| Try fostering to see how it suits your family. It might be the best thing ever or your kids might lose interest once they see how much work it is. |
This is pretty in line with what we spent, other setup and ongoing expenses I didn't anticipate: $80 - crates $150/year - toys and treats $25 each time we take him to get a bath (which is rare, he doesn't require any grooming, we trim nails at home) $300ish for neutering (required by rescue) It's a lot. So much more than I expected, but expecting it to be cheaper in the second year. |
Most pets are an extravagance. |
| OP, dcum is not the best place to get this kind of advice. Look into pet insurance, costs and what is covered v what isn’t. Most people (outside of dcum) do not have a dog walker once dog is trained. |
People who work full time have dog walkers. |
Not everyone. Step outside the bubble. |
NP here. Agree with this, not everyone who has a dog that works full time has a dog walker. It's better to have a dog walker but not everyone can afford this. If only people who could afford a dog walker were allowed to have dogs there would be plenty more dogs at the animal shelters waiting to be put down. DCUM is a bubble. |
They do for a puppy, even if it is the neighbor's kid.rather than a service. An adult may be OK for a normal work day, but a puppy can't wait that long. |
I forgot grooming. I spend more on my dog’s haircuts than my own. $100/6 weeks including tip. |
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Op please do some research on those breeds. If you have no experience with dogs, I would not start there. Research family friendly, lower energy dogs.
I can’t tell you how many friends I have who’ve idiot golden retriever or lap had eaten expensive shoes, swallowed socks (5 figure vet bill) or chewed up kitchen cabinets. |
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I did not even consider a dog until I decided to go part time at work. By then DCs were teens and I felt bad they never had a dog (dh either!) I forgot how much work and $$ they are!
We lucked into a great rescue puppy at a shelter- 6-months old, now a medium-size dog. We feed raw meat + liver which must be cooked- i buy on sale avg $1.25/lb x 1.75 lbs/day We already had a fenced yard and a dog door. