Apartment Showcase Blog

Northern Virginia’s Animal Allies Rescue Group Is the Cat’s Meow

Animal Allies

Staring contest: Animal Allies seems to have a particular affection for felines, but the group offers dogs for adoption, too. (dungodung via Flickr)

Today, we’re gonna talk about an organization that’s near and dear to me, or, sniff, sniff, OK, an organization that bequeathed me Minx, a six-pound ball of gray fur and attitude.

I’m talking about Animal Allies.

Minx – or Minxies, as she’s commonly known – is a half-Tonkinese kitty who everyone mistakes as a Russian Blue. But I knew that wasn’t true early on.

How? Well, besides the fact that the friendly lady at Animal Allies told me Minx was half-Tonka, she meows in Tonkinese (mother) and regular kitty (hit-and-run dad) but not in Russian.

Yes, she’s beautiful, and no, you can’t touch her, even if you’re a cat person. Get out of here. I’m the only one.

[ Related: Woodley Park: Lions, Tigers and Bears! Oh, My! ]

We’re a misanthropic pair, Minx and I. No one else will have us, so we’re stuck together, bearers of three languages and a miserable fortune. But we’re still here, and we have rights, too.

Animal Allies is “a nonprofit, all-volunteer organization dedicated to the rescue of homeless and abandoned animals.” Founded in 1984, Animal Allies is spread out all over Northern Virginia.

These people really care about cats and will work to find them a home. Believe me, they stayed on me until I adopted Minx. Like I said, for whatever reason, I’m the only person that cat’s ever seemed to like. Lucky me.

How about you? Living and working in the Washington, D.C., area can be stressful enough to break anyone. Wouldn’t you want to come home to a furry, purring pal? Sometimes it feels like a pet is the only true friend one can have. Just check out some of these cuties.

As you can see on their listings, the folks at Animal Allies make sure you know what you’re getting. Does the kitty in question like other cats? Dogs? Kids? Does it have health issues? Has it been declawed?

[ Related: Alexandria Leaves Dog Owners Howling With Delight ]

Each animal is also checked for diseases and spayed or neutered (if they’re too young, you’ll need to have them spayed or neutered at the appropriate time as a condition of adoption). There is an adoption fee of course, but your money goes right back into rescuing animals.

Another good thing about Animal Allies is that it’s a no-kill shelter, so you can feel good about that.

The organization provides other ways for you to help cats as well, including opportunities to foster a cat, act as an adoption show coordinator, or donate funds or time.

If you’re an apartment renter in Northern Virginia – or anywhere in the metro area, really – get on the site and find yourself a lifelong friend.

Centreville Offers Renters Contemporary Comforts with a Touch of History

Filed under: Centreville, Va. — Scott D @ 10:00 am on July 24, 2010
Cemetery

Historic cemeteries, churches and other reminders of yesteryear add character to Centreville.

Like many Northern Virginia towns that aspire to be cities, Centreville isn’t even incorporated. Nonetheless, according to the 2006-08 American Community Survey 3-Year Estimate, more than 50,000 residents call Centreville home, making it one of the largest communities in Fairfax County.

And as a prominent suburb of Washington, D.C., Centreville provides an ideal home for apartment renters working downtown or in suburban Maryland.

Centreville has a strong sense of community, bolstered by its own newspaper – The CentreView Southern Edition (which also covers Clifton and Little Rocky Run) – and public library. It’s also home to a pair of high schools: Mountain View School, located in the town proper, and Centreville High School, which is in nearby Clifton.

People looking for apartments to rent in Centreville won’t be without material essentials, either, as the town features a number of convenient shopping plazas and is only a short car ride away from the more than 190 stores at Fair Oaks Mall. And this being Northern Virginia, there are plenty of parks in the area – led by the 650-acre Ellanor C. Lawrence Park complex – for those days when you want to enjoy the great outdoors.

What separates Centreville from many other Northern Virginia communities are its robust sense of history and the myriad, still-standing reminders of yesteryear. The town includes its own historic district – featuring a number of 18th-century churches and cemeteries, Civil War-era battlefields and more – and is home to the famed Centreville Military Railroad. Built by the Confederate Army in 1861 during the Civil War, the Centreville Military Railroad was the world’s first railroad built exclusively for military use.