All About Change - Chrissy Beckles - Giving New Life to Stray Dogs in Puerto Rico
Episode Date: December 11, 2023The correlation between boxing and rescuing stray dogs isn’t one that’s clear at first glance. But for Chrissy Beckles, founder of the Sato Project, the connection is one she makes each and every ...day. Since 2011, the Sato Project has rescued more than 8,000 dogs in Puerto Rico. With nearly half a million stray dogs roaming the island, there’s no one knockout solution. Chrissy sat down with host Jay Ruderman to talk about the long journey, from gaining feral dogs’ trust, to finding funding, to weathering a category 5 hurricane. Please fill out the Listener Feedback Form - Linked HereSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I will never forget the first day I walked on that beach. It was a life-changing moment for me because I walked onto there and there were just dogs everywhere, like hundreds of them running in packs.
We put them there, but we're the ones that can help them because we've taken away a lot of their original instincts to hunt and to fend for themselves, to feed themselves.
feed themselves. Hi, I'm Jay Rudiman, and welcome to All About Change, a podcast showcasing individuals who leverage the hardships that have been thrown at them to better other people's lives.
This is all wrong. I say put mental health first because if you don't... This generation of
Americans has already had enough. I stand before you not as an expert, but as a concerned citizen.
Chrissy Beckles never expected to be where she is today.
But after a fateful trip to Puerto Rico, she felt she had no choice.
I flew back to New York and I just spent the entire plane ride thinking, like, what am I going to do? Like, I don't know what I'm going to do, what it's going to look like.
But I know I need to do something.
Like, I can't get back to Brooklyn and forget what I've seen.
What she'd seen were packs of starving stray dogs, hundreds of them, roaming the beaches and streets in Puerto Rico.
In the weeks following her visit, she was
inspired to start the Saddle Project. There are currently estimated to be in excess of half a
million here on island. And to give you a metric and a visual, Puerto Rico is roughly the size of
the state of Connecticut. In the years since then, in the face of underfunding, a pandemic,
and a Category 5 hurricane, Chrissy and the Saddle Project have rescued more than 8,000 dogs.
Chrissy Beckles, thank you so much for being my guest on All About Change. I really look forward to this discussion as I am a dog lover, as many of us are, and I
know you are.
Maybe you could take a step back and talk about why there's such a strong connection
between humans and canines.
From my personal perspective, I grew up with animals, so I've always had an affinity and a connection.
I think if I take a step back and look at the larger picture, it's something that we as a species have started.
And I think in some cases we've taken it a little bit too far, our reliance on other species and tried to mold them to what we believe they should be.
I see that a lot with dogs. The canine and human connection started when dogs were trying to get
warmth around a campfire. Then hundreds of millions of years later, we've essentially
positioned those animals to be reliant on us.
And that's something that I see in our day-to-day work that the stray and the abandoned dogs we're dealing with are in that scenario because of us, because of humans.
It's a conflicting position to be in.
We put them there, but we're the ones that can help them.
Right.
we put them there but we're the ones that can help them right uh because we've taken away a lot of their original instincts to hunt and to you know fend for themselves to to feed themselves right i
happen to have been in south africa on safari once and you know encountered some wild dogs and they are a completely different species than our domesticated dogs.
Yeah, absolutely. It's not just we've made them relying on us. It's what we've done to them,
you know, in differing breeds. Like if you look at what bulldogs look like,
even a hundred years ago, they looked very different to what they look like now. Like we
have bred them to look cuter and to be more
appealing to us as a species at a detriment to them and how they can survive.
What did you do professionally before you started this endeavor?
My background was advertising and marketing. So I had my own consulting business,
but I was also a champion amateur boxer that was competing in New York.
I didn't get paid for what I did, but I had a couple of titles.
I boxed in Madison Square Garden three times, won New York Golden Gloves,
a couple of other titles.
And crazily enough, there is a huge correlation in boxing and rescue,
believe it or not.
