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Adopt Pulpet

Mixed Breed · Male · Puppy · 4 months

Pulpet is a cute puppy at the age of 6 months.He is very cheerful, loves fondling, is perfectly socialized. He likes kids. He's nice on a leash. It is about 35 cm tall and weighs 12 kg.It does not attack dogs or horses.

Read original (pl)

Pulpet to uroczy szczeniak w wieku 6 mies.Jest bardzo wesoły,kocha pieszczoty,jest doskonale zsocjalizowany.Lubi dzieci.Ładnie chodzi na smyczy.Ma ok35 cm wzrostu i waży 12 kg .Nie atakuje psów,ani koni.

Size
Age
Puppy · 4 months
Location
🇵🇱Poland
Shelter
Fundacja Wzajemnie Pomocni
Living with Pulpet
  • Good with kids
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Cared for by Fundacja Wzajemnie Pomocni · PolandLearn about Mixed Breed

Listed 2 weeks ago

Bringing Pulpet home

What you'll need for Pulpet in week one.

Hand-picked · prices indicative

  1. 01
    Required by most shelters

    Trixie Transport Box

    Sturdy plastic carrier — what most shelters require for pickup.

    View on Amazon
    €35–45
  2. 02
    Editor's pick

    Folding Wire Crate

    First-week safe space. Shelter dogs settle faster with a crate.

    View on Amazon
    €50–80
  3. 03
    Legal · EU

    Car Seatbelt Tether

    Legally required in most EU countries for transporting dogs.

    View on Amazon
    €8–12
  4. 04

    Adaptil Calming Spray

    Dog-specific pheromone diffuser. Worth it for the trip home.

    View on Amazon
    €18–25
  5. 05

    Orthopaedic Dog Bed

    Worth the upgrade — rescues often have joint issues from kennels.

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    €30–60
  6. 06
    Safer than a collar

    Padded Y-Front Harness

    Escape-proof for spooky rescues. Safer than a collar in week one.

    View on Amazon
    €20–35

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About Pulpet

What life with Pulpet looks like

Pulpet is a puppy/kitten mixed breed dog waiting at Fundacja Wzajemnie Pomocni in Poland.

Puppies need routine, gentle socialization, and roughly two short outings a day for the first year. The first six months are the formative window — house-training, leash work, and quiet exposure to traffic, other dogs, and unfamiliar people happen now or not at all. Expect early-morning wake-ups and a few months of chewing.

🇵🇱Adopting from Poland

Polish shelters maintain established transport routes to Germany, Netherlands, Austria, and Sweden. Animals leave sterilized and chipped. Adoption fees are typically lower than in Western Europe (often €50–€150) but adopters cover transport.

Poland, Poland browse more dogs in Poland.

Frequently asked

Adopting Pulpet, answered.

How do I contact the shelter about Pulpet?
Use the phone, email, or website link in the sidebar of this page. Fundacja Wzajemnie Pomocni handles screening and the adoption contract directly — TailHarbor doesn't broker the conversation. When you reach out, mention you saw Pulpet on TailHarbor so they know which animal you're asking about.
Can I adopt Pulpet if I live in another country?
Yes, in most cases. Rescues across Europe routinely place animals abroad — Fundacja Wzajemnie Pomocni will tell you what they need (EU pet passport, rabies titer, transport coordination) and whether they handle transport themselves or refer you to a partner. Plan for an extra €100–€350 in transport costs depending on distance.
Is Pulpet already vetted, vaccinated, and chipped?
Most dogs on TailHarbor leave their shelter with sterilization, current vaccinations, microchip ID, and an EU pet passport included in the adoption fee. The vet status on this page reflects what the shelter has reported — ask them directly if you need details on specific vaccines, recent bloodwork, or chronic conditions.
What happens if Pulpet isn't the right fit?
Every reputable rescue accepts an animal back if the adoption genuinely doesn't work — that's part of the standard contract. Talk it through with Fundacja Wzajemnie Pomocni early rather than rehoming privately; they know Pulpet and can place them more successfully than a second-hand listing can.
Why does the description sometimes read awkwardly?
TailHarbor translates shelter descriptions into English from the source language (PL). Translation is imperfect — names of streets, donors, and shelter-specific terms occasionally slip through unidiomatically. For the cleanest read, click the source link to see the shelter's original page.
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