



Behind every dog profile is a rescue group, foster home, or independent rescuer doing the daily work of saving lives.
Our rescue partners remain responsible for their dogs, their adoption decisions, and their internal processes. Our role is to help create more visibility, structure, and support around their work.
The Good Strays Project exists to support the rescue work already happening — not to replace it.


A rescue partner is a shelter, foster-based group, independent rescuer, or organization whose dogs may be listed or supported through The Good Strays Project.
Each partner may participate in different ways depending on their needs, capacity, and current situation.
Some may need help with dog visibility.
Some may need foster or volunteer support.
Some may need adoption forms or digital tools.
Some may simply need another place where their dogs can be seen.
What Is a Rescue Partner?
How the Network Works
1. Rescue groups share information
Partners provide basic information about dogs, needs, updates, or areas where support may be helpful.
2. We help organize visibility
The Good Strays Project helps create dog profiles, connect pages, organize information, or share available dogs through the network.
3. Visitors connect with the right rescue
Depending on the dog, visitors may be directed to the rescue partner’s website, contact form, social media, or a Good Strays profile page.
4. Each rescue remains in charge
Adoption decisions, foster approvals, follow-up, and final placement remain with the rescue or rescuer responsible for the dog.
Current Rescue Partners
Want to donate to a specific rescue partner?
Please use the contact or donation information listed on each partner card to support them directly.

Los Cabo Human Society
Padre Nicolás Tamaral S/N, Palmas, 23473 Cabo San Lucas, B.C.S.
direccion@loscaboshumanesociety.org
https://loscaboshumanesociety.org/
Why Rescue Partners Matter
Rescue work is often invisible to the public, but it is constant, urgent, and physically and emotionally demanding.
Our partners are the ones doing the daily work:
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Taking in abandoned or injured dogs
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Feeding, cleaning, and providing daily care
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Paying for veterinary treatment
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Finding fosters and adopters
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Managing emergencies
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Giving dogs time to heal and trust again
This project exists to help make that work easier to see, easier to support, and easier to sustain.
Ways We Support Rescue Partners
Depending on each partner’s needs, The Good Strays Project may help with:
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Dog profile visibility
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Adoption pathways
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Foster support
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Volunteer connections
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Transport support
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Creative and digital tools
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Food supply connections
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Sterilization support
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Community events
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Future training support opportunities
Important Note
The Good Strays Project is a support network. We do not take ownership of dogs listed by partner rescues, and we do not make final adoption decisions unless otherwise stated for a specific case.
Each rescue partner remains responsible for the dogs in their care, their adoption requirements, and their follow-up process.
Our role is to help increase visibility, create useful tools, and connect more people with the rescue work already happening.



