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Home for C Boy
by: Jennifer K. Woldt, WI,
Thenorthwestern.com
After spending years racing other dogs, Cinnamon Boy is now content to find a comfy spot on the couch and settle in for a long nap.
This new life, one that includes lots of affection, squeaky toys and some feline roommates in addition to the couch time, is one Cinnamon Boy, or C Boy as his new owners Christopher and Brittany Crane call him, is different than the one he had as a racing greyhound at Dairyland Greyhound Park in Kenosha.
But it’s one he has come to enjoy.
“He fits right in and he enjoys the new things in his life,” Brittany Crane said. “It’s important that he gets to enjoy life and that’s what we’re trying to do.”
C Boy is one of hundreds of dogs there were left in need of a home when Dairyland Greyhound Park in Kenosha closed its doors Dec. 31 and Heart Bound Greyhound Adoption, a non-profit organization aimed at finding retired racing greyhounds their “forever homes” stepped in to help.
Greyhounds are bred to be racing dogs and were never meant to be pets, said Larry Phillips, president and one of the founders of Heart Bound. While their racing careers are short — most dogs retire by age 5 — greyhounds have an average lifespan of 12 to 13 years and need a place to live out the rest of their lives, Phillips said.
Which is where adoption groups like Heart Bound step in.
Since it was founded about three years ago, Heart Bound has helped find new homes for between 50 to 60 retired racing greyhounds. When the organization heard about Dairyland’s impending closure, Phillips said they did what they could to help find homes for the 250 to 300 dogs that were at the park.
In late November, Cinnamon Boy and Drive Me Crazy, a greyhound that was eventually adopted by a Fond du Lac family, came to Oshkosh and were placed in foster homes. Used to a life that featured wire crates, cement floors and dirt tracks, the foster homes helped acclimate the dogs to a lifestyle they had never seen before, Phillips said.
“You’re taking these dogs and putting them in a house with patio doors, stairs, mirrors and all kinds of things they’ve never seen,” Phillips said. “We’re introducing them to civilian life.”
After a short stay with a foster family, C Boy was ready to go home with his new family.
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