There's a lot of things
that I take from my training. Like my coaches would always instill in me that the fight should
be the easiest part of what you do. The training has to be the hardest. And, you know, that's what
we do every day in rescue. It's like we're training for the big moments and that's where all of your effort
has to go. You can't be afraid to take a knee. It's not a bad thing if in the ring you get hit
and you're seeing the birds flying around your head or whatever, stars, disco lights,
whatever you want to call it. Taking that knee is not a sign of weakness. It's actually a sign
of strength to give you a beat, to give you a moment, to gather yourself, to listen to your
corner and then get up and continue with either a better plan or stronger. And then the other thing
is that boxing, you enter the ring on your own, but you have a team in your corner and you should always
listen to your corner because they can win a fight for you. And they can see things that you
might not be able to see in that moment. And so by listening to them, it can change the entire nature
of a fight and the result of a fight. So a lot of my boxing training has had a huge impact on
what we do in rescue. And one of our taglines is that we fight for the dogs of Puerto Rico,
and we do. If I get in a ring now and I fight, it's to raise money for and to raise awareness
of what's going on on the island.
So paint us a picture of your first visit to Puerto Rico.
I understand you visited with your husband, who was a stuntman at the time.
Correct, yeah.
So he quickly transitioned from boxing into stunt work. He's smart, and he soon realized that he could get a lot more money
for pretending to get hit than actually being hit.
So, yeah, he's been working in the stunt industry for almost 25 years now.
And he's very successful.
He does a tremendous job.
And he was filming in Puerto Rico.
It was 2007.
He was filming a movie called Che with Benicio Del Toro.
filming a movie called Che with Benicio Del Toro.
And they were, him and a group of other stunt guys were living in Puerto Rico.
They were down here for a couple of months.
He had never been to the island before.
I had never visited before.
And I was coming to spend a week with him.
And he said to me before I arrived,
like, you're going to freak out when you see the dogs here.
And I was like, oh, that doesn't sound good. We had one dog at the time, a little Jack Russell named Basher.
And so I arrived on island and was completely immediately overwhelmed with what I saw.
There were dogs everywhere. It's something that in day-to-day life, depending on where you are in the US, you don't ordinarily see.
I know this is a situation that is not unique to Puerto Rico and I've traveled Europe and I've
seen stray situations in Greece and other areas, but it was different here. There was definitely kind of another level to,
there was a lot of indifference to the animals,
to the dogs that we were seeing.
And if I picked one up,
I could literally see like the looks of horror
on people's faces that are like,
oh, you know, why are you touching that dog?
You know, it looks like a rat
or it's got a skin disease and you're gonna get it.
There was a definitive lack of
empathy and again not from everybody it's a certain amount of people and and if that happens
often enough people it becomes the norm if you know if you've grown up and you're used to seeing
animals on the street then it's not shocking to you you. If it goes from generation to generation, then it's nothing new.
And it's something that is the norm.
To me, it was incredibly overwhelming.
And I spent a week wondering, what the heck do I do here?
I flew back to New York.
And I just spent the entire plane ride thinking, what am I going to do?
I don't know what I'm going to do,
what it's going to look like, but I know I need to do something. Like I can't get back to Brooklyn
and forget what I've seen. And so I did some research. I reached out to every organization
I could find that had a website. And I think a hundred percent of them, it was literally a static page with a general email address,
some photographs, and that was it. And I wrote to everybody and two organizations got back to me and
I started volunteering for them. I mean, it's kind of the complete 360 years. Those are the emails.
I get hundreds of them now every day. It's like I came, I saw what can I do.
I was in a position where I have my own consulting organization. I earn a very good amount of money, so I could donate a lot of money to these organizations.
