In 2025 "we are more of a sanctuary than a rescue" is a line you will see and hear attached to us
As the visible face of Dun-Roamin', I wanted to detail why this is now the case as this is something we often get asked about
Although there is a small team here to fulfil the functions required to be a charity, it is my knowledge as the founder that allows me a high level of autonomy when it comes to the direction of the organisations under the DR banner. Over the last 20 years, decisions have been made with the right intention and with the knowledge available at the time. As I have learned more and my opinions and the times have changed, the autonomy has allowed me to alter what we do in line with the new thinking
Every dog rescue, however well intentioned, carries out its activities in the knowledge that achieving a 100% success in rehoming is impossible thus accepting that a certain percentage of placements will fail leading to some dogs losing their lives. This practice favours volume over individual life and is one, made easier to live with or make, with a high turnover of dogs where there is little time to build relationships. Up until the Covid outbreak, we too were guilty, without realising it at the time, of favouring the successful majority at the expense of the unsuccessful minority
An unforeseen consequence of "specialising in dogs with a negative behavioural history", is that their stay with you is longer and time adds strength to any relationship between a human and a dog
The explosion of more appealing dogs, visually and physically, that came with Covid brought about a real noticeable watering down of the quality & quantity of suitors for our dogs which was evident in the level of work people were prepared to do when comparing BEFORE & AFTER Covid
The realisation hit me that we would now need to action somewhere around five times the level of resource to achieve the same success rate as before. This would mean working harder and looking further afield than ever before with the likelihood still being, perhaps even moreso, that we would be sending them out to either come back more stressed than when they left our care or worse, to die at the hands of the new post-Covid standard of owner, ill equipped for "bad" behaviours. Seeing our dogs as happy and as well as they then were, living under our very different approach & belief system, I decided that I neither wanted or needed that outcome for myself or any dog under our care. It was evident that they were already, in terms of their care and understanding, in the best place they could possibly be
Whilst the lines of enquiry remain open to all, this stance remains in place to this day. The right home is about the people who make it and not the material that the four walls are made of and if we see the right qualities in those people enquiring then the idea of placement to them remains very much an option
Ian Webb
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