Autumn Acres Animal Rescue & Sanctuary

Autumn Acres Animal Rescue & Sanctuary The animals we help are confused, bewildered, and – most of all – heartbroken.

Operating as a no-kill facility since 2004, our mission is to identify, rescue and rehabilitate at-risk animals who live in neglectful or abusive circumstances.

We are changing our name. Autumn Acres Animal Rescue & Sanctuary will be our new name. AARS for short. We’ve always take...
12/18/2024

We are changing our name. Autumn Acres Animal Rescue & Sanctuary will be our new name. AARS for short. We’ve always taken in the special cases which are so much harder to find homes for. We might as well add the word sanctuary to our name. Photo is of Marley who was one of our special long timers who did get adopted and is doing great!

You can save a life too! ❤️
12/10/2024

You can save a life too! ❤️

Something we don't bring up, but we should. PLEASE make sure you have your will updated and consider adding a charitable...
12/08/2024

Something we don't bring up, but we should. PLEASE make sure you have your will updated and consider adding a charitable bequest to Autumn Acres Animal Rescue - Tax ID- 35-2238650. Never assume you have tomorrow to get this done. I've lost a couple of friends who always planned to add a bit to our rescue in their will but never got around to getting it updated. Please take the time and make sure you have your will set up the way you want it. Our organization is small, but dedicated and we were established in 2004. We're not new to this rescue world and we plan to be here for many more years to come. Thank you for considering adding us to your estate planning!!

It's also never too early to have a plan in place for your current pets. We ALWAYS take back our adopted dogs, so let your family know where you got your dog from. If they don't want to take on the dog...OR if you wouldn't trust them to care for your dog and you want him/her to come back to us make sure someone knows.

Monty has been a part of the Autumn Acres family since 2011. He was estimated to be 4-7 years old when we pulled him fro...
12/07/2024

Monty has been a part of the Autumn Acres family since 2011. He was estimated to be 4-7 years old when we pulled him from the Springfield Shelter.

Monty in a structured kennel environment was great…but in a home he was a terror.

He went through several foster/adoptive homes. Monty had transitional stress, and that stress would cause seizures. Each home was hard, and each new home was harder than the one before. About 4 years ago we decided to make him a sanctuary resident.

Monty loved his time at A Dog’s Fun Playce and he spent most of his time either with us in Richmond, or at the dog boarding place in Kansas City…with a few scattering of home attempts throughout. Monty had many friends and was well loved. In both our environment and the boarding place, he was a good dog. He was happy, he played with toys, he barked at horses or squirrels, he interacted with people willingly.

Monty’s personality was very strong willed and he was determined he could do things on his own. In homes he was not the dog we knew and loved, several homes tried for months, but Monty just didn’t handle home-life. He was quite an escape artist in his homes. One told me he jumped onto a picnic table to climb onto a grill to go over a 6’ fence. Another lived in an apartment building and he’d dart out her door and run down the hall, down the stairs, and be out the front door in seconds. Even in his old age I had to warn grooming facilities, don’t be fooled! He’ll act like he can barely move but the second that door is left open he’ll make a dart for it. They’d laugh like I wasn’t serious, then when I went to pick him back up, they’d say oh my gosh you were right.

Yeah, we knew Monty lol.

Monty was also a bug catcher and if he wasn’t on watch for the horses, he was chasing flies or other bugs that came nearby. He was friends with so many of our rescue dogs that have passed or been adopted. The past 1.5 years his buddy has been a boy named Milo. Monty was never food aggressive, bed aggressive, etc. He always welcomed any new dog and just did his own thing.

His favorite thing to do was trying to get the horses to run by barking at them thru the fence. Even the past few years when he was mostly deaf/blind he STILL knew when the horses would pass the fence line and he’ be right there barking at them. When he was out in the large backyard he’d wander until he found the barn entrance and start barking over there.

We decided to get his ashes back, and I’m going to spread them in the pasture. He can finally be out there with those horses.

I know my words don’t express the full force of Monty’s personality. Honestly, I’m just tired of death. Between the rescue dogs, my personal animals…sometimes it’s overwhelming losing yet another one.

Monty’s final car ride. 💔
12/06/2024

Monty’s final car ride. 💔

On Giving Tuesday, we just want to say THANK YOU!I'm sorry to everyone who I haven't sent individual thank you's to! I w...
12/03/2024

On Giving Tuesday, we just want to say THANK YOU!
I'm sorry to everyone who I haven't sent individual thank you's to! I wanted to take a moment during the Thanksgiving break to tell you all THANK YOU. Thank you to those who donate, those who share, those who adopt and those who care. Thank you for your friendship and support over the years. Can you believe Autumn Acres has been rescuing for 20 years now! It's crazy. When Donna and I first started this rescue we never would have believed it would still be going 20 years later.