I got what I like to call my Harvard education in rescue over like an 18-month period of
coming to Puerto Rico, volunteering, learning what went into rescuing
dogs, transporting, vetting, et cetera. And about a year into that, we adopted our first Sato,
who we named Boom Boom, which is my ring name, my boxing name. She was a puppy that came from
one of the five municipal shelters on island. um she was the only member of her family that
survived so we gave her like a fighter's name which was mine and the minute she arrived in
brooklyn it was like game over i i said to barbie like i can't half-ass this anymore i need to do
more and i am incredibly lucky that i have a wonderfully supportive and understanding husband that I turned around to him and said, I want to, you know, do this full time.
And he said to me, well, we have like the Beckles family motto is if you're going to do something, you don't f*** it up.
So I want to ask you about stray dogs.
it up. So I want to ask you about stray dogs. These are dogs that are just either abandoned or have been born as strays and are just scavenging. Yeah. How do they live? How do
these dogs survive? And the other thing that I would ask you is, is this problem more exacerbated
in Puerto Rico as opposed to other countries in the Caribbean or other places around
the world? I can't think of another area that small that has a concentration of stray and
abandoned animals this large. So I would say I think it's really bad here. Satos, that's the
colloquial term for stray dog or street dog, as they're known in
Puerto Rico, there are currently estimated to be in excess of half a million here on island. And
to give you a metric and a visual, Puerto Rico is roughly the size of the state of Connecticut.
So if you think of it in those terms, that if Connecticut had half a million stray dogs running around,
it would be front page news in every newspaper. It would be the ticker on every news channel, but it's not. It is something that is widely ignored here in PR. Obviously, my organization
is working incredibly hard to change the situation down here, as are many others.
But it's, you know, it's overwhelming. I always say like, we're the island that can't get a
breakdown here. I started rescuing in 2007. So 10 years later, Hurricane Maria hits the island as a
category five hurricane. It makes landfall at Dead Dog Beach where we have always concentrated
our work. So it was very, very personal to us. And in that moment, I lost not only like the 10
years of work that we had done as an organization, I lost my home. I lost everything I owned.
Like we were set back over a decade in one day.
And, you know, we had to pick ourselves up and keep moving forward.
And it's that adage that, you know, this wasn't a need.
This was almost like a KO to us, if you look at it in boxing terms.
And so when that happened, a lot of people, like 5% of the island's population left, and not everybody took their animals with them. So you have a large number of dogs and cats entering an already huge stray and abandoned population.
stray and abandoned population. Sadly, there is not a culture of spaying and neutering here in Puerto Rico. It's something that, again, we as an organization are working very, very hard
to change. So you've got all these, you know, this new population entering into an already
large population and there's an explosion. And I could see it from day one. I said, like, in
six weeks, we're going to
be inundated with poppies. And it's going to be the same thing, like six weeks after that. And
that's what happened. It's really hard to get ahead of it when, you know, it's a very few amount
of people that are fighting to make these changes. And we, you know, we can't get the government to get on board.
Let's talk about that a little bit about the government, because Puerto Rico is a territory
of the United States. What is the position of the government in terms of this issue?
I mean, I've met with four governors. I've been yes to death by each of them. You know,
I'm this girl that came from England that has arrived in Puerto Rico and is trying to
help the stray dogs. And so I guess I'm a bit of an anomaly to them. And they yes me to death while
I'm sat in front of them and then nothing gets done. So at this point, I'm like, I'm not going
to waste my time anymore. I have to put in that fighter's mentality that I'm going to throw the
first punch and I'm going to get out there ahead of it. So if I wait for them, I'd still be waiting.
So, Christy, tell us what is Dead Dog Beach
and what did it look like to you the first time you arrived there?
Dead Dog Beach is a name that was,
this is not a name that me or my organization has given to that beach.
Its official name is Playa Lucia.
It's in the municipality of Yabucoa, which is on the southeast coast of Puerto Rico.
