Dogs needing homes

Before you adopt, please read our guide: What to expect when Adopting a Rescue Border Collie.

Corrie

Corrie is a beautiful Collie cross, around 2 years old, and a neutered female.

This cute young girl was sadly handed into a dog pound as a stray and was never reclaimed. She has now come into DBARC’s care and is ready to find a loving, permanent home where she can truly thrive.

Corrie is a sweet, intelligent, and fun-loving dog. She has a bright mind and an energetic nature, making her a wonderful companion for someone who enjoys an active lifestyle. She would particularly love a home where she can take part in activities such as agility, flyball, or learning lots of fun tricks — anything that keeps both her body and mind engaged. Like most collie types, Corrie will need plenty of mental stimulation as well as physical exercise.

As we do not have any long-term history for Corrie, we would not place her in a home with children under the age of 10. Her behaviour around cats or small animals is unknown. While we do not know if she has lived with other dogs previously, she has been friendly and playful with dogs in the rescue environment. This positive behaviour will need to be continued through careful introductions to calm and well-mannered dogs.

Corrie would greatly benefit from attending training classes. This will not only help her learn new skills but also provide a structured way to socialise with other dogs. She will need an active and enriching lifestyle, along with human company for most of the day.

When a dog moves into a new home, it is a big adjustment. Everything is new — the environment, the people, the routines. Corrie will need time, patience, and understanding to help her settle and feel safe. Her new family will need to guide her, teach her house rules, and support her as she adapts to her new life.

Ongoing training and, if needed, professional behavioural support may be part of her journey. Anyone considering adoption should be fully committed to meeting her needs — not just in the first few weeks, but for her entire lifetime. Corrie will depend on her new family for her happiness, security, and wellbeing.

Please take a moment to honestly consider your lifestyle, activity levels, and long-term commitment before applying.


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If you’re interested in adopting Corrie, please apply through DBARC website:
http://www.dbarc.org.uk

Smokey

Smokey is a striking 3-year-old Border Collie with a sharp mind, incredible energy, and a true working-dog spirit. He arrived at The Spot due to his owner’s health difficulties, and while well-loved, he did not receive the structured training and confidence-building he needed. Smokey is now looking for a very experienced collie home—one that understands sensitivity, pressure, arousal, and reward cycles in high-drive dogs.

Smokey has no desire for physical contact at this stage. He finds handling uncomfortable and becomes anxious when touched or approached too closely. This is not aggression—he is simply overwhelmed, and his default coping strategy is avoidance. He will need someone patient enough to teach him that touch is optional, predictable, and safe.

What Smokey does love is fetch. It is his comfort activity, his coping mechanism, and the easiest way to build a relationship with him. He could play ball endlessly, and this would be an important tool for bonding and decompression in his new home.

Training & Behaviour

Smokey is intelligent but easily over-aroused and struggles to switch off. He hasn’t had formal training and finds it difficult to focus unless carefully managed.

He needs someone who can offer:

  • Calm, structured training sessions
  • Clear routines
  • Low-pressure interactions
  • A hands-off approach initially
  • Confidence and skill in handling sensitive, high-drive collies

Smokey:

  • Has no reliable recall
  • Pulls on the lead
  • Can be anxious around new environments and people
  • May nip if someone tries to take items from him, including food or toys
  • Is worried at the vet and usually needs sedation
  • Gets stressed in cars and barks
  • Can be left for up to three hours with enrichment
  • Enjoys scenting for hidden treats around the room

He is fine walking past dogs on a leash, but does not like them too close.

Ideal Home

Smokey needs:

  • A quiet, adult-only home
  • No children
  • No visiting children
  • No other pets
  • A secure garden
  • An owner experienced with collie behaviour, anxiety, arousal management, and hands-off training
  • Someone willing to take things slowly and give him the space he needs
  • A home that understands that Smokey may never be a cuddly dog—and that’s okay

He will thrive with someone who enjoys shaping behaviours, building confidence, and helping a sensitive dog learn to feel safe.

In Summary

Smokey is not a beginner’s dog. He is not a petting dog. But he is a clever, beautiful, sensitive collie who desperately needs the right person to help him decompress, learn the world at his own pace, and develop trust again.

With patience, boundaries, and a deep understanding of collie behaviour, Smokey will blossom. If you’re the sort of person who enjoys the journey as much as the destination — and loves helping a dog grow — Smokey could be your special project.

If you think you may be a match for Smokey, please get in touch.

Please email Gill directly at info@thebordercolliespot.com

Please provide as much detail as possible about your home, garden, lifestyle, working hours, family, other animals, age, and experience with border collies.

Please state which dog/s you are applying for and give your full address and all contact details.

Please note: We often receive a high number of applications, and while every one is read with care, unfortunately Gill does not have the capacity to respond to everyone individually. If you don’t hear back, please know it simply means we didn’t feel this particular dog was the right match for your home at this time. Thank you so much for understanding and for your support of rescue.

Sassy

???? Meet Sassy – our deaf collie

Sassy is a beautifully sensitive young Border Collie who forms deep bonds once she feels safe. With people she trusts, she’s soft, affectionate, and responsive — a dog who wants to connect and be close, often pressing gently in for contact or resting quietly by your side.

She’s also a dog with a fragile nervous system and a history that’s left her easily overwhelmed by sudden change. New people, new environments, or too much fuss too soon can send her into a state of anxiety where she doesn’t know how to cope.

Sassy is deaf, which adds to her vulnerability in new surroundings — she can’t rely on sound to predict what’s coming, so she depends heavily on visual and emotional cues from those she trusts. Sudden movement or touch from behind can startle her.

When she feels safe, she’s truly delightful: she enjoys gentle walks, soft attention, and calm companionship. Her recall with familiar people is excellent; she’s attentive and eager to please once she understands what’s being asked of her.

Behaviour Notes

  • Fear & Stress: Sassy can become overwhelmed by too much handling or excitement. When her stress builds, she may “shut down” or react defensively (for example, showing teeth or snapping). This isn’t aggression — it’s communication and fear.
  • Environment: She thrives on calm predictability. Loud noise, fast movement, or emotional tension quickly raises her stress levels.
  • Other Dogs: She has previously lived peacefully with another calm dog, but she can become defensive if she feels insecure or if competition for attention arises. She would likely do best as an only dog or with a very steady, gentle companion.
  • Handling: She needs a “hands-off until invited” approach, allowing her to seek contact rather than being reached first.

Ideal Home

Sassy needs an experienced, patient owner who understands body language and can give her structure, calmness, and space to settle at her own pace.

She will thrive in:

  • A quiet, adult-only home
  • A predictable daily routine with minimal change
  • A secure garden where she can explore safely
  • Someone who uses positive reinforcement only and will never rush or scold her for fear-based reactions

A home experienced with deaf dogs would be perfect — one that uses visual cues, clear body language, and gentle consistency.

Training & Communication

Sassy responds beautifully to calm, consistent guidance. She can learn visual hand signals for basic cues such as “sit,” “down,” and “come.” A simple thumbs-up can become her “good girl” marker — she learns fast when the teaching is kind and structured.

She benefits greatly from:

  • Crate/den training for security
  • Scatter feeding and sniffing games to lower stress
  • Short, calm walks in quiet areas
  • Predictable handling routines (always from the front, never sudden touch)

In Summary

Sassy isn’t a dog for everyone — but for the right person, she’ll be one of those unforgettable dogs who give everything once they trust you. She’s sensitive, intelligent, and capable of deep affection, but she needs time and quiet understanding to let her heart open.

With patience, stability, and gentle communication, Sassy will become a loyal, loving companion — the kind of dog who doesn’t just live with you, but bonds with you for life.

Please email Gill directly at info@thebordercolliespot.com

Please provide as much detail as possible about your home, garden, lifestyle, working hours, family, other animals, age, and experience with border collies.

Please state which dog/s you are applying for and give your full address and all contact details.

Please note: We often receive a high number of applications, and while every one is read with care, unfortunately Gill does not have the capacity to respond to everyone individually. If you don’t hear back, please know it simply means we didn’t feel this particular dog was the right match for your home at this time. Thank you so much for understanding and for your support of rescue.