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Illinois Birddog Rescue's Have A Heart 10 Calendar Contest

Welcome to Illinois Birddog Rescue's 10th Anniversary Have A Heart Calendar contest. The fundraising from our last 9 contests have helped us raise much needed funds for so many dogs struggling with heartworms and tick-borne disease infections, besides other special needs dogs and seniors. Here are our cover dogs from the last 9 years. This year's contest is dedicated to helping a few more dogs fighting heartworms, tick borne disease and other serious health problems.

The photos that receive the most votes during the contest will win PAWSOME prizes, and the top 12 vote-getters will be featured in our Have A Heart 10- 2026 calendar. The rest of the photo submissions will be inserted into the date boxes.

We encourage you to enter the contest with your favorite photo of your dog/dogs/cat and write a few words about why your dog is so special as I use that in the text of the winning calendar pages. Check out last year's Special Winning Calendar Pages, featuring Pointers, Setters, Mutts and Seniors.

Then invite your family and friends to vote for your photo! The contest is open to anyone, and it is only $10 to enter your photo.

Voting is easy and fun. Votes are $1 each with a $5 minimum donation. Each dollar donated equals an equivalent number of votes. (A $5 donation equals 5 votes, a $10 donation equals 10 votes, etc.) A minimum donation of $5 is required. The proceeds will benefit Illinois Birddog Rescue and fund the medical expenses for many of our heartworm positive and special needs dogs. You can vote as often as you like during the contest, and you can apply all your votes to one photo or vote for multiple photos too and with so many lovely dogs- we encourage that!

For the best chance to win, be sure to spread the word about your dog's entry into the contest on Facebook, Instagram, email and other socials. Also ask family and friends to go online and support your entry. You can use the sharing buttons that appear on your dog's photo page to share your photo entry with your Facebook friends, and you can email links to family and friends to encourage voting for your dog's photo.

Each year we bring in many dogs that need extra care due to neglect and this year has brought us many new dogs and puppies in need. Our cover dogs:

All have heartworm disease and tick-borne disease and 3 dogs also fighting an added horrendous fungal infection called Blastomycosis. Heartworms and tick-borne disease is challenging enough, but an added infection of Blastomycosis has been a difficult diagnosis—but we are doing our best to help Daisy, Hazel and Queenie recover. Blastomycosis often looks like a snowstorm in the lungs on a chest x-ray. We are treating our girls with an extra medication called Itraconazole and that expense is an extra $90 a month and it could take up to a year or longer for them to recover. So far, the girls are doing well and are in foster homes dedicated to helping them get better.



The cost to medicate 1 heartworm dog for 1 year through our slow-kill program can be in the hundreds and thousands especially if there are additional medical procedures needed like x-rays, dentals, tumor removal, etc. Many dogs take longer to become heartworm negative with slow- kill, but it is an ideal treatment plan as the dogs don't need months of cage confinement and can have normal low-key exercise and play. Finding homes for these dogs can be challenging but so far GSP -Hank, and Beagles Jed and Markus have found Foster to Adopt homes already and thanks to last year's contest, I had supplies for all on hand to get them started.


Ten Years Of Have A Heart
It's hard to believe we are starting our 10th Have A Heart Calendar Contest fundraiser. I have personally helped quite a few dogs in foster care recover from heartworms—promoting the Slow-Kill program as a less harsh treatment method and we have had so many successes the last 10 years. As this is our 22nd year as an official 501c3 Charity- we really hope we can raise some much-needed donations to help our current 10 heartworms positive dogs and many more dogs and puppies in 2026. Our heartworm slow-kill program and high standards of testing for underlying tick-borne disease is the best in the country. We hope we can get a lot of support again this year as nearly every dog we brought in this past year was infected. Here is last year's HAVE A HEART 9 CONTEST & PREVIOUS WINNERS. What a contest it was too!!
Prizes
GRAND PRIZE WINNER- the photo entry with the most votes/donations:
This year we have a lovely prize set that includes a Bissell PET HAIR ERASER Vacuum, a Guidesman Safari Club Chair (featuring Cinders), Flavors of Fall Coffee, pair of Illinois Birddog Rescue Anniversary mugs and an ALL FOR PAWS Pheasant toy.