And it was given that name by the locals. And I had heard about this beach and one of the
organizations that I was volunteering for in the beginning, a group called Manos Por Patos,
was working to try and help the dogs there. there was a local school teacher sandra sintron
that was helping to feed these dogs and it's just you know she'd given as many of them as she could
names she identified them by like their differing packs and each pack had like a different pack
leader but it's it's like where do you start and? And I said to her, who do you choose who gets
rescued? And it came down to money. And so that was a huge motivating moment to me that for the
first couple of years of doing this, I had to stand in front of these dogs and decide which one was going to live
and the rest of them, you know, I was essentially leaving them to a death sentence. And it happened
on one too many occasions where I would go and feed them and then I would go back, you know,
a few days later and some of them would be missing and you would never know what happened to them.
The first pictures now coming in from puerto rico after taking a direct hit hurricane maria slamming into the island and as
you heard one official saying the island is destroyed maria is the first category four to
hit there in nearly a century 150 mile an hour winds ripping buildings apart knocking out power
everywhere all of the electricity is out tonight. It was horrific. It truly was. So, you know, I decided that if I was going to do,
if I was going to set up my own organization, there were certain ways I wanted to do it.
And one thing that was very important to me was I needed to be able to see I was making a difference. And so by concentrating our rescue
efforts in one area, specifically on this beach, then we could visibly and tangibly see the impact
that we were having. And if you walk on that beach today, you won't see a single dog. There are
a feral pack of eight dogs that are living there that we are
working really hard to gain their trust to, you know, spay, neuter, vaccinate them and then release
them again. Cause sadly they are feral and they're not candidates for our rescue program.
But it's, I get emails from people that will say, or, or, you know, messages on social media,
people say, well, I went to Dead Dog Beach
and I didn't see any dogs. And I'm like, well, that's a good thing. That's because we've rescued
over 8,000 dogs from there. And in 2016, we started a community spay, neuter vaccine and
microchip program that originally started as a subsidized program where we would charge people $35.
They could get their dog or their cat spayed, neutered, vaccinated, and microchipped.
And the Sato project covered the balance of the bill for the surgeries.
But we soon realized that we had to change that model to a completely free of charge
one.
And it was a difficult transition to make because
anybody that, and I spoke to, I did a lot of research when we were setting up that program.
I spoke to like the people at Soy Dog out in Thailand who were doing incredible work and that,
that essentially is their model. It's like CNBR, it's like capture, neuter, vaccinate, release.
nbr it's like capture neuter vaccinate release and i spoke to other organizations that were doing this work to see what the best model was and at the time the the overwhelming like answer was
that you you need to put a little bit of value on the services that you're giving and so that's why
we did the co-pay but when i had people that were coming that literally had a jar like this big that was loaded with coins and they were tipping it out and saying, like, here's my $35, it soon became apparent that we needed to change that model to a completely free of charge one.
And that's what we operate to this day.
So I just want to understand on this beach, are these dogs who have been living there for a while,
do people abandon their dogs there? Is it a combination of both?
So when I first started visiting that beach, it was definitely a dumping ground. There's only two
entrances to the beach and it's not like there's a residential community nearby. So dogs are not
making their own way there. There is not a food source on that beach. So it's not like, you know,
this fast food stands or anything like that, that they're going to gravitate towards. Some of the
conditions that we found dogs in where they're not able to walk, we unequivocally know somebody drove them there and dumped them. And in the
beginning, I think it was a dumping ground. And then as word got out that we were working there,
I think now it's a scenario where people will drive dogs there and dump them there because
they know that my organization works there. And in the beginning, when you've got
such a large population, then, you know, there were huge amounts of litters of puppies being born and
extraordinary large litters, and not all of them, you know, are going to survive because they just
can't in that kind of environment. So you would maybe get two or three out of a litter of 12 surviving. But nature knows
that if this dog's only going to have two, they're not going to survive. And so you have an explosion
of dogs. And we have a visual that I can share with you. It's basically a chart. And one unsterilized dog or pair of dogs can be responsible for over 67,000 puppies in a five-year period.
That's them having puppies and then dogs at six months old can become pregnant.
