We don't know much about Snowy's first nine months of life but we do know that his original owner could no longer care for him.
Since he never had any real training, he initially showed a lack of discipline and house manners that he's been quickly learning how to behave in his foster home. He has learned a lot from his foster sister and brother. Snowy is good with other dogs and very much enjoys play time with them.
Snowy is very sweet and enjoys time with his humans as much as he does with other dogs. He was starved for attention and is now getting lots of it. He does not like to be crated and appears to behave himself outside the crate when left alone and at bedtime. He occasionally has accidents in the house but is quickly learning where to go.
Being so young, Snowy has a lot of Husky puppy energy in him. Tire him out with play time, long walks, and continued training, and you will have a good, well behaved Husky.
Snowy had what’s called a cherry eye but this has been corrected through a recent visit to the vet. This condition is relatively easy to treat but can recur so checking it should be part of his annual physical. See:
http://dogsaholic.com/care/cherry-eye-in-dogs.html,
https://www.petmd.com/dog/conditions/eyes/c_multi_prolapsed_gland.
He is otherwise healthy, Heartworm negative, housebroken (90%), neutered, up-to-date on vaccines, and microchipped. A dog this young is a clean slate so make him the dog you always wanted and he will reward you with years of loyalty and affection. Fill out an adoption application at the upper left corner of this page, today.