's the one who never gives up on
them.
Mr DeAngelis has dedicated himself to helping dogs languishing in area animal
shelters, dogs that have not been adopted by new families.
He works with a network of caring individuals at the shelters and is in
contact with trusted veterinarians and animal control people. He keeps track of the
dogs that are passed by, and he gets to know them.
The unfortunate fact is, not every animal shelter has a no-kill policy. When
a dog's time is up and the clock is ticking toward euthanasia, Mr DeAngelis
often steps in. He may find another shelter for that dog, or take it into his
own home, until another can be found. Or he will assist in the rescue of an
abused or abandoned dog and see that it is brought to a shelter.
"We've got a fabric of people. The word travels fast within the rescue
community. We hear about the cruelty cases," Mr DeAngelis said.
Four years ago, he established the DeAngelis Family Foundation for the
purpose of helping the shelters feed and house homeless dogs. Two groups he works
with are the Animal Shelter Assistance Program in Bridgeport, and Pets and Live
Animal Sanctuary in New York.
Several dogs he has fostered are being boarded at Dogwood Boarding Kennels
and Cattery off Route 25 just over the Newtown line in Monroe. The Dogwood
Kennel is owned and managed by Lee Gourley, and it maintains a no-kill policy.
"Lee is a sap just like us. She loves dogs, and she gets stuck with the ones
whose owners don't pay their bills," he added.
Dogwood Kennel also has a trainer named Rob Mullins who offers free obedience
instruction for families that adopt. Mr DeAngelis calls him amazing. "He's
got unbelievable training skills," he said during an interview at the kennel on
February 9.
Phantom is a "cuddler" and much more laid back than her "buff and beefy" pit
bull looks suggest, according to her biggest fan Matt DeAngelis.
Dogs That Proved Irresistible
Mr DeAngelis and his wife, Ingrid, who grew up in Monroe, sometimes take dogs
home on a temporary basis when the shelters do not have room. This gives them
a chance to get to know the dog and hopefully to match it with the right new
family.
"I've seen a lot of different dogs, and we are very careful about who that
dog ends up with. You can always tell a dog person. I believe you can tell
someone's character by the way they treat their dogs," he said.
Working as an advertising executive until five years ago, Mr DeAngelis said
he was "looking for something worthwhile to do on the side," and found himself
volunteering at the Bridgeport animal shelter.
"There was this dog named Baxter. He looked look like a pit bull but he
wasn't. He was blind and nobody wanted him and his time was up," he recalled,
adding the experience affected him so much that he became an advocate for dogs in
dire straits.
"I've shuttled dogs with cancer up to Tufts University, and worked as a
volunteer farmhand at Pets Alive in Middletown, N.Y.
"I'm a big shepherd fan and I've taken a few home, made them a permanent part
of our family. Once you get to know a dog, you get attached," he said,
listing the dogs he and Ingrid have fostered, and then adopted over the years.
"There was Emma, a six-year-old shepherd. She was a fear aggressor, the runt
of the litter, and was just not adoptable. And then there was Bailey, a
Doberman mix, who came from a New Haven shelter. His time was up, and my wife fell
in love with him.
"Bandit is another story. He had been kept outside on a two-foot leash for
two years, and two older ladies who lived nearby had been agonizing about him.
Finally, they just stole him, brought him to a shelter, and then they both
moved to Florida."
Pooh was a cruelty case with both demodectic and sarcoptic mange. She was an
"evidence" dog, meaning she had been involved in a criminal case, and she had
to stay in a cage and was not allowed to be touched.
"Now Pooh is a great dog. She had never been in a house and had to be
domesticated. She had also never had a puppyhood. But she's having it now," he
laughed.
There have been other dogs -- Mr DeAngelis could go on and on. Dogs that were
used as bait for dog fights and dogs abandoned outside the shelter gates.
A particularly tragic case was the pair of German shepherds whose owner was
dying of cancer, and the relatives not only tried to give them away while he
was still alive, but they were going to split them up in the process.
"Shepherds are one-person dogs -- utterly devoted. I couldn't bear it," he
said.
Matt DeAngelis knows he cannot personally foster all of the dogs that are
languishing in area shelters, even on a temporary basis.
"There's always one more dog than you can manage to take care of," he said.
So he keeps on looking for homes. Meanwhile, he visits them, plays with them,
and helps pay for their food and medical bills.
Five Good Dogs Ready To Go
Matt and Ingrid DeAngelis are currently fostering Jake, a three-year-old
shepherd/golden retriever mix that was abandoned at the Dogwood Kennel.
"He's very sociable, very strong and active. He likes to jump, but we're
training him not to do that. Whoever adopts Jake will get free instruction with
Rob Mullins," he added.
"Jake needs to be active. He'd be perfect with a hiker, biker, or runner, and
he likes cats and other dogs. He's really wonderful," Mr DeAngelis said.
Cajun is a hound shepherd mix, three or four years old, who has been kenneled
almost two years. "When he first came from the Bridgeport shelter, he needed
a lot of work. He had been abused and was skittish at first. But he's so
sweet, he just doesn't show well the first time because of his timid nature."
Phantom, affectionately known as "Phantie," is a pit bull whose time was up
at the Bridgeport shelter.
"She was my favorite and she was on the euthanize list. I just couldn't let
it happen."
Phantie has lived in a kennel for about three years, but she loves to ride in
the car when Mr DeAngelis picks her up at Dogwood Kennel and does errands.
"We stop at the bagel place, at the newsstand, at the drive-thru, and she's
happy. She's not fond of other dogs or cats, but she would be a perfect dog for
one person, or a couple with steady habits.
"I'm just afraid she won't get adopted because she looks so beefy. She's
buff! You wouldn't think it to look at her, but she likes to sleep a lot and she's
been spoiled. She'd be good for someone who has to work all day. She's a
cuddler and a grunter, not aggressive," he added.
Happy is an 11-year-old cocker with some arthritis who needs to lose weight.
He is a relatively new resident at the Dogwood Kennel, and was brought in when
his owner had to go to a nursing home.
"Nobody else in the family offered to take him. They said he was too
difficult to take care of," Mr DeAngelis said with disgust.
"It's sad. If you could hear the stories we hear about why people don't want
to take responsibility for the dogs in their lives. It's deplorable.
One dog that Matt DeAngelis feels sure he can place is Ben, an eight-year-old
collie mix with only four teeth.
"He's the nicest dog I've ever met, and the dog owner who gets him is lucky.
He's very low maintenance. When we got him, we could tell he was in a lot of
pain. His owner had died, and the people who had him didn't notice that he had
very bad teeth. He was thin because it hurt him to eat." Ben was rushed to
Berkshire Animal Clinic on Toddy Hill Road, and there was so much infection that
when he came out there were only four teeth left.
"He's wonderful and sweet. He's only got a few years left. I don't want him
to live them out in a cold kennel. He needs a home."
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