So you've essentially got puppies having puppies.
And those numbers, people say, no, that's not right.
That's not believable.
It is because we're seeing it.
How do you think we got to over half a million stray dogs on this island?
It absolutely can happen and is happening.
And by rescuing there and concentrating there and not running over the entirety of Puerto Rico,
we were able to, you know, clear the beaches and that in a combination
of working with the local community and educating about spay-neuter vaccines, hand in hand,
they have definitively proved that change can be made and it's been made, you know, on that beach.
So Christy, let me ask you a little bit
about how your team works
because I understand the dogs are in really tough shape.
They're afraid of humans.
I read one story about dogs were starving
and chewing on rocks because there was no food.
How do you go about approaching the dogs,
earning their trust,
being able to spay and neuter the dogs and eventually, you know, capture them to be able to get them to a better place?
That is a whole situation that is evolving. In the beginning, you know, I wanted every dog on
that beach to be able to have a home. And there was a mother and daughter on that beach
that took me eight years to capture them, to rescue them.
Like you couldn't touch them.
That was a combination of them having a familiar face every day.
And we have incredible team members and volunteers
that work with our organization.
So for Dead Dog Beach, for example, Natalia and Samwell,
who work with me, they go there pretty much every day to give food and fresh water to the dogs
there. So dogs are creatures of habit. So if they're seeing the same person every day and
you're the food source for them, they soon begin to understand that you are not the enemy. You're not going to hit them.
You're not going to throw things at them. You're the good people. And so it's a combination of
maybe hand feeding. We do use humane traps. It's getting them to trust you.
And the easiest way to do that, if a dog is dumped, we need to get them like within 24 or 48 hours of them being dumped on that beach.
Because if we don't, they're going to start to fall in with one of the packs.
And then they're going to start to revert to like feral behaviors.
So we try and get them kind of as soon as they appear there.
The ones that have been there for any kind
of length of time, certainly the ones that are there now, they're not candidates for rescue.
And that's been a difficult realization for me to have because I started this organization from the
place where I wanted every dog to be in a home and every dog to experience being part of a family.
And it goes back to the first question you asked me
about the relationship between people and their dogs.
Not all of these dogs want to be around humans.
They have had no positive experiences.
And to put them in that scenario is almost as cruel as doing nothing about it.
It's something I don't think I'll ever be comfortable with.
But I have come to see from experience and just know with the sheer number of dogs that need help on this island that we
can't rescue them all we can't rescue our way out of what is a crisis here now and so you have to
you have to make a decision and there's two ways to solve situations like this and that's what it
comes down to you either there's mass euthanasia or there's mass spay and neuter.
And when I say spay and neuter, it's like CNVR.
It's capture or collect, spay, neuter, vaccinate, return.
You know, because there's not the space.
There's not the outlet for all of these dogs.
And, you know, a certain percentage of them are not candidates to go into homes.
And, you know, a certain percentage of them are not candidates to go into homes.
And so you have to do the next most humane thing, which is ensure that they're not having litters every few weeks, vaccinate them so they can't keep spreading contagious and infectious
disease, and give them a food and a water source every day.
You know, the ones that are candidates, we'll gladly take them.
day. You know, the ones that are candidates, we'll gladly take them. And there is no greater day than rescue day when we pick up a, you know, a puppy or a dog and they are frightened. And you see that
moment where, and I say the same thing to every single one, like you need to, please trust me
because your life is going to change. And sometimes it happens in an instant and sometimes
it can take months, but it happens. So how do you decide which dogs are candidates for rescue?
They will usually tell you. The dogs that we're working with on Dead Dog Beach right now,
we've been working with them for some of them for a year
and a half. And at that point in a year and a half, if you still cannot put a hand on one of
these dogs, then you kind of know your answer. They don't want to be near you. They see you
coming and they'll come out for their food, but they're not coming to you to seek affection or anything else.
They are coming to you as a food source and a water source. That is it.
