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Pets Poll: Most People Got Their Animals As Gifts, Strays

By SUE MANNING   11/15/11 12:51 PM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES -- Where do people get their pets? A new AP-Petside.com poll found that the most common way people acquire a pet is as a gift, followed by taking in a stray.

About four in 10 pet owners say at least one of their current pets was given to them by friends or family, while a third say they have a pet that showed up on their doorstep as a stray.

Shelters and breeders are next on the list as sources for pets. Thirty percent of those polled say they adopted through a shelter, 31 percent got a pet from a breeder and 14 percent bought an animal at a pet store.

Karen Hulsey, 63, adopted a cat from a Texas shelter. Greyson is about a year old now and "he's cuddly and clean," she says.

She calls her shelter experience very upbeat because the cat "has turned into a wonderful pet with a good attitude and I felt like I was doing something positive."

Another quarter obtained a pet in some other way, including 3 percent who say they went to an animal rescue group and 2 percent who purchased them using an online or print classified ad.

More than half of the pet owners polled say they've taken in a shelter animal at some point, and two-thirds of them say their experiences have been extremely positive.

Jackie Schulze, 77, of Williamsport, Pa., got Sassafras, a white cat with periwinkle eyes, from Lycoming Animal Protection Society Inc., a no-kill cat rescue that operates a local shelter. The cat, which was rescued from a meth lab in Scranton, is very attached to Schulze, following her around and sitting in her lap.

"Sassy chose me," Schulze said.

Among those who had the most positive shelter experiences, 44 percent cite positive interactions with shelter staff. Just 3 percent say they'd had a moderately or very negative shelter experience.

Edward Acosta, 46, of Thomasville, N.C., said if he were getting a new pet today, he would probably go to a pet store or breeder, not because he doesn't like shelters but "because I like thoroughbreds." He and his wife Vicki bred Pomeranians for years and still have three descended from their original pair. They also own five chickens – Rhode Island Reds bought at a feed store – whom they consider to be pets.

Cat owners are more likely than dog owners to have adopted a stray or shelter animal. Forty-three percent of cat owners polled say one of their pets came from a shelter, compared with 29 percent of dog owners. More than half of cat owners (52 percent) say one of their current pets was a stray, compared with 30 percent of dog owners.

Fifty-eight percent of shelter adopters say being socially responsible was extremely or very important in their decision to use a shelter. It is usually cheaper to adopt than to buy from a breeder or pet store, but 60 percent of those who adopted shelter pets say the cost made no difference.

Thirty-six percent of shelter users say they had more confidence in the staff at pet shelters than they did in the staff at pet stores or breeders. Thirty-six percent of those who obtained animals from shelters also say they believe shelter animals were more likely to have had recent veterinary care than animals from pet stores or breeders.

And more than two-thirds of those who have adopted from a shelter – 68 percent – say they would do so again.

Not all pet owners see shelter adoptions as a positive. Thirty-six percent of those polled say that if they were to adopt an animal from a shelter, they would be extremely or very concerned that the pet might have hidden medical problems; 29 percent express concern about psychological problems and 33 percent say they would worry the animal wouldn't fit in with their families.

Ojala Reino, 31, of Fairmount, Ga., who got his boxer bulldog, Bruster, from a friend, said he was one of those who would worry about the physical and mental health of a shelter dog.

"I watch of lot of those shows on TV where the animals come in and have been abused," he said.

Fifty-two percent of pet owners say they have gotten a pet from a shelter or rescue at some time, but only 23 percent have taken an animal to a shelter. Of those who turned in animals, 59 percent say the animal belonged to someone else.

If shelters started charging a $25 fee to accept unwanted or stray animals, about a third of those polled (34 percent) say they would be dissuaded from leaving animals and 52 percent say it would make no difference.

By region, adopting a stray is most common in the West, where 39 percent got a pet that way compared with 34 percent in the South, 30 percent in the Northeast and 29 percent in the Midwest. Forty-one percent of rural-dwelling pet owners say their pet was a stray, compared with 28 percent of suburbanites and 34 percent of urbanites. And suburbanites were most likely to have adopted from a shelter: 36 percent compared with 30 percent in urban areas and 22 percent in rural parts of the country.

The AP-Petside.com Poll was conducted Oct. 13-17, 2011, by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,118 pet owners. Results among pet owners have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points.