The winning photo will also be the cover of the Have a Heart 9 Calendar Contest and an insert into the calendar.



2nd - 12th place Dogs:
Second through twelfth place winners win the eleven other coveted monthly calendar cover pages and a new Have A Heart 10 Calendar.

Bonus Prizes:
  • TOP POINTER, TOP ENGLISH SETTER, TOP GSP, TOP BRITTANY and TOP BEAGLE will also win the great prizes featured below.



  • We are also offering prizes for TOP Senior (dogs 7 or older) or in Memorium, TOP Kitty *new* and TOP Mutt.



  • Also NEW for this year is TOP Pointing photo- featuring these special pheasant themed prizes, and if the winner is local- 1 of IBR's President's homemade pumpkin pies! YUM!!

About Us
Who We Are
Illinois Birddog Rescue (IBR), is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization and licensed shelter by the Illinois Department of Agriculture. We are dedicated to saving, transporting, vetting, fostering, and adopting homeless American Field bred Pointers and English Setters. Most of the dogs and puppies in our foster care program were strays or owner surrenders pulled from overcrowded shelters and humane societies from all over the United States. Perhaps some weren't winning enough in Field Trials, maybe some became too old to hunt or to have litters of puppies, but many were gun shy. Due to IBR's tick borne disease research, we know that many dogs and puppies infected with Lyme disease and co infections can not scent point as these diseases affect their natural hunting instincts. A dog that can not smell a bird and point is often a dog that will wind up in a shelter or worse- shot dead in a field for non performance. Many of these dogs have never had any flea and tick protection and many come in with heartworm disease due to never having any monthly preventative. WE do know that these diseases are also passed from mother to pup so many dogs are disposed of young as rejects through no fault of their own and once treated- gain back their natural hunting drive and scent pointing abilities. Sadly, all were in danger of being euthanized - never reaching their full potential until we pulled them to safety. We also take in Pointers and Setters from families that have been hit hard financially and are struggling due to the economy. These dogs come in from owners who have lost their jobs, some are facing foreclosure, some are going through divorce and sadly in many cases some have to be rehomed due to their owners passing away. On average we bring in 80 to 100 Pointers, Setters and a few mutts in between every year as funds allow and depending on foster care openings. IBR has adopted dogs on both coasts and several states in between besides Canada. Once an adopter is screened and approved and the adoption is finalized.


The IBR Foster Care Program
Since our beginnning, we have been housing rescue dogs and puppies with foster care volunteers who open their homes to these neglected animals. We are lucky to have working foster homes in Illinois (licensed by the Il Department of Agriculture), Indiana, Ohio, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. Once in foster care, we access the dog or puppy's health and complete our vetting protocols which include the following; heartworm testing and treatment, tick panel testing and treatment (many dogs with heartworm also have tick borne illnesses so recovery time is doubled), fecals to check for intestinal parasites and protozoa and de-worming if necessary, Parvovirus and Distemper combination vaccinations, Rabies vaccinations, spaying and neutering, micro-chipping, dentals if necessary and for our special needs dogs, CBC (complete blood count) and chemistry and any major surgeries including mastectomies for mammary cancer and additional tumor/growth removals. In home foster care allows for the dog or puppy to be treated as a member of the family while learning to be cage trained and house broken. Dogs and puppies are also socialized and desensitized to normal household noises, and are treated with kindness and tender loving care especially if they have suffered terrible abuse.


Homeless Hunters

Our focus on adopting working hunters into pet homes help us dispel old wives tales passed on through generations of birddog owners and field trailers who think that all hunting dogs must live outdoors to keep their scenting abilities and that they also need their testicles and uteruses to be successful in the field. On the contrary, we have disproved these out of date ideals. All of our adoptables are spayed or neutered as required by the Illinois Department of Agriculture shelter regulations and all must live indoors as family pets as required by IBR's hunting/pet home guidelines. This not only prevents unwanted pregnancies—but spaying and neutering prevents long term health issues like testicular cancer in males besides their desire to roam, and spaying females helps prevent mammary cancer. Testing every incoming dog using our strick tick borne disease screening also helps us get these dogs better, and many with multiple infections, once treated for many months gain back their natural hunting instincts and drive. We try to test some of our more talented adoptees on pheasant in the fall and when pheasant is available and are delighted to see dogs with no signs of natural instincts start pointing once antibiotic therapy is started. Lyme disease especially can hurt a dog's natural scenting abilities.