And believe you me, I wish it was different.
But like I say, it's been a difficult thing for me to reconcile with myself. And I know my team find it very, very hard as well,
because we're the organization that has taken more than 8,000 dogs and from, you know, a life
of hell and trying to survive. And we see them now in homes and, you know, we, we fly all of our dogs
up to New York for adoption and we, we see them in homes and they are you know I want some of our adopters to adopt me because the the lives that some of our dogs are
having are unbelievable it's you know everything that you could wish for a little dog that was
dumped on a place called dead dog beach or born on a place called dead dog beach but
there are some and and we you know we've learned it the hard way where we
impressed on a dog that yeah your life's going to change and this is going to be great
and it's you know it's not turned out well it's been a dog that can't be in the city and then
you're having to move them and and try and get them in a scenario where they do feel more comfortable and they never are.
And so that's where it comes down to, you've got to take your feelings out of the scenario and say, what can I do to help this dog live the best life they can live without taking all emotion
out of the scenario? So how do you decide who gets to adopt a dog?
And I understand that you're flying the dogs
once they're rehabilitated,
the ones that you can from Puerto Rico to New York.
How do you decide who has the opportunity to adopt a dog?
So we have kind of a unique model
in the fact that we quarantine
and we do all of our vetting on island and that that takes time and we have an unprecedented vetting protocol and that
was one thing that i was really adamant about when i started this organization i i kind of i did the
reverse kind of psychology on myself and my cpa was holding his head in his hands like,
Chrissy, this is not how you're supposed to do this. Because I was like, if money was no object,
and that was when he put his head in his hands and he's like, you're a nonprofit,
money's always an object. But I was like, if money is no object, how do we vet these dogs to the highest standards to ensure that when we put them on a plane, they're not going to be
transporting any communicable disease.
And they can go straight into a home with other animals and live with a family.
And it's been an evolving process.
It's incredibly expensive.
It's time consuming.
And so some people immediately take themselves out of being candidates to be adopters because they'll see that we're rescuing dogs and they're immediately like, I want to adopt that dog. And you say, well, we just rescued the dog.
They've got to go. They've got to be quarantined. We've got to do diagnostic testing. There's some
tests that we might not get results on or that we have to repeat in a month's time that then give us a result that might in turn take six
months to treat. Are you willing to wait six months for this dog? And not everybody is.
We have a very strict adoption application. My team, my adoption coordinator, Melissa,
is incredible. She has a wonderful team of volunteers that work with her
that process applications we're back to doing home visits now after not doing them during covid
and i think the rescue world is in a very unique place right now like the the entire
world of rescue has changed has done like a complete 180 degree turn over the past few years.
So if you think back to during COVID, which seems oh so long ago, but it's actually not.
It's like two years, three years ago.
During COVID, what was like, what was that everyone wanted a dog?
Shelters were reporting that they were empty.
People were fostering dogs
that's the staff at the friends of palm beach county animal care and control they usually
house about 50 dogs but now they've got none carson daily according to the humane society
the rates of fostering have increased by 90 90 in some place i wonder if the dailies are
gonna add it was i think it was the cover of time magazine that the winner of the pandemic have increased by 90%, 90% in some places. I wonder if the dailies are going to add one.
I think it was the cover of Time magazine
that the winner of the pandemic was dogs
because they all got adopted.
I was watching this happen
and I was in New York at the time.
I'd actually flown to New York
for what was supposed to be a five-day trip
to meet with donors and then got stuck there
because Puerto Rico closed down. And we had
over 100 dogs in Puerto Rico that were supposed to fly and couldn't fly. And the majority of them
had adopters. And so we were getting inundated with people saying, I want a dog, I want a dog.
And I didn't have dogs to give them because all mine were in Puerto Rico. I mean, the great thing was we got a new
group of fosters in Puerto Rico, which we had never really had before. And we've managed to
keep that wonderful group of people and cultivate them. But I was cognizant that the pandemic wasn't
going to go on forever. And we had people coming to us saying, well, I'm working from home now, so now I can have a dog.