Rescue is tough, emotionally and financially. Everything we have goes towards this mission. Burn out is a real thing and Donna suffered thru it for a few years before she made the decision to step back. She's still a good friend and she still helps out when she can, but she couldn't live and breathe rescue anymore. I'm still in the trenches and with losing Mercy this year, it's been a super tough year...but I look at the ones we've rescued and I can't imagine not being here for them. We will continue on and I'm hoping we can make it another 5 years and reach that 25 year milestone for Autumn Acres Animal Rescue.

I've personally been involved in rescue for 26 years already. Time just flies sometimes.

Anyway, THANK YOU to everyone who helps. We truly appreciate each one of you. I hope your 2024 ends on a good note.

If you want to make a donation for Giving Tuesday or a last minute end of year donation here is our link:
http://www.autumnacres.org/donate
Or you can mail a check to:
Autumn Acres Animal Rescue
105 E. Main St, Suite 1
Richmond, MO 64085

Thank you,
Jenifer Dickson
Autumn Acres Animal Rescue
501c3 est. Aug 2004.

11/29/2024

You will see them soon….!!!!

The rescue dogs all got a serving of boiled chicken and noodles with their thanksgiving meal. ❤️ of course they got fed ...
11/28/2024

The rescue dogs all got a serving of boiled chicken and noodles with their thanksgiving meal. ❤️ of course they got fed before I ate my meal, but now we can all relax the rest of the night.

A HUGE thank you to the Liberty Animal Shelter for accepting Emma and Arthur into their program. Liberty has a state of ...
11/16/2024

A HUGE thank you to the Liberty Animal Shelter for accepting Emma and Arthur into their program. Liberty has a state of the art facility, is no kill, and does screen homes. We got the pups fully vetted and I’m certain they will find homes there easily. From starving along Swafford road, they are now on the last leg of their journey towards forever homes. It’s totally taken a full community effort. ❤️

11/11/2024

Thank you to all of the veterans out there who help/helped keep our country safe.

11/05/2024

Under-talked about part of rescue….

The biggest thing no one could have prepared me for getting into rescue is the constant guilt.

Guilt for the dogs you can’t help. For walking out of a shelter with one dog and passing by a line of others just as deserving practically screaming help me. For that litter of puppies you got an email about, likely to be dumped and face a life of suffering because as so many other, we are full and have no where for them to go.

Guilt for having to tell people sometimes in the lowest points of their lives that you can’t help. For the good citizen trying to help a stray in an area without an animal shelter. For the overworked animal control staff pleading in your inbox. For simply not having the physical space, fosters, or funds to help and having to relay the bad news time and time again.

Guilt for the dogs you were too late to save. For looking in their eyes laying on that vet floor and know they never got to experience the life they deserved. For the dog in heart failure or puppies with parvo, too far gone to save. For knowing they very well may be leaving this world having only known suffering.

Guilt for missing a thank you to a donor or not saying thank you enough. For them not knowing how much you truly appreciate them and couldn’t be more grateful, but in the midst of all things rescue, you haven’t had a chance to get that thank you note out.

Guilt for always feeling like the time you spend with dogs isn’t enough. For having vet appointments, meet and greets, rescue missions that go longer than expected and cut into your time with them.

Guilt for having your own aging dogs at home who so much irreplaceable time with is given up. For watching, or missing watching, them age before your eyes because rescue takes over. For how much they have to share, cope and adjust to meet the needs of the constant revolving door of fosters.

Guilt for the mountain of emails and messages that go without a response because there’s simply only so much time in a day. For some messages going unopened because the subject line alone is enough to tell your empty tank at the end of a heartbreaking day, your heart literally could not bare it right now.

Guilt for taking a moment to do anything other than rescue knowing there’s that inbox full of unopened messages waiting, dog to walk, kennels to clean, appointments to schedule, so. much. paperwork. to do, the list goes on….

Guilt for not always immediately replying to foster or adopter texts because your hands are full of p**p covered puppies, in the middle of a rescue mission or other. For them not knowing you really did glance at the text on your watch to make sure it wasn’t an emergency, told yourself you’d reply as soon as you finished, but end up forgetting for a couple hours.

Guilt for being absent from family and friends, missing events, celebrations, time together. For holidays turning into some of the only times you spend together, and even then, there‘s always a good chance a rescue emergency will interfere then too.

Guilt for your own spouse at home getting whatever is left in your empty tank at the end of the day. For gracefully dealing with all the new dogs to show up out of the blue, jumping in to help get them set up. For the messy house, for the garage and spare bedrooms turning into storage rooms for supplies.

For me personally, it is the guilt.

I know I can’t be the only one either.

Be kind to your small rescues. Chances are… behind that rescue name and fancy licensing is just a single person or couple person team doing they best they can — and carrying an overwhelming amount of guilt already.

-Heather

Address

Richmond, MO
64085

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