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Companion Corner: Rosie at No Paws Left Behind

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — There's a sweet girl at No Paws Left Behind who is waiting for her new family.
 
iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home.
 
Rosie is a 2-year-old female Labrador who has been at the shelter for about five months.
 
Shelter manager Noelle Howland introduced us to her.
 
"Rosie came to us as a stray from animal control that was never claimed. She's been here with us since August," she said.
 
Rosie is very athletic and it's recommended she has an owner that will let her go out for many adventures. But after a day of exploring, she will never leave your side and would be happy to stay cuddled up to you.
 
"She is very, very energetic. She is a extremely cuddly dog. So if you're looking for a dog that will love to cuddle with you on a couch, she would be the perfect fit for you," Howland said. "She's also very active, so definitely somebody that's willing to be very active, like going on walks, hikes."
 
Rosie is not at her best with men. If there is a man in the home it might take multiple visits to help her get used to him. Ideally, she is recommended to go to a home with a woman.
 
"If there was a male in the home, it would be with another female in the home, because she has not been the best with a lot of the men that she's met here," Howland said. "It would take a couple weeks for her to be OK with a male, with like a female in the home. I think it'd be a little different. But a single male, I think she would struggle a lot with so it would definitely take multiple meets for her to be OK."
 
Rosie could possibly live with an easy-going cat but will have to be the only dog as she can get rough. It is also recommended that she is in a home with children 12 and older.
 
"She will have to be an only dog, because she does tend to take playing with dogs a little too extreme, and she'll be perfectly content, and then the next minute, she does escalate it," Howland said. "So you she will be fine for play dates, but we would recommend no other dog in the home. She also will resource guard with other dogs."
 
A more experienced dog owner would be suitable to take Rosie home.
 
"If you're looking for a dog that will have playdates with other dogs, you definitely have to be able to understand when she's taking it too far," Howland said. "But otherwise she is a very, very sweet dog. And I think anybody that adopts her will be very lucky, because she is just overall very good dog."
 
Rosie is house broken and crate-trained. She can be destructive with her toys, like most dogs, and has chewed on the walls, but Howland thinks she will less prone to acting that way in a home as a shelter environment is very different.
 
Rosie can also get a little mouthy when she gets overwhelmed or excited. But she has been working on that as well as her basic commands like sit and place, or stay, which she is a pro at. She is learning that once you place her, she knows she needs to calm down.
 
But Rosie loves play, and she loves to chase and destroy her squeaky toys.
 
"Her favorite thing. She loves any balls, play with outdoors. She loves squeaky toys, but she is quite destructive," Howland said. "So, you have to be careful that you're watching her if you do give her a toy, she will eat them."
 
If you think Rosie might be a great fit for you contact No Paws Left Behind today and learn more about her on their website.

If you think Rosie might be a great fit for you contact No Paws Left Behind today and learn more about her on the website.


Tags: animal shelter,   dogs,   

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Bread-Baking Appliance Designer Moving to Mass MoCA Campus

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art Commission welcomed bread-baking appliance designers Brod & Taylor to the campus on Monday.
 
The commission voted to bring Brod & Taylor to Building 1. Owner Michael Taylor, who called into the remote meeting, said the space will primarily be used for photography and content creation to promote their products, with an overarching philosophy of growing the bread-baking community.
 
"The genesis of the whole business of this company is to really get more people involved in bread baking," Taylor said. "We think it is something that is good for individuals and good for society; the more people that bake bread the better people are off in the world. We are looking for ways to make connections between people and the community based on bread baking."
 
The 1,500-square-foot space was built out for the company and will include a home kitchen and a microbakery.
 
Taylor said the company started in 2010 and operated out of Williamstown, above the Purple Pub.
 
"It was a business that brewed slowly in the teens but since COVID, sourdough bread sort of became the center of the world. We have expanded rapidly," Taylor said, adding that the company employs around 15 employees who work in the area.
 
Two years ago, they moved to the Norad Mill in North Adams but found the space too noisy to accommodate filming and content creation, Taylor said.
 
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