And my immediate response was, but what happens when you go back to work?
What's your plan then?
And, you know, anybody that came to us and said that, they kind of instantly negated themselves from having the chance to adopt because you are making a commitment that might be 15 to 20 years
long. I need you to be able to tell me or to have a plan in place for what happens when you are
called back to the office. And a lot of people didn't have that. And I think what is happening
now, it's a culmination of not only people going back to work and getting called back to in-office hours, but now we're in a scenario where inflation is out of control and housing is difficult to come by. And so what the rescue world and the shelter system is now seeing is dogs coming back in
unprecedented numbers.
You know, it's for reasons that, one, those people that didn't make a plan for when they
had to go back to the office.
There is a huge group of dogs that were adopted during the pandemic that were never really
socialized.
And so once kind of things started to open up and
people could go places again, they had dogs that, you know, were fearful or had anxiety issues,
separation anxiety, and not everybody's willing to put the work in for those dogs.
Then you've got people losing their homes. They can't afford to keep their animals. They can't afford to feed them. There's a whole list of why shelters are filling up.
You've rescued so many dogs. Are there a couple of cases that really stuck with you that you can talk about?
do um couple one a dog named sugar who was rescued from dead dog beach and she was hit by a car on the beach and she was dragged under the car and she was brought to us by our volunteer at the time
of that at about six o'clock at night and came to our vet's office and this dog had three shredded legs like her front legs were
completely destroyed and one of her back legs too this was like a 50 pound dog and my vet took one
look and was like this dog's you know you need to euthanize this dog and sugar we we picked her up to put her on the the examination table and she wagged her tail
and I was like how you know this she must be in so much pain and she she didn't growl she didn't
snap she didn't do anything she just wagged her tail and I was like we we gotta try we gotta try
something here so my vet like cleaned out her wounds she bandaged her up she put her on an IV of pain
meds and she's like Chrissy this dog's not going to survive the night at first like we didn't even
look to see whether this dog was a boy or a girl like I called her Rocky because I thought it was
a boy I get a phone call the next morning Rocky's still alive and Rocky's actually a girl.
So then we changed her name to Adrian.
She was with us in our care for over a year.
She had five major surgeries on her legs.
And this dog, throughout it all, was the happiest, happiest dog.
She truly was. Through surgeries, she had a titanium plate put in her leg eight titanium
screws she had other multiple surgeries we had to take the plate out because it became infected
she really put us all through the mill and like I say this dog got her chance because she was so
happy and so joyful and she walked me into the ring at one of my fights and there was a lady there that had
been brought by some friends of mine that met then Adrian and she said like I want to adopt her and
she Marissa as is the lady's name and we have become incredibly good friends she changed
Adrian's name to sugar because she's
like she's sweet as sugar but it's also like sugar's a boxing name as well so i was like okay
i can give you that and sugar is still with us and to this day if she hears my voice if if marissa
is online and i'm like talking on a video, this dog goes crazy.
If I don't see her from one month to the next and walk in the door,
she still knows me to this day.
And I am one of her favorite people in the world.
And I love that.
She knows that I was with her.
I would drive her to bed appointments. I would sing to her in the car.
And I've got the most god-awful singing voice,
but she loved it.
And yeah, so she's a huge success story.
Such a moving story.
Yeah, there's many like that.
You've really done God's work
in helping so many dogs in such a terrible situation.
Let me ask you, for any listeners
who want to get involved in the Saddle Project,
tell us how they can get involved.
I wish what we could do, I always say, I wish what we could do,
we could do this work on love alone.
Because if we could, every dog would have help.
Unfortunately, it comes down to cold, hard cash to be able to do what we do.
So donations are always gratefully
received. We're 100% transparent with all of our financials are available on our website.
We independently audit every year so everybody can see where their hard earned money is going.
