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Collie Adoption Winnipeg

Adoptable Collies and Collie crosses across Manitoba in one place. Refreshed regularly. Most rescues will arrange a meet at the foster home.

4 Collies listed in Winnipeg from 1 rescue

Showing 4 dogs

Collies in Winnipeg, right now

We're currently tracking 4 adoptable Collies in southern Manitoba, listed by 1 rescue including Hull's Haven Border Collie Rescue. Listings update regularly, and most Collies in Winnipeg get adopted within days of being posted — if one catches your eye, reach out fast.

Adopting a Collie in Manitoba

The Collie is the classic Lassie dog, and it earned that reputation. Rough Collies wear the long, flowing coat most people picture, while Smooth Collies carry the same build and brain in a short coat. Both are gentle, sensitive, deeply biddable family dogs that want to be near their people and tend to be soft about correction. Raise your voice and a Collie wilts, so they thrive on calm, encouraging handling.

Collies are not a high-volume rescue breed in Manitoba, so listings come and go. We pull adoptable Collies and Collie crosses from Winnipeg and Brandon rescues into one place so you can scan the whole province at once. When a Rough or Smooth Collie comes through Winnipeg Humane Society or Manitoba Mutts, it usually finds a home quickly.

Why Collies turn up in Manitoba rescue

Most Collies in rescue are owner surrenders rather than strays. Families sometimes underestimate the herding brain, get a barky, undertrained dog, and give up. Others come in after a life change like a move, a new baby, or a senior owner who can no longer manage the coat. The dogs themselves are usually well-mannered and easy to live with once settled.

Manitoba Mutts runs a northern transfer pipeline that brings dogs south from remote communities, and herding-type crosses with Collie in the mix arrive that way too. A Collie-shepherd or Collie-heeler cross can carry the same sensitivity and the same need for a job.

Manitoba climate fit

This is a breed built for the cold. Manitoba runs the harshest winter of any major Canadian city, with routine minus 30 nights, windchill past minus 40, no chinook to break it, and five or six months of it. The Rough Collie's heavy double coat handles that beautifully, and most Collies are happy to play and walk through a Winnipeg cold snap that would have a short-coated dog shivering. Smooth Collies still have a dense undercoat and cope well, though they appreciate a coat on the worst windchill days.

Summer is when the heavy coat works against the Rough. Manitoba summers are hot and humid, 32C with the humidex, and a full-coated Collie overheats faster than people expect. Do not shave the coat, since it protects against both sun and heat, but do walk in the cool hours, keep water close, and let the dog rest indoors midday. Mosquitoes and West Nile along the river paths are a real summer-evening concern, so keep that in mind on dusk walks.

Health questions to ask the foster

Collies are generally healthy, but a couple of breed-specific items are worth raising before you commit.

  • MDR1 drug sensitivity: a gene common in Collies makes some dogs dangerously sensitive to certain common medications, including some dewormers and anaesthetics. Ask whether the dog has been MDR1 tested, and flag the breed to your vet regardless.
  • Collie eye anomaly and PRA: inherited eye conditions occur in the breed. Ask if the eyes have been checked.
  • Coat and skin: the heavy Rough coat needs regular brushing to prevent mats, especially behind the ears and on the legs. Ask about the grooming routine the foster has kept.
  • Hips: as with most medium-large breeds, ask about any signs of joint stiffness.

What it is like to live with a Collie

A Collie is an easy dog for a household that gives it attention and a bit of work. They are people-oriented to the point of velcro and do not do well left alone all day.

  • Gentle and sensitive. Great with respectful kids, but loud chaos stresses them.
  • Biddable and quick to train. They learn fast and want to please, which makes them rewarding for first-time owners willing to put in calm, positive work.
  • Vocal. Collies bark, sometimes a lot. Training can manage it but it is part of the breed, so factor that into apartment or close-neighbour living.
  • The herding brain needs a job. Walks, training games, scent work, or a sport keep them content. A bored Collie invents work.
  • Coat care matters, especially for the Rough. Plan on regular brushing and a couple of big seasonal sheds.

What the adoption fee covers

A Manitoba rescue adoption fee usually covers spay or neuter, core vaccines, deworming, and a microchip, and many rescues include a vet check and any care the dog needed while in foster. For a Collie, ask whether MDR1 testing or an eye check is included or recommended. Adoption gets you a vetted dog and a foster who can tell you about temperament, training, and whether the dog is good with kids and other animals.

How to search

Browse the Collies and Collie crosses listed across Manitoba above. Each listing links to the rescue holding that dog. You apply directly to the rescue, they review your application, and they arrange a meet, usually at the foster home. If nothing fits today, check back, because Collies come through Winnipeg and Brandon rescues steadily but in small numbers.

Looking more broadly? Browse every adoptable dog across the province on Dog Adoption British Columbia.

The rescues that most often list Collies across BC are Winnipeg Humane Society, Manitoba Mutts Dog Rescue, and D'Arcy's ARC. For breed-specific background, the Canadian Kennel Club is a useful reference.

Collie Adoption FAQ — Winnipeg

Where can I find Collie adoption near me in Manitoba?

Right here. We gather adoptable Collies and Collie crosses from rescues across Manitoba, including Winnipeg and Brandon, into one place. Each listing links to the rescue that holds the dog, and you apply to them directly. Collies are not high-volume in rescue, so set an alert if nothing fits today.

Are Collies good family dogs?

Yes, this is one of the gentler, more trainable family breeds. Collies are sensitive, biddable, and good with respectful children, and they bond closely to their people. The main trade-offs are vocal tendencies, a strong need for company, and the herding brain that wants a job. Give a Collie attention, light training work, and coat care, and it is an easy dog to live with.

What is MDR1 and why does it matter for a Collie?

MDR1 is a gene mutation common in Collies that makes affected dogs dangerously sensitive to certain common medications, including some dewormers, anti-diarrheals, and anaesthetics. Ask the rescue whether the dog has been MDR1 tested, and always tell your vet the dog is a Collie so they choose safe drugs and doses. It is easy to manage once you know.

How does a Collie handle Manitoba weather?

Winter is no problem. The double coat, heavy on the Rough Collie, is built for the Manitoba cold and most Collies enjoy it. Summer is the harder season for the full-coated Rough, since heat and humidity sit on the heavy coat. Do not shave it, walk in the cool hours, keep water handy, and let the dog rest indoors during a hot, humid afternoon.

Is LocalPetFinder a shelter or does it charge fees?

No. LocalPetFinder is a free pet-discovery tool, not a shelter. We never add fees. Adoption fees are set by each rescue, and all applications and decisions are handled directly by the rescue you apply to.