About Tia Rescue

About Tia Rescue

It’s fair to say we have moved about a bit. You have to hand it to us, we always sleep with our boots on ready to run.  Tia began as a shed in a field and then traded up to a sewage farm in Sowerby Bridge. A devastating break in and Yorkshire water put the kibosh on that and we were saved by a timely legacy which lifted us to another level. A bit of crawling to the bank and we were able to purchase Moorside farm. Eventually outgrown after 10 happy years, we nervously moved down South as far as Doncaster. Millrace and its 70 acres allowed us to expand the numbers we could save and it quickly became the go to kennels for the surrounding tracks. Sadly the world and urban creep began to impact our lives, and after 7 years we needed to call the removal vans again. We managed to buy a farm outright, in Scotland.

Easter Hardmuir Farm is beginning to take shape, and we have recently opened our first shop in Nairn. The dogs have developed a taste for Haggis. We too have grown to love the place but miss our curries though visiting volunteers have been known to bring us some from our old takeaway. They also send their love along with the Chicken Tikka Masala.

Our first move took a few hours. Everything in the pickup, sign over the door and get the kettle on. Our last move entailed three months of preparation, a team on each site and five massive Gillies Transport horseboxes being cheered on along the M1 by supporters clutching banners at the side of the motorway. Go Tia go! Check out the video.

Covid knocked us for six and we all have our own stories. The usual suspects dumped their dogs after the last race at Askern and we had a good dozen on top of the “family” to provide for. Again our supporters came to our rescue and squeezed another onto the sofa. Most never returned to the fold and are still there. It was a horrible time for all but we are still standing, unlike some of our fellow charities sadly.

Under our wing we have around twenty five greyhounds, most of whom won’t be going anywhere due to age and issues, plus the same number of horses, most of whom are the size of bungalows. Donkeys, chickens, goats and also our doves which were in the removal vans sandwiched between the pork and the beans. It is impossible to put a figure on the amount of dogs and horses we have helped. This has been achieved through the efforts of wonderful people, frankly restoring our faith in human nature. Our work is not done yet as we move into our next phase. The joint announcement of the RSCPA, Blue Cross and Dogs Trust aiming for the cessation of the sport within 5 years signals our next challenge. There will be thousands of dogs needing places and it’s bad enough now. Nevertheless we welcome the declaration and the big three’s massive resources mean they will probably achieve it. Tia will do its best.

Our founder is a nightmare and most people don’t last the pace. Death threats, walkouts, splinter groups, a sustained online attack by animal rights nutters are all part of our rich tapestry. That’s just the supporters. Then there’s the racing industry itself. One trainer stripped naked on the yard after we had just fed him a good dinner, another threatened to pour accelerant over her!  Some supporters have been tempted to offer them a light on occasion.  However around 6-8000 animals would stand between us and in rescue as in life you need a hard edge to survive. We aren’t milk and water people, but we do good work. A few trainers openly loath us but still beg us to take their retired dogs and will wait until a place becomes available. That speaks volumes. We are proud to say that we are banned from every racing forum in the land.

To those who stick with us please know we couldn’t do it without you. Any rescue will tell you they would pack up tomorrow if not for the volunteers. We have the very best. Sometimes we get it wrong and there is remorse. We are not perfect. Neither are you.

We have to keep going. Even without the politics, greyhound racing is in trouble. The stadiums are in the inner city and the land worth a fortune. The average age of a trainer is in the late 60’s, youngsters soon quit when the bills arrive. We know of several kennels where 40 dogs are looking for a place in a rescue. A series of welfare scandals damage the image and no sport can continue without the backing of sponsorship and big firms wont risk their image. We know of more horror stories to come out soon. Every day, tracks host races where say 5 of the 6 are trained by the same person.  Prize money is pitiful and the quality of runners seems to decrease by the year. Our own overheads are also soaring and it is difficult to see past that at the moment. A recent bill has seen an increase of 300% in twelve months. We are worried and very tired with staff shortages.