We hope that our successful adoptions of these altered homeless and treated hunters will help educate the birddog public in that spaying or neutering a working hunter never lessens their desire to hunt. As a matter of fact these dogs are more focused as hunting companions. Also, living indoors (and in most cases on the furniture or in bed with their owners) has no negative affect on their bird scenting abilities. Our successful adoptions to hunting families where these dogs and puppies are treated as family pets also helps us promote that a dog with a strong bond to their owner is that much more confident, loyal and happy to work side by side with their master on upland birds. Thru patience, kindness and commitment, quality and expensive vetting protocols, many of our dogs regain their confidence in the IBR program and are back working in the field to the joy of their adopters.


Ticked Off
Recently, our research into tick borne illnesses (Anaplasma, Babesia, Bartonella, Ehrlichia Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever) has been tremendously helpful in diagnosing dogs with fear aggression, scatterbrained obsessive compulsive behavior, cage anxiety, depression, lethargy and anemia, joint pain, stiffness and arthritis, liver and kidney damage including incontinence, deafness, cataracts, unexplained fevers and death. Most dogs that are infected with any of these terrible diseases have no focus or energy and in many cases lose their scenting abilities are dramatically affected as these diseases attack the central nervous system and can cause brain damage besides chronic pain and suffering. Because of the uniqueness of the breeds we rescue, we can always tell when our infected dogs are recovering as they start to settle down and once their brain starts to heal—they start to point. They point tweety birds, they point squirrels and eventually and much to our delight, they will point upland birds. We are certain that these unfortunate dogs have been dumped by their owners and deemed useless because of their undiagnosed illnesses, but our success rate in re-homing these dogs post antibiotic treatment— especially into working hunting pet homes has been quite successful. Currently our incoming infection rate of new foster dogs is over 90 percent. Check out our new Ticked Off! section to view our recent research into this important health issue affecting our pets.


The Cost of Neglect
Please take a minute to read The Cost of Neglect. This document profiles the conditions some dogs enter rescue and what it takes to get them ready for adoption.
Rules
  1. Contest is open to ALL pet lovers all over the world!!
  2. Entry donation per photo is $10 (which covers the cost of one heartguard for one of our heartworm positive dogs), and voting is $1 each with a $5 minimum – but you can vote for several entries.
  3. Pet submissions can be any dog or cat breed.
  4. High resolution photo submissions and horizontal preferred- but any submissions are welcome.
  5. Photos can include multiple pets- no humans please.
  6. Pointing photos are of the dog only.
  7. Please include a paragraph that tells voters something endearing about your special pet to help get votes and more donations. This text will be used in the composition of the winning dog pages. Please use 150 words or less (this may be used in the text of the calendar as a caption for winning pages).
  8. All submitted photos become the property of Illinois Birddog Rescue, Inc. By entering the contest, entrants grant Illinois Birddog Rescue, Inc. permission to use submitted photos to be utilized by the organization to further its mission.
  9. All photos must be uploaded.
  10. EVERY photo submission will be added into the Have A Heart 10 Calendar up to 365 days. Additional calendars may be produced featuring like themes- Pointers/ Setters/ Mutts, etc.
  11. Entry submissions and voting ends at midnight (11:59:59 PM Central Time) on Saturday, December 6, 2025.
  12. All photos are subject to approval by Illinois Birddog Rescue Inc.
  13. All donations are non-refundable.
  14. First prize winner will be notified on IBR's Facebook page and by phone or email.
  15. Bonus Raffle prize winners will be notified by email.
  16. All remaining top 12 winners will be notified on IBR's Facebook page and by phone or email about their winning prizes.
  17. Illinois Birddog Rescue, Inc. is a 501(c)3 organization. Donations are tax deductible as allowed by law.
  18. BE CREATIVE and HAVE FUN and share share share!!!!

Thanks for helping us raise
$15,786

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Illinois Birddog Rescue
P.O. Box 364
Wood Dale, IL 60191
illinoisbirddogrescue.org
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