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From YouTube: Animals in Ames
Description
June 27, 2016
A
Hello
and
thank
you
for
watching
this
episode
of
animals
and
aims.
My
name
is
Ron
Edwards
I'm,
the
animal
control
supervisor
here
for
the
Ames
animal
shelter
and
animal
control
program,
and
our
first
guest
with
us
today
is
the
lively
tengo
que.
Lo
tengo
has
a
whole
lot
of
energy
he's
just
about
10
months
old
I,
know
I,
know,
that's
good
kiss
thanks
he's
just
about
10
months
old.
It
needs
some
training.
Obviously,
but
it
just
is
a
very
excited
dog
he's
here
in
the
cat
room.
A
So
he's
really
excited
about
all
the
cat
smells
and
not
sure
where
he's
at,
but
so
tonga
were
estimating
again
is
about
10
months
old.
He
came
into
us
as
a
stray,
so
we
don't
know
a
whole
lot
about
him.
We're
saying
he's
a
German,
Shepherd
beautiful
black
german
shepherd
here.
He's
definitely
got
to
put
on
some
weight
by
just
a
beautiful
dog
again
with
a
lot
of
energy.
He
came
into
us
as
a
stray
and
we
don't
have
any
information
on
him.
A
He
didn't
have
any
tags,
no
microchip,
no
way
for
us
to
identify
who
he
was
so.
We've
named
him
tango
and
now
Tongo
is
up
for
adoption
at
the
Ames
animal
shelter.
So
if
you're
interested
in
this
beautiful
dog
here
and
willing
to
give
him
the
training
and
love
and
care
that
he
needs
tonga
might
be
the
good
dog
at
your
family.
Again
he's
just
very
excited
here
to
be
in
this
room,
but
he
is
a
sweet
dog
we've
seen
no
bad
behaviors
from
him.
He
is
a
sweet
dog.
A
A
A
Definitely
just
his
tonga
was
excited
to
be
in
this
room
and
not
really
sure
what
he's
doing
here,
but
we're
probably
looking
for
a
kind
of
a
different
situation
for
him
here.
He
did
have
some
problems
with
having
some
accidents
in
the
house
and
it
seems
like
he
may
have
some
anxiety
anxiety
that
may
need
to
be
dealt
with,
but
he
he
appears
to
be.
You
know
pretty
sweet
and
gentle
dog.
They
didn't
report
any
aggressive
behaviors
with
him
at
all.
A
It
was
really
just
his
anxiety
and
making
a
mess
in
the
house
as
far
as
not
being
house
trained.
So
that's
definitely
something
that
needs
to
be
worked
on
here
with
Charlie.
Now
charlie
is
a
girl.
I
may
have
said
boy
I
keep
doing
that
charlie
is
a
girl,
she's,
a
spayed
female
about
four
years
old
and
again
we're
think
we're
saying
she
is
a
German
Shepherd,
doberman,
pinscher
mix,
so
two
great
breeds
and
just
a
beautiful
dog
here,
that's
looking
for
her
forever
home
with
someone
that's
going
to
work
with
her
and
train
her.
A
She
might
be
a
dog
that'd,
be
really
good
where
she
has
access
to
come
in
from
the
weather,
but
you
know
maybe
through
a
doggie
door
or
heat
a
garage
or
something
like
that.
So,
if
you're
interested
in
meeting
charlie
we'd
love
to
introduce
her
to
you,
she
is
a
sweet
dog
and
deserves
a
home,
and
we
really
don't
want
her
to
be
living
out
her
life
here
at
the
animal
shelter
she
deserves
to
be
at
home
with
the
family,
where
she
would
thrive.
A
So
if
your
interest
don't
eat
the
microphone,
if
you're
interested
in
Charlie
come
on
down
to
the
aim,
shelter
we'd
love
to
introduce
her
to
you
and
you
get
a
chance
to
meet
her
outside
of
our
kennel
and
see
how
she
is
with
you.
We
let
around
the
yard
and
play
and
she's
a
fun
dog
to
be
around
and
I
think
she
might
be
a
great
addition
to
your
family.
A
And
our
next
guest
today
we
went
from
the
largest
of
our
furry
friends
to
the
smallest
of
our
furry
friends,
at
least
here
at
the
Ames
animal
shelter.
This
here
is
Scotty
Scotty
is
a
beautiful
guinea
pig
wanted
to
bring
them
on
the
show
today
to
remind
people
that
we
do
get
animals
here
other
than
dogs
and
cats,
and
we
actually
have
three
guinea
pigs
right
now.