It's going to help these incredible dogs. One thing I do want to mention is we talked about the
overpopulation and how overwhelming it is. That's been a huge realization for us as an organization
this year. And that combined with the situation we talked about after COVID with how shelters are
being overwhelmed and there's just not enough space and enough adopters for the amount of dogs that we have, we are pivoting a big amount of our resources into spay and neuter and CNBR
because we feel that is a good thing to do, certainly for the next couple of years.
Right, because you've rescued 8,000 dogs, but there's a half a million dogs on the island.
So the challenge is immense.
Yeah.
So tell me, what's the website?
How do people reach out to you?
The Sato Project, T-H-E-S-A-T-O-P-R-O-J-E-C-T.org,
the SatoProject.org is where you can donate.
Everybody will receive a receipt for use for tax purposes
with their donation. We welcome volunteers. We fly our dogs into New York. So we're always
looking for volunteers to help drive dogs to their families, get crates back to the airport.
We're always looking for foster families. Our dogs, if they go into foster, they average about a week to two weeks in foster.
That's all before they're adopted.
And then as we're starting these big spay-neuter initiatives, we're about to start one on November 1st.
It's called Operation Sato.
We're partnering with Kathy Bissell and the Bissell Foundation.
Kathy Bissell has been incredibly generous and has purchased all of the surgical equipment
that we're going to need to put on a six-day high-quality, high-volume spay-neuter event.
And we're targeting 1,500 dogs over six days.
And then the equipment is staying on island so we can keep doing those events and keep
helping as many dogs as we can.
Because as I said to you, I can't, I wish we could,
but we can't rescue our way out of this crisis.
Finally, Chrissy, I just wanted to ask you,
a lot of people get their dogs from breeders.
What's your advice to them,
seeing as the overpopulation of shelters
and do you have a message to impart to our listeners?
Yeah, I mean, any dog that you think you can only get from a breeder, I'm sorry, but you're wrong.
There are many purebred dogs, specific breeds. There are specific breed rescues. These dogs
are available at your local shelters. You might not just be able to walk in the nearest
one to you. You might have to do a little bit of research, but you can find them. I have rescued
Great Danes. I have rescued French Bulldogs. I've rescued an English Bulldog from here in Puerto
Rico. I have rescued Shih Tzus, Weimaraners, Beastlers, like all of these like fancy breeds. One of my rescues, one of my dogs,
he looks like some fancy doodle. Everybody thinks he is like, oh, they're like, what kind of doodle
is he? He looks like an old English sheepdog. He is a rescue from the streets of Ponce.
Like you can get any dog you want from a shelter or a breed-specific rescue.
Not every breeder is a bad breeder, but we know during times like a pandemic
and when there's a lot of people that are wanting a specific thing,
when there's a need for something, then unscrupulous people start to get involved.
You just have to put a little bit of work in, not a huge amount,
a little bit of work in. And maybe you might have to travel to get your dog, but you know what? That dog is then going to
be with you for 15 to 20 years. So if you have to take a day or half a day to find your new family
member, I think it's worth it. Well, Chrissy Beckles, thank you so much for being my guest
on All About Change. You're doing
God's work and there's so much need. Thank you. Thanks for having me. Thank you. And I hope people
reach out to you and support your important work. Thank you so much. Thank you. I really appreciate But not goodbye Dogs are near and dear to my own heart,
so it was a true inspiration to hear about the work
Chrissy's been able to do in Puerto Rico.
I look forward to seeing what the Saddle Project does next.
That's it for today's episode.
Join us two weeks from today
for one of my favorite episodes from the vault.
Today's episode was produced by Rebecca Shaston, with story editing by Yochai Meytal and Mijon Zulu.
To check out more episodes or to learn more about the show, you can visit our website
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Morgan Foos, Brian Rivers, and Amy Machado. That's all for now. I'm Jay Ruderman,
and we'll see you next time on All About Change.