A pet project
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Renee Carleton, a slender blond Newport Beach hairstylist, is in
the market for a new vehicle.
“I would kill for a forklift,” she said.
Carleton said she needs the heavy machinery to load and unload
pounds of pet food donated to her self-run and nonprofit Pet Food
Bank.
Shampoo bottles, hairdryers, scissors, curling irons, combs and
large bags of chinchilla food abound at Trim Hair Salon in Newport
Beach. Carleton often needs some extra space to store the tons of
donated pet food she receives.
“My clients are used to it,” she said. “There is dog kibble all
around the salon.”
Carleton, 44, personally delivers food, equipment and medical
supplies to shelters as far away as Victorville and Mexico. She has
food for chinchillas, monkeys, birds, dogs, cats, bearded iguanas,
etc. You name it, she’s got it.
The food supply comes from donations from generous pet stores, who
load her van with food. Every morning, before her first appointment
at the salon, the Westminster resident makes her rounds, collecting
and delivering provisions.
“I am the crazy person that drives around and picks up food,”
Carleton said.
The busy hairdresser and pet philanthropist gathers medical
supplies, such as peroxide, alcohol and special prescriptions, from
area veterinarians and delivers them to kennels in financial
hardship.
Carleton, who could not ignore the dire need for food and supplies
at underfunded shelters, said she schedules her hair appointments
around her food bank schedule.
“It’s a full-time job, but thankfully I have flexibility and I can
work around my clients,” she said.
-- Story by Lolita Harper
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