However, we are still rehoming lots of greyhounds in Yorkshire and with the network of supporters and volunteers we have we are still continuing to save these beautiful dogs, albeit in a different way.

We are just sitting tight but at some point Tia will get back to Yorkshire…maybe not me and Bob, but we do need a rehoming kennel down there.
Deb

LOLA

LOLA

 Lola..
She has Jeremy ears for those who have lasted the distance. Her connections should hang their heads in shame over this little girl.
Lindrick Loner. dob 22.3.16.
More guts and tenacity in her paw than most of the block put together.
Lola was discovered on an allotment quite by chance.  Of course we said yes, and Lola, made the journey to Inverness the following day with Percy, thanks to yet another proper person.
Lola was born in Ireland and raced at Doncaster and Sheffield a staggering 120 times. In spite of being able to fit into your top pocket, Lola brought home the bacon on twenty six of those runs and came a close second in a further twenty two. Game as a pebble and frequently showing a clean pair of heels to much bigger racers. All they ever saw of her was her backside fading away in the distance.
A sofa and a happy end to her was denied and it is possible that she spent the next three years churning out diverse lurchers. There is no record of her having a greyhound litter and Lola was kept there for a purpose. As a tiny blue girl, there would have been no shortage of adopters fighting over her and our kennels were not that far away. Why the hell didn’t they bring her to us.
Lola isn’t exactly brimming with vitality. Her nerves are in shreds and she is beaten down. Shabby and scabby, teeth are horrendous but her depression is giving us the most concern for now. We think she will be OK with a good dose of TLC,  and perhaps go on to her long overdue reward of a home.  We’ve got you Lola, it’s going to be okay.
This shouldn’t have happened.
A VERY BUSY MONTH

A VERY BUSY MONTH

Well all I can say is, things are still mental….

With having no one on the yard and only three part time members of staff in the kennels, the main of the work again falls to me and Bob. We are doing seven days a week, on average 160 hours a week between us. We never have a day off but Kenzie, who used to work for us in Doncaster, is joining us soon, she will be living in…..so fingers crossed.

And whilst the day to day stuff is being done…so did all this.

Mia & Gracie, the lovely greyhound sisters were rehomed, by previous Tia adopters in Todmorden, direct from the trainer in Nottingham.

Harris, the gorgeous whippet bedlington decided he didn’t want to live in his current home, caused havoc and was driven up all the way from Edinburgh, at speed…a few days later, a haircut and he bagged himself a lovely home locally.

Ruby, a lovely greyhound girl was rehomed direct from the trainer in Manchester to a long term supporter/adopter in Dewsbury.

Our Jess saw a greyhound girl on Facebook who needed to be out of her home in Doncaster asap. Within a few hours Lottie was in a foster home with previous Tia adopters, wondering what was going on now….she’d been racing a few months ago and this is all very confusing.

Ellie one of our greyhound girls, who had been adopted back in 2020, found herself in need of another home as her mom had become ill. Long term supporters and friends, Nigel & Steph stepped in to foster her…..of course they failed, almost immediately….

Sylvester was rehomed to long term supporters and friends Peter and Alison who have relocated to Dunoon. They made the 8 hour round trip to come and get him as he had been here in kennels for a whole year.

We sadly lost Harper to bone cancer. The kennels are a lot quieter without him. Sleep tight big fella.

Next Chic, who had been waiting in her trainers kennels in Derbyshire, has gone into a foster home with long term supporters and friends in Nottingham.

Minnie the cob that came back from her previous adopters, a riding school in Winterton in a disgraceful condition, has gone to her new forever home where she is a spoilt princess.