They
were
all
surrendered
by
the
same
person
who
got
them
at
a
pet
store
and
didn't
realize
that
they
were
at
a
time,
commitment
and
a
pet.
A
That
needs
a
lot
of
love
and
attention
and
a
lot
of
time
so
Scotty
here
is
the
one
of
them.
The
other
two
are
a
bonded
pair.
They
tried
to
get
Scotty
to
live
with
the
other
two
and
they
just
didn't
get
along
they're
all
three
males
they're
about
three
months
old,
but
just
incredible
little
little
beings
here
very
interesting
that
you
look
at
their
hair.
A
They
just
they
kind
of
go
every
which
way
and
I
might
be
a
little
jealous-
that
they
have
a
lot
more
hair
than
I
do,
but
they're
just
really
neat
little
creatures,
and
they
do
deserve
special
attention.
They
do
require
special
vet
care
when
they
get
sick,
as
well
as
the
habitat
that
they
live
in
they're,
not
a
pet
that
you
want
to
just
throw
in
a
cage,
and
you
throw
some
food
in
every
once
in
a
while.
They
need
to
have
an
appropriate
diet.
A
They
need
to
make
sure
that
they
have
an
appropriate
place
to
live
where
they're
going
to
be
safe
and
well
cared
for,
and
a
lot
of
like
rabbits,
they
do
have
special
needs
to
so
they
do
like
some
of
the
same
stuff
that
rabbits
like.
So
we
definitely
want
people
to
do
some
research
before
you
consider
adopting
one
of
these
guinea
pigs
Scotty
can
be
adopted
by
himself.
Well,
they
typically
do
well
in
bonded
pairs.
A
We
just
don't
happen
to
have
so
maybe
if
you
have
a
guinea
pig
out
there
and
you'd
like
to
introduce
him
to
Scotty,
we
would
love
to
have
you
come
down
and
try
that
out
and
see
how
well
they
get
along
together
and
then
we,
the
next
to
that
I'll,
be
showing
you
those
are
bonded
pair
and
need
to
be
adopted
together.
So
the
first
one
here
is
Scotty,
you
can
see
he's
a
very
tame
guinea
pig
they've
actually
been
held.
A
A
A
Here
this
is
Fitzgerald
again
there
are
there
all
three
months
they
are
very
possibly
from
the
same
litter,
even
though
you
have
the
longer
hair
and
the
shorter
here,
it's
it
is
possible
that
they
are
from
the
same
litter
and
then
it's
this
one
over
here,
the
grey
and
white
one
is
his
name
is
Gatsby,
so
we
have
gatsby
here
and
then
Fitzgerald
over
here,
the
orange
one
with
the
black
and
the
white.
So
these
are
a
bonded
pair
again.
A
They
are
used
to
some
handling,
as
you
see
here,
they're
pretty
clumps
and
hear
their
little
camera-shy.
I
guess,
but
they
are
very
calm
pets
and
begin
to
require
a
lot
of
special
care.
So,
if
you're
interested
in
adopting
these
two
as
a
pair,
we
have
them
available
for
adoption
here
at
the
Ames
animal
shelter.
A
Our
staff
is
available
and
can
help
you
and
provide
you
with
information
about
how
to
properly
care
for
these
little
ones
as
well
as
how
to
let
them
thrive
in
your
home
as
a
as
a
wonderful
pet
that
they
can
be
so
again.
They
just
do
need
that
special
attention,
special
dietary
care
and
special
housing
areas
that
you
want
to
keep
them
in
and
they
can
just
be
great
pets.
So
that
gets
me
there
talking
to
us
a
bit
yeah
again.
A
A
So
that's
our
show
for
the
day:
that's
just
a
real
sampling
of
what
we
have
here
available
for
adoption.
We
also
have
Francine
and
you
may
have
seen
the
episode,
the
special
episode
that
we
did
to
help
Francine
last
week,
Francine
still
here,
we've
received
some
wonderful
support
and
just
incredible
donations
and
want
to
say
a
special
thanks
to
the
Asia
blue
rescue
who's
done
some
work
with
us
here
at
the
shelter
and
they
did
a
tremendous
support.
A
It
was
a
personal
donation
to
help
Francine,
so
we're
really
on
our
way
to
helping
her
and
helping
her
recover
and
have
her
surgery.
So
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
that.
We
do
have
we're
still
accepting
applications
for
Francine's
adoption
come
down
and
meet
her
she's,
a
great
dog
she'd
love
to
meet
you
as
well
as
the
other
dogs
that
you
saw
today
and,
of
course,
I
didn't
show
any
cats
today,
but
this
is
kitten
season.