Main Line Animal Rescue

Have You Lost Your Pet?


Baxter Card

Losing your pet can be one of the most upsetting ordeals you and your pet may ever go through. It is important to remain calm and to do everything needed to find your dog or cat.

Make a call to your local police department and report your dog or cat missing. You will need to file a missing pet report with their department, then after you speak to them, ask to be connected with their Animal Control Officer. In most cases, this officer will be out in their van helping other people and they will need to call you back. If they don't return your call in a timely manner, keep calling until you are able to speak to him or her. In some townships, animal control is handled by the local SPCAs or Humane Societies. Call ALL the shelters, SPCAs and Humane Societies in your area and file a missing pet report. Remember, a person working in your area may pick up your lost pet and drive them out of the immediate vicinity, dropping them off at a shelter nearest to THEIR home. So call ALL the shelters within 50 miles.

Interview neighbors, talk to UPS drivers, mailmen, and school bus drivers who routinely travel the streets where your dog or cat was last spotted. Everyday school buses leave from a "hub." Go there and talk to the drivers before they leave in the morning. Give them several lost dog (or cat) posters to hang in their communal area. Police departments also have communal areas/locker rooms and a sympathetic officer will also hang up your signs if asked. Town watch organizations are also excellent at finding pets, call them as well as local schools and ask them to mention your missing pet over their public address systems. You will soon have hundreds of children searching for your dog or cat for the reward. Seniors are also a valuable resource of information and many of our older citizens are out and about during the day. Visit senior centers and hang signs.

Signs, posters and ads. Create signs and hang them on telephone poles. This is still THE most effective way to recover your pet. BUT you must make the signs large enough to read from a car stopped at a red light, fifteen feet away. Print off posters 11" by 17" for telephone poles. REWARD should be across the top in bold (the people who will stop and help your pet will be true animal-lovers and will rarely accept a reward if it is offered). Followed by LOST DOG (or CAT), then a photo of your pet. In smaller print describe your dog or cat, include their name and where they disappeared (the intersection, town, etc. but NOT your actual address). At the bottom, large and in BOLD, put your phone number. These signs should also be hung in convenience stores, libraries, pet food stores, and most importantly veterinarian offices, including all emergency vet hospitals in case your pet was hit by a car and was brought in by a good Samaritan. Ads in local newspapers are often inexpensive (retail ad space is more effective than just a classified ad) and if your pet has distinguished themselves as a therapy dog or has done something that has set them apart, the newspapers may be convinced to write a small article and include a photograph.

Shelters, Humane Societies and SPCAs. As difficult as it is to visit all the shelters in your area, it is THE most important step in finding your pet. Often dogs are not identified properly when they are brought into shelters. MLAR hears stories all the time of dogs or cats sitting in SPCAs while the owners were repeatedly told that their pets were not there. Male Cockapoos have been identified as female Cocker Spaniels. Corgies have been labeled as Dachshund Mixes. Any black dog brought into a shelter is a Lab Mix; all brown dogs are labeled Shepherd Mixes. And if your dog has long hair and is turned into an SPCA, the staff may shave him or her down and he/she may no longer look like the dog you lost, or the dog on your posters. GO to your local shelters and look in every kennel run, and go often. Hang your signs in their lobbies and get to know their volunteers and staff. They will be more likely to help and remember your pet.

Illegal but effective. It is illegal to stuff individual mailboxes with smaller versions of your telephone signs, but MLAR has been told that it is an extremely effective way to track your pet. Not that we would ever encourage anyone to break the law. You can place signs outside the boxes or through the handles of people's front doors. Or you can contact www.expresscopy.com and they will help you create postcards with a photograph and information on your pet and mail them out to 100 homes in your area for about $40. We suggest mailing out a minimum of 500 cards for approximately $200. Express Copy can provide the addresses of all the surrounding homes if you can tell them where your pet was last spotted. These postcards are mailed out immediately and postage is covered in the price of the cards.

Never give up. Cats have turned up a year later. Dogs have been known to live in wooded areas for months before being rescued and dropped off at the local Humane Society or SPCA. Studies have proven that most lost cats stay within 500 feet of the place from which they were lost. Dogs hide in open garages and sheds and are attracted to construction sites where the workers, thinking the dog belong to the neighbors, feed them. Also, tree trimmers, gardeners, construction workers and road crews have, from time to time, inadvertently taken pets they thought were ownerless. If your pet disappears, try to remember if there was any work done outside of your home on that day and contact those companies.

Get your pet micro-chipped so if your dog or cat does run away and is picked up by animal control or is taken to your local shelter, they can scan your pet and call you. Micro-chipping is inexpensive and done without anesthesia. A small, rice-sized, micro-chip is inserted between your pet's shoulder blades and acts as permanent identification. ALWAYS have an ID tag with all your current contact information on your pet's collar. Check your gates after your gardener leaves to make sure they are closed. Use a baby gate in your front hallway so a skittish pet cannot run through an open door. If your dog is very timid, tell groomers and vet-techs that you do not want your dog walked outside if you have to leave them at the spa or vet hospitals. Their collars will be removed during grooming or medical procedures and your dog will be left unprotected without ID if they manage to get away. Many dogs and cats will also run away during national holidays, frightened by firework displays, so keep them inside. Best to take extra measures to secure your pets during thunderstorms as well.


Setting up a "have-a-heart" trap (available at Braxton's Animal Works if you live in Southeastern Pennsylvania, or through your local SPCA) may be the only way to catch a dog that runs from strangers. Leave the trap in a secluded area in someone's backyard (away from curious children and teenagers). Ask permission, of course, and ask the family to call you if they see your pet. Use the smelliest wet dog food you can find or an article of your clothing as bait. If you catch a racoon or opossum, wearing gloves, open the trap and they will quickly run out and away. If you call animal control to report a trapped wild animal, they may required to kill the poor creature. They are often more frightened than you are and will flee the minute the trap door is opened. Main Line Animal Rescue also highly recommends Vicki Wooters for tracking your missing pet. Miss Wooters participates in Search and Rescue work and has a dog who is trained to specifically find missing pets. Miss Wooters can be reached at 610-296-5374 and 484-343-5204.