Help Bali Strays
17/02/2026
We found this little puppy on the side of the road.
Alone. Vulnerable. Very, very sad.
Normally, I would bring him/her straight home.
But right now, we are still dealing with the fence collapse from the strong wind, and I don’t have a safe isolation space available. I cannot risk the safety of the dogs already under our care. I also already maximize my capacity of rescuing a dog 😔
The puppy has received the first yearly vaccination.
If still here in 3–4 weeks, I will continue with the rabies vaccine.
What this baby needs now is:
• A foster home
• A forever home
• Or a monthly sponsor to support care
Sometimes rescuing means knowing your limits and asking for help.
If you can step in, please message us.
Let’s not let this puppy stay on the street. 🤍
31/12/2025
2026 resolution: sterilize a dog - and work on my waistline.
It’s totally okay to go to the gym, eat well, and feel great in your body. We love self-care.
But what if, once a month, we also helped one Bali dog get sterilized and vaccinated?
Small choices add up. Fewer unwanted puppies. Less suffering. A kinder Bali.
Visiting Bali or living here — you can be part of this too.
Skip one cocktail. Help one dog.
Be a badass with a good heart ❤️
May this become our 2026 mantra.
29/12/2025
I believe real change comes from empowering local people, not building more shelters, as shelters that I always see mostly in a sad condition where dogs are having a limited movement daily, cramp all together in a tiny space, smelly and don't really have a good quality of life.
I believe empowering locals and set the good example of taking a good care of dogs and cats will work better while providing a basic health requirements access for their pets (sterilization and vaccinations).
When locals who own dogs or cats are supported, the animals are cared for within their own communities, with routine, familiarity, and belonging.
Access to vaccination and sterilization creates healthier pets and safer coexistence.
Many local carers in Bali have big hearts but limited resources. Empowering them prevents cruelty at the source, reducing abandonment, killing, and the dog meat trade.
This is how a dog-friendly Bali is built:
healthy dogs, informed people, and shared responsibility — not fear or neglect.
I know it's a long journey and it might just a daydreaming, but as long as I live, I will speak the same dream language that we could do it together, from community for community ~ that's where the change exists and impactful 🙏
If you’re visiting Bali, support the locals (or any local business) who choose kindness. 🤍🐾
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Suweta
Ubud