FOSTERDOPT
A Four Footed World
A Four Footed World
Meet Bigloo above
Bigloo is a gentle, nine-year-old beagle who once knew the comfort of a home, until the day she was left behind, abandoned on the side of a road by someone who decided she was no longer worth the trouble of loving.
In India, there are no laws to protect animals like Bigloo. No system to stop people from buying pets from cruel, unethical breeders. No accountability for those who throw them away when they grow old, sick, or simply inconvenient. Bigloo was found standing at a deserted crossroads, dazed and broken, her ribs visible beneath thinning fur, her frail body crawling with insects, bleeding, and so very, very hungry. She didn’t understand why she had been left. She just waited.
A volunteer came across her and gently scooped her up, taking her away from that place of fear and confusion. What followed was weeks of exhausting care. She was suffering from tick fever, dangerously dehydrated, and battling a host of infections. She required intensive, round-the-clock treatment, expensive medications, blood tests, IV drips, and careful monitoring. Each day was uncertain. Each improvement, hard-won.
But we did not give up. And neither did she.
Against the odds, Bigloo pulled through. Slowly, the light began to return to her eyes. She began to eat, to trust, to rest without flinching.
Across the country, our volunteers take on cases like Bigloo’s every single day. Animals discarded by those they once trusted, left to die in silence. Our teams perform quiet, unseen miracles - fighting for those who cannot ask for help, who have nothing left but the hope that someone, somewhere, might care enough to try.
And sometimes, that hope is enough.
Our volunteers during a Fosterdopt meet (with our tripod champ Milk)
Ensure everyone's safety when driving
The Fosterdopt family during a meet
Our shelter is not just a building; it is a sanctuary, a safe haven for those who have known only cruelty, neglect, and pain. It is a home for the broken, the disabled, and the ones who were left behind. Here, we care for animals who have lost so much, dogs who cannot walk, cats without limbs, and rescues of every size and shape who have endured more suffering than any living creature should ever know.
Some of them were hit by cars and left to die alone on the streets. Others were born with conditions that made them unwanted, unloved. The world had cast them aside, telling them they were no longer worthy of care, of kindness. But here, they are seen. They are wanted.
In this place, dogs scoot across the floor, their hearts full of joy despite their struggles. Sick and injured ats curl into warm beds, finding comfort in the security they were never given. Some animals will never run or jump, but here, they run freely in the love they have finally found.
Each one is precious. Each one is unique. They may not have the perfect bodies or the perfect past, but they are perfect in our eyes. We hold them when they fall. We lift them up when they can’t stand. We give them the dignity and love that they were denied for so long.
In this sanctuary, they are home. Here, they are not forgotten. Here, they are safe.