Our adoption application can be found at the bottom of this pet's bio. Once your application has been approved, we can arrange a meet & greet with you and Iris.
Iris is currently in a foster home in Houston, TX and is eligible for meet & greets!
Meet Iris!
Iris was pulled from a high kill shelter down in Texas along with her siblings. Iris is the last of the bunch still waiting for her forever home. She's 3 and a half years old and our vet says she's a shepherd / black mouth cur mix. Iris is fully vaccinated, microchipped spayed and ready to find a family to call her own! Iris is compact at just 47 pounds.
Iris is goofy, playful, affectionate, and genuinely sweet, but like a lot of reactive dogs, only a lucky few get to see that side of her. Right now, that's a very short list: her foster, her foster's partner, and a backup foster who steps in when needed. But that list isn't closed. Iris is a dog worth getting to know, and she deserves someone who understands that a slow burn leads to something really special. Once she trusts you, she is ALL in.
She'd be a dream for someone working from home, but deep down, I think she belongs somewhere quieter; trails, open space, away from the chaos of city streets full of strangers and reactive dogs. She loves fetch with tennis balls more than almost anything. She's silly and tender and trying her best. She just needs someone who gets that.
Iris is dog selective and does best with slow, intentional introductions. With patience, she's been able to build genuine friendships! She currently plays with dogs in her foster home, wrestling, chasing, and trading kisses. Play works best when food and toys are kept out of the mix.
Iris is best suited for an adult-only home. She hasn't been around young children, and given her fear reactivity and need for boundaries to be respected, unpredictable energy from kids isn't ideal for Iris. This isn't a knock on Iris, she just needs an environment where she can trust and decompress, and that requires adults who can read her cues and give her space when she needs it.
Iris actually loves her leash! She knows exactly what it means and does a little happy dance when it comes out. She walks confidently for shorter distances, staying mostly close and sniffing along the sidewalk. On leash, Iris can be reactive when dogs get too close on the same side of the street, so she does best with an owner who knows how to create distance and set her up for success.
Iris is fully potty trained and crate trained! She's never had an accident inside and is sure to always do her business outside. Her crate is her sanctuary. She loves it and goes in without issue. In a multi-dog home, she can free roam the home office. If she's the only dog, she can free roam the whole house with no accidents and no destructive behavior. She's solid.
Iris does exhibit some food and resource guarding behaviors towards other dogs. If there are other dogs in the home, Iris should be fed separately. If there are no other dogs, this is not an issue! With continued consistency and training, this is very workable.
We would describe Iris' energy level as moderate and wonderfully balanced. Iris loves her walks and gets genuinely excited for them, but she's equally happy hanging out by your desk while you work or curling up on the couch. She doesn't need a high-intensity outlet, she just needs connection, routine, and a good walk. She'd be a dream work-from-home dog.
Iris' green flags:
Where do we start? Iris is loyal to her core. She gives kisses freely (once she trusts you), does a full tap dance coming out of her kennel, knows sit, down, and wait, and is an absolute belly rub enthusiast. She's gentle, she's playful, she's obedient and she's the kind of dog that makes you feel genuinely chosen once she lets you in.
Iris' quirks / need to know:
The most important thing to understand about Iris is her reactivity — and it deserves to be named clearly, not buried. She's a fearful dog who has built protective behaviors to keep herself safe, which means she won't be the dog who runs up to strangers or plays nicely with every dog at the park. New people and new dogs require slow, supervised introductions. But here's what's also true: once you get past that layer, Iris is sweet, gentle, calm, and deeply loving. She sleeps beautifully in her kennel, walks well until she's reached her limit, and isn't destructive. She's not a difficult dog, she's a dog who needs someone patient enough to meet her where she is.
Iris's world is small right now by design. Her foster works from home and keeps a quieter lifestyle, which has actually been great for her decompression. On walks, close interactions with neighbors (especially dog owners) are managed by creating distance. She doesn't have any specific triggers like men, hats, or loud voices - her reactivity is more generalized, rooted in fear rather than aggression. With slow, low-pressure introductions, she builds trust and confidence over time. She just needs people willing to let her set the pace.
Outdoorsy is a huge bonus. Iris's sister lives near the woods in Vancouver, long trail walks, river dips, beach days - and that kind of lifestyle feels made for her. She'd do beautifully away from the density and noise of city life.
Honestly, the best thing that could happen to Iris is landing with someone who loves dogs and loves the process of working with them. Her foster has given her so much love, but training and confidence-building takes time, knowledge, and consistency and Iris deserves someone who can really lean into that with her. She's not a complicated dog once you understand her. She's actually the best kind of project: one that gives back tenfold.
If you're interested in learning more about Iris or applying to adopt her, please fill out our adoption application below and a volunteer will reach out.
https://heartoftheunderdog.org/adoption-application
BEVO
Pointer, Labrador Retriever
🇺🇸
Oak Ridge North, Texas
male, medium, baby
Pointer, Labrador Retriever
Oak Ridge North, Texas
