? Stray Dogs: Forgotten Lives That Deserve a Second Chance
Many animals will spend the winter outside. Let’s not let them suffer!
With your donation, we can continue our efforts and prevent these animals from dying in the cold by providing them with food, proper veterinary care, and better living conditions.
Each contribution helps us fund medical equipment, shelters, and the necessary improvements to offer them a safer and warmer environment.
Let's not let them face the winter alone.
Every winter, thousands of stray animals struggle to survive the cold, hunger, and loneliness. Our mission is simple: to give them warmth, care, and hope.
With your support, we can feed, heal, and protect those who have no one else.
Together, we can make a difference!
Who We Are ?
We are an association of veterinary clinics that goes beyond in-clinic care, we are actively committed to helping homeless and vulnerable animals.
With a dedicated team and strong partnerships on the ground, we provide medical care, food, and shelter to stray animals, especially during the coldest months of the year.
We believe that no animal should suffer from cold, hunger, or neglect.
Every act of kindness matters, and together, we can save lives.
Help us
Since its creation, helping animal shelters has been at the heart of the 30 Million Friends Foundation’s mission. Without these shelters, thousands of abandoned animals would be doomed to certain death. Always ready to welcome dogs and cats left behind, the staff and volunteers at the shelters devote their time and pour out their affection without limits. They truly deserve our admiration!
Abandonment is an act of extreme cruelty for pets who, from one day to the next, find themselves torn from their homes and stripped of all familiar surroundings. Taken to a pound, they risk being euthanized if their owners do not reclaim them within eight days. Their only hope of survival is to be taken in by a shelter.
Beyond saving them from death, shelters do everything possible to give these animals a second chance at life, by providing medical care, food, and, little by little, helping them regain trust in humans after the trauma they’ve endured.
Driven by their love for animals and their determination to save them, shelter managers, most of whom are volunteers, face tremendous challenges: a severe lack of financial resources, the constant need to adapt to take in more animals than they have space for, and significant food and veterinary expenses.
Shelters therefore have immense needs, both material and human, and could not welcome and save so many animals without the vital support of the Foundation.