
Sparky Malarkey is a 12-year-old Lab, Akita and Chow mix, living the Hollywood dream, as a character actor, certified therapy dog and pet charity spokes dog.
But for the past few weeks, Sparky has faced a challenge hitting his marks, due to health problems.ย On his bad days, heโs wobbled trying to walk and lost his appetite.
With the bills mounting, his best friend Tanya took her human friendsโ advice and tried crowdfunding ย to keep him going.
The Gabby Dogโs regular readers may remember her Pawfleet pal, Boris Kitty (@BorisKitty), has gone the same route. Boris has a fund on You Caring, while Sparkyโs on GoFundMe.
Theyโre not alone. Crowdfunding has become a last resort for a lot of strapped pet owners. In fact, since the Great Recession, fewer and fewer pet charities have been able to step up.
The U.S. Humane Society now includes social mediaย platforms as one of the waysย people canย finance medical care. The society still publishes a list of established pet charities. But many of the non-profits are broke, almost broke or unable to contribute more than a nominal sum.
Gabby started researching after Carol Conlogue, of New Hampshire, wrote and asked the Peke-a-Poo divaโs help in choosing a good charity. Conlogue uses the nom de plume Olivia Rose. (I wanted to say pen name, but Gabby likes the French phrases and insisted. Her column: her style sheet.)
When Conlogueโs childrenโs story, “Furry Faces in Strange Places,” went on sale in the Amazon Kindle Bookstore, she wanted to donate a percentage of her earnings to help senior citizens on fixed incomes pay the vet bills.
Gabby sent her to the HSUS webpage, and Conlogue found a group she wanted to support. But, no surprise, you will find more non-profits looking for donations on the list and far fewer able to assist.
Since the list is organized by state and Gabbyโs summering in Rhode Island, earlier this summer, we tried the HSUS listings for the Ocean State.
We found five organizations, and not a single one could help us with emergency bills. Three would help only with spay/neuter.
The others help only pets who truly donโt have a biscuit to their name. In one case, applicants must be on public assistance or at (or below) 150 percent of the federal poverty level; the other will provide $100 to low-income pet owners.
The national charities are also blunt about their limitations. Paws 4 a Cure, for example, suggests people try several other sources before applying and notes $200 is its top contribution. Donations, their webpage reports, are at an all-time low. Need is at an all-time high.
I hesitate to say the HSUS also listsย yard sales as a way to raise money for vet bills. Good luck with that. (After paying the city permit, the Gabby Dogโs incompetent owner lost money at our last such event.)ย So, HSUS also mentions the Gabby Dog’s old standby โ a credit card with a high limit.
As for Sparky, vets initially thought his issue was arthritis, but when the doctors couldnโt agree on a diagnosis, his owner found a new doctor in Malibu. This vet specializes in geriatric medicine and believes the dog may be suffering from spinal cord degeneration.
โVet care is so expensive and I knew we needed not only new diagnostics but treatments that I currently canโt afford,โ she said. โI am waiting surgery and cannot work much due to the pain.โย (She is recovering from a car accident and an injury in a fall after the accident.)
โSo everyone kept saying: since we have always been the ones to help othersโ animal charities through the years when we could, why not set one up for Sparky in our time of need? Iโm very private about my personal life, so I didnโt want to do it for a long time,โ she said.
โIt isnโt going as fast as we need it,โ she said. To be successful, she believes, people need to spend โa LOT of timeโ on the fundraising and have a high social media profile.
โOr have social media savvy friends who are willing to circulate the petition, she said.
Sparkyโs Twitter friends have come through and helped, she said. In fact, his Twitter followers have contributed the most.
Sparky (@SparkysMalarkey) belongs to The Aviators (#TheAviators) and to Zombie Squad (#ZSHQ) and Deputy Sparky Eastwood has more than 2,000 followers.
Thanks to their help, Sparkyโs started cold laser therapy and meds and doing a bit better, his owner says.
Heโs still barking at the mailman, anyway, and staying in practice in case Hollywood calls. As a character actor, heโs played the โBig Scary Black Dogโ in the Indie film, โThe Invitation,โ and โBlade,โ the biker gang dog, in the Internet film, #30 Nods. Heโs also hosted a lot of charity events, including pet adoption flash mobs. (See the left coast really is more fun.)
Sparky believes โ12 is the new seven,โ his owner says. Gabby hopes to see him back on The Green Carpet soon.
Have a tip or story idea? E-mail Margo Ann Sullivan at TheGabbyDog@gmail.com and follow The_Gabby_Dog on Twitter.
Margo Ann Sullivan is a pet columnist who has written for ZooToo,ย and numerous publications in New York and in New England. Sheโs had pets all her life, starting with a rescue collie named Lollypop. The Gabby Dog column chases the news that helps pets and people. It also chronicles the adventures of Gabby, the peke-a-poo, and Asia, the tabby cat, and their many pals, hitting the high spots between Providence, RI, and Manchester, NH.
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