Turbo & Rascal made the journey up from Sheffield with Andy from Leeds. These two 10 year old brothers have lived all their lives at Askern greyhound track and the last few years on an allotment in Sheffield. They are looking forward to beach walks and hopefully a new home.  They arrived with a huge amount of dog beds from Huddersfield, for the Nairn shop and a cool box full of pork pies. Some of the pies later that day headed off to Tongue with their own private chauffer. Pork pies were consumed later that day by five very grateful Yorkshire folk. A week later the rest of the Turner family landed from Leeds, with another cool box this time full of delicious curries. Later that evening I was a very happy little piglet as was Hazel ( Nairn shop manager ) and her other half who now have a taste for a proper curry.

So please, when you ring up and say you know how busy we are, excuse me if I sigh…

Deb

 

Help Needed

I’m not going to write a long post, the short version is we need other people to help applying for grants.

We already have a volunteer doing a brilliant job, and a couple of staff are having a go too. It is very, very hard to get grants at the minute as everyone is struggling.

If you could please just spare a couple of hours a week, it could make a massive difference.

Deb  deb@tia-rescue.org

Flossy

Flossy

This is Flossy, she is coming up 5 years old and needs a foster home ASAP.  She is currently in Barnsley…

Update on Dogs

Update on Dogs

We are rehoming plenty of dogs direct from their trainers. I have just added a load more on the rehoming page.

We have dogs in Nottingham, Derbyshire and now Stockport, Manchester who are looking for a new start. And of course a few here, but we specialise in dogs that no one else wants, so it’s a bit trickier for them.

One of the many things I don’t like about this move, of which we had no choice to safeguard the Charity, is that I don’t get to meet the dogs and get to know them. I do miss that. And of course seeing all the excited owners coming to pick up their precious new dogs.

Two particularly giddy people have just bagged these 2 sisters from a trainer in Nottingham…Thanks guys, I know you will all be very happy…

Mia and Gracie, although you don’t know it yet, you are two very lucky greyhound girls…

Joey has now been rehomed..

Joey has now been rehomed..

Poor Joey, he is so quite and unassuming that I’d even forgotten to put him on the website.

He has been here since December.

He last raced at Kinsley in October 2020 and was sent to a rescue centre, who have unfortunately lost their kennels. Royston Animal Welfare, where Ripley came from.

He has just gone 7 years old and the chances of him finding a home are very slim….a middle aged black dog, amongst hundreds of other black dogs.

He is no bother though,

Quill Joey bn 3/2/2017

Chic

Chic

 

This little beauty is called Chic.  She isn’t three years old yet.

She doesn’t like racing. She is a very timid little poppet who needs to go with another greyhound to show her the ropes.

She is currently with her trainer in Ripley, Derbyshire..

Billy

Billy

 

This is Billy….Billy has finished his racing career, he is 5 years old in September and now needs a family of his own.

A beautiful boy…

He is currently with his trainer in Ripley, Derbyshire

RUPERT!!

RUPERT!!

When Rupert was fetched to us by the Police in January 2022, it was clear that he had had a very hard life. He had been found tied to rubbish bins in Doncaster town centre. The dog wardens weren’t working and the rspca didn’t want him. They had no one to send out…to be fair if they had seen a photo of him they would have made the effort, not for Rupert, but for the media/cash opportunity he would have provided.
Emaciated just under 20 kg, exhausted, his lip hanging off and an infected mouth, too sore to eat.
Injuries consistent with badger baiting.
He stole my heart and everyone else’s who he ever met. Such a gentle soul. When he was well enough he was neutered and his lip stitched back by our vet at the time, the fabulous Chris from Donaldson’s, in our own vet room…which I miss immensely. He made the trip to Scotland with us and all the other animals. A few people had wanted him but I needed a special home for Rupert, a very special one and thankfully just a month ago his mom & dad travelled from Tobermory to come and get him. It was really hard to let him go but that’s what we do and just look at him now.
If you are ever in Tobermory and you see Rupert with his mom & dad, please send me pictures…
UPDATE….me and Jo have just had a cheeky trip to the Isle of Mull to see Rupert….It was amazing to see him so happy…even if his waistline is expanding….no mom, there are no ribs to be seen there….
Lovely…