___

AP Polling Director Trevor Tompson, Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

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LOS ANGELES -- Where do people get their pets? A new AP-Petside.com poll found that the most common way people acquire a pet is as a gift, followed by taking in a stray. About four in 10 pet owners s...
LOS ANGELES -- Where do people get their pets? A new AP-Petside.com poll found that the most common way people acquire a pet is as a gift, followed by taking in a stray. About four in 10 pet owners s...
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
06:06 AM on 11/29/2011
All of our cats (but a litter of three who we took for a desperate friend) walked up to our door and 'asked' for a place to stay. The dog was abandoned on a dangerous stretch of country road, and we came along in time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Klad InVermont
05:46 PM on 11/18/2011
I have 1 dog and 2 cats, all from a rescue shelter and I don't know anyone who has pets, that didn't get them at a rescue shelter.

Rescue cats and dogs are great.

Give them a 2nd chance!
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bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
01:52 AM on 11/18/2011
Yep, those gifts are at you local animal control.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
12:56 AM on 11/18/2011
Normally I would not approve getting an animal from a breeder, because that supports overpopulation. But my sister is allergic to normal cats, so she got this new breed that has been bred not to be allergenic. Two cats, siblings, and they are wonderful.
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majesticjkr
Always look on the bright side of life
08:05 PM on 11/17/2011
every dog ive ever had has come from a friend that got themselves a pup then didnt want it, ive took it in and past it on to a good home whenever one comes a long, i love dogs but couldnt have one from pup to old, their ok for the short time, a yr tops,
03:32 PM on 11/17/2011
"Edward Acosta, 46, of Thomasville, N.C., said if he were getting a new pet today, he would probably go to a pet store or breeder, not because he doesn't like shelters but "because I like thoroughbreds." He and his wife Vicki bred Pomeranians for years and still have three descended from their original pair."

Mr. Acosta may like purebreds, but I'm guessing he has never even considered where the pet stores get their animals from, the lack of testing, the inbreeding and the misery puppy mills cause. If he and his wife were proper breeders, instead if BYBs, they'd know perfectly well where to find a new dog. Specific-Breed rescues and shelters are the only way to go..
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05:07 PM on 11/19/2011
Don't pet shops have to disclose where they get their puppies from?
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Kalzakath
fighting right wing hypocrisy
03:23 PM on 11/17/2011
ADOPT, ADOPT, ADOPT
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PiedType
Old editors never die, they just revert to type
10:29 AM on 11/17/2011
Now if only we could get that pet store group down to zero (at least for cats and dogs) and put the puppy mills out of business.
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DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
07:38 AM on 11/17/2011
2 cats, Taylor county animal shelter. Best cats EVER!

Lot awseome folks on this here thread!
04:21 AM on 11/17/2011
Cat Care Society.
07:09 PM on 11/16/2011
All of my cats were either found as strays or rescued from shelters. My current cat, however, rescued/adopted me ... and I am so very thankful for her!

My only wish is for every cat & dog to have a home. They are the best friends you could ever have ... pure unconditional love!
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
06:07 AM on 11/29/2011
some feign tolerance rather than love, but it's just a pose.
01:08 PM on 11/29/2011
Please clarify. Who are you saying is the one posing as tolerant? The human or the animal?
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06:08 PM on 11/16/2011
My dog is a foundling tossed from a car in front of mine, I stopped he was the only pup alive, he is today and for the last 9 years a member of this family,
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BlackCatBone
11:26 AM on 11/16/2011
We have an Australian cattle dog and an ACD/border collie mix, both from shelters. We plan on adopting another ACD from a shelter or rescue eventually, as we love the breed and they tend to end up there a lot due to being a bit more challenging to the average pet owner. Way too many people get dogs without researching the breed and their needs.
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
11:06 AM on 11/16/2011
Up until our last cat (we got him from a shelter), our animals were strays that friends found and gave to us or my parents' pets when they could no longer keep them. Theodolite was a 3-legged cat whose owner decided to start a post-Y2K commune in Hawaii and just left him behind on the street. One of the sweetest cats we ever had. I miss him. :-(
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ninjacb
not just another white dope on punk
10:59 AM on 11/16/2011
all my animal companions have been rescues. and it is they who have rescued me more often than not.
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Judith Jaehn
Animal Activist!
11:49 AM on 11/16/2011
Nin, I'm with you all the way. We have rescued all of our companions. 9 million dogs die every year. They still have gas chambers in the south, a friend told me that it sometimes it takes an hour to "kill" one of these poor darlings. NO MORE PUPPY MILLS!! Come on people, adopt and help shut down the puppy mills.....
Fanned and faved!