Wow
what a year 2012 has been. A year that has gone down in British history,
not just for the Olympics or the Queen’s Jubilee but because Dogs Trust
Loughborough opened this year!
I’m
Nikki, Rehoming Centre Manager of the Loughborough centre and for me 2012 has
been fabulous if a little crazy!
I
started with Dogs Trust on the 3rd January 2012 and my first day did not
go well. I headed off to London HQ excited and nervous only to get stuck
on the train due to a fallen tree. Arriving 90 minutes late was not the
start that I needed but I was soon forgiven and everyone was lovely and so
passionate about me joining the UK ’s
largest dog welfare organisation. I met so many people who were just as
excited about Loughborough opening as I was.
I
was to work from my home in Warwickshire for the first few months and as I went
home that first day with my laptop under my arm, bag stuffed full of notes on
my shoulder I couldn’t wait to get started!
Meet the team |
First
job – recruitment, recruitment, recruitment! I had job descriptions to
write, adverts to approve and interview dates to sort. I had been given
some key dates including a recruitment weekend on the 18th and 19th
February which was just 6 weeks away – I had a lot of work to do! We had
40 full time roles to fill and I received nearly 900 applications for the
various posts so I spent many hours reading application forms and short listing
for interview. My small home office was packed to the rafters with forms!
January
passed in a blur and my diary for February consisted of day after day of
interviewing. I met so many people who had been eagerly watching the
centre grow from the disused pig farm it was to the amazing centre it is
now. We clearly had a lot of local support and it was great to chat with
people so enthused about improving dog welfare in the east midlands.
Difficult decisions had to be made but by mid-March I had a team – Dogs Trust
Loughborough was growing!
The other thing that was growing was the centre. My first visit to the site was at end of my first week and although it was still very much a building site I was blown away with the sheer size of the place. I remember being in the pouring rain, ankle deep in mud but thinking the centre was the most amazing thing I had ever seen. It was love at first sight! I visited each week to see things grow and develop. I’d never been involved in anything like this before and it was just brilliant.
From this |
to this |
Before
I knew it April was here and on the 15th I officially started work
at the centre with 7 members of my team. Vet Nurse Annie, Assistant
Managers Nick and Claire, TBA’s Lucy and Nico plus Adam and Pete our
Maintenance Operatives and I all met for the first time and together wandered
around this amazing centre. Everything was a bit behind schedule so we
still had builders everywhere and hard hats had to be worn but we enjoyed our
first day of getting to know one another. We then spent 2 weeks based in
our new staff room talking set up and systems and learning about how everything
in the centre worked. It was an intense 2 weeks but it soon started to
feel like home.
May
was a manic month. It started on the 1st with the rest of the
team arriving for a 2 weeks induction. I’m terrible with names and here I
was faced with a huge challenge of learning over 30 people’s names all at
once! I think I mastered it by the end of week 2!
The first dogs arrive |
Week
3 saw the arrival of the dogs and when the van full of dogs pulled into the car
park we were just giddy with excitement. Barking filled the air – yay at
last, this is what its all about. The kennels soon filled and our open
day crept ever nearer.
Those
first few weeks brought us a far number of challenges, things like getting the
cleaning regime right to catching escapee dogs but things soon started to
settle and once we opened our doors to visitors the dogs soon started going off
to new homes.
We
opened on the 1st June and within 30 minutes Canine Carer Carlie had
reserved the first dog. A few days later beautiful yellow Labrador Bob (I
had a soft spot for him the minute I saw him on the van!) was our first dog to
be adopted and he now lives with a lovely family in nearby Wymeswold.
Bob our first dog adopted |
Since
then we’ve gone from strength to strength, rehoming our 500th dog in
November. Every single member of the team both here at the centre and at
London HQ have worked so hard to get the centre off the ground and their
dedication and determination to make Dogs Trust Loughborough a success has been
truly extraordinary.
For
me personally I’ve found the experience of setting up and starting a new centre
incredible yet at times difficult and challenging. However for every low
there have been a million highs. 2012 for me has truly been a remarkable
year, I’ve moved house and now live in Lincolnshire
and I’ve also added to my own family by adopting Mork a 7 year old JRT who came
to us from Ireland .
He too has been a challenge as he’d never lived in a house before therefore
wasn’t housetrained and was petrified of a lot of people but now he is the most
adorable and lovable dog I have ever owned and is a great companion to my 12 year
old JRT Rupert. It’s a slow but steady process for Mork but he’s just
enjoyed his first Christmas, opened his first presents and definitely enjoyed
his turkey dinner so we’re doing well!
Mork
is a typical example of many of the dogs we see at the centre and I’d like to
thank every single member of staff for having so much patience and
understanding with the dogs in our care and an ever bigger thank you to
everyone who has visited this year, especially those who have added to their
family by rehoming one of our dogs. Without you we could do what we do.
Happy New Year from Nikki, Mork and Rupert and all the team at Dogs Trust
Loughborough.
1 comment:
Well done Nikki. The centre is fantastic, and without it we would never have found our beloved, life changing JRT Buster. Keep up the good work and send best wishes for 2013.
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