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Adopting a Basset Hound in Alberta
Basset Hounds turn up in Alberta rescue in modest but steady numbers. Calgary Humane Society, Edmonton Humane Society, AARCS, SCARS, and the smaller rescues we work with take them in through the year. The Basset is an unmistakable, good-natured breed, and the reasons it lands in rescue are usually about underestimating a scent hound, not about a bad dog.
This page pulls every adoptable Basset Hound from the launched Alberta shelters into one searchable place, refreshed regularly. Because Bassets come through in small numbers, searching province-wide matters. A Basset in Edmonton or Red Deer is worth the drive, and most rescues will arrange a meet at the foster home regardless of where you live.
Why Basset Hounds cycle through Alberta rescue
The Basset that ends up in rescue is rarely a behaviour disaster. It is usually a dog whose owner underestimated how stubborn a scent hound can be. The Basset Hound has one of the best noses of any breed, second only to the Bloodhound, and it was bred to follow a trail at its own slow, determined pace, ignoring the handler. An owner who expected a placid, easygoing couch dog meets a dog that plants its feet, follows its nose, and treats recall as a polite suggestion.
The other recurring reason is weight and the back. Bassets are food-driven and built long and low, and an overweight Basset is at real risk of back trouble. When the vet bills or the daily management add up beyond what the household planned for, the dog can come into rescue. The Basset temperament is genuinely sweet and patient. The breed just needs an owner who understands the nose, the stubbornness, and the body.
The scent hound underneath the easygoing look
A Basset Hound looks like the most relaxed dog in the world, and at home it often is. Outside, the nose takes over, and this is the single most important thing for an adopter to plan around. A Basset on a scent is genuinely hard to recall, so leashed walks and a secure fenced yard are the rule, not loose time on an unfenced Alberta trail. Bassets are also more athletic than they look. They can follow a scent for a long way at a steady pace, and a determined Basset will work a gap in a fence.
Training a Basset means working with the breed, not fighting it. They are intelligent and food-motivated, which helps, but they were bred for independence and they do not aim to please the way a retriever does. Short, patient, reward-based sessions work. Harsh correction does not, and it makes a Basset shut down or dig in. Give the nose constructive outlets, scent games and sniffy walks where the dog is allowed to track, and the stubbornness becomes much easier to live with. A Basset that gets to use its nose is a contented Basset.
Health concerns worth asking the foster about
The Basset Hound's build comes with specific health concerns, and weight management sits at the centre of all of them. The long back and heavy body put the breed at real risk of intervertebral disc disease, and keeping a Basset lean is the single best thing an owner can do to protect it. The breed also sees ear infections, because the long ears trap moisture, along with glaucoma and other eye conditions, bloat, hip and elbow issues, and skin infections in the folds. A foster who has lived with the dog for weeks knows its weight, its ears, and how it moves. Ask directly, and plan to manage the food bowl from day one.
What Basset Hounds are actually like to live with
The Basset Hound is patient, gentle, good with children, and genuinely funny to live with. The harder parts are practical:
- Ruled by the nose. Recall is unreliable on a scent. Leash and secure fencing are the rule.
- Stubborn. Bassets were bred to work independently. Training takes patience and food, not force.
- Must stay lean. The long back means extra weight is a direct risk of disc disease.
- Ear care. The long ears trap moisture and need regular checking and cleaning.
- Surprisingly athletic outdoors. A Basset can cover real ground on a trail and work a fence gap.
- Loud when they want to be. Bassets have a deep, carrying bay, and many use it freely.
- Low to the ground. Deep Alberta snow is hard work for a short-legged dog, and winter walks may need to be shorter.
What the fee usually covers
Basset Hound adoption fees at Alberta rescues sit in the same range as other medium rescue dogs in the province. The fee covers the medical work the rescue already paid for: spay or neuter, core vaccinations, microchip, deworming, and a vet check before placement. Confirm the exact number on the dog's own listing, because it varies with age and any special medical care.
How to actually search
Use the filters above to narrow by energy level (Bassets are low to medium), size (medium), age, compatibility, and shelter. Bassets do not come through often, so if a dog fits, apply the same day. Be ready to talk about your fencing and your plan for keeping the dog lean, because those are the two things that protect a Basset. Foster homes are usually willing to set up a video call before you drive across the province for an in-person meet.
Prefer a city-specific view? Browse our deeper Calgary Basset Hound cluster, or the dog listings in Edmonton, Red Deer, and Grande Prairie. The broader hub is Dog Adoption Alberta.
The rescues that most often list Basset Hounds across the province are SCARS, AARCS, Calgary Humane Society, and Edmonton Humane Society. For breed-specific background, the Canadian Kennel Club is a useful reference.
Basset Hound Adoption FAQ — Alberta
Where can I find Basset Hound adoption near me in Alberta?
Basset Hounds come through every launched Alberta city we cover, though in modest numbers. The major sources are Calgary Humane Society, Edmonton Humane Society, SCARS in the Edmonton area, and the province-wide AARCS. This page lists what is currently available across all of them. Each profile links directly to the rescue to apply.
Can Basset Hounds be let off leash?
As a rule, no, not in an unfenced space. The Basset has one of the strongest noses of any breed and was bred to follow a trail and ignore the handler, so recall is unreliable the moment a scent takes over. Keep a Basset on leash on Alberta trails and let it loose only in a secure fenced yard. A determined Basset will also work a gap in a fence, so the fencing has to be sound.
Are Basset Hounds easy to train?
They are intelligent and food-motivated, which helps, but they were bred for independence and do not aim to please the way a retriever does. Training works when you go with the breed: short, patient, reward-based sessions, and constructive outlets for the nose like scent games and sniffy walks. Harsh correction backfires and makes a Basset shut down or dig in. Patience is the whole strategy.
What health problems should I know about before adopting a Basset Hound?
Weight management is the centre of Basset health. The long back and heavy body put the breed at real risk of intervertebral disc disease, so keeping the dog lean is the best protection there is. Bassets also see ear infections from the long ears, glaucoma and other eye conditions, bloat, hip and elbow issues, and skin infections in the folds. Ask the foster about the dog's weight and ears, and plan to manage the food bowl from day one.
Are Basset Hounds good with kids?
Generally very much so. Bassets are patient, gentle, and good-natured, and most do well with children and other pets. The things to manage are the food drive, since a Basset will happily take food from a small child, and the dog's back, since rough handling or jumping on and off furniture is hard on a long-bodied dog. A calm household suits the breed well.
How much does it cost to adopt a Basset Hound in Alberta?
Basset Hound adoption fees sit in the same range as other medium rescue dogs across Alberta. The fee covers spay or neuter, core vaccinations, microchip, deworming, and a vet check before placement, plus the rescue's other costs. Confirm the exact fee on the dog's own listing, because it varies with age and any special medical care.
Is LocalPetFinder a Basset Hound rescue?
No. We aggregate listings from Alberta rescues so you can compare them in one place. All applications and decisions happen directly with the rescue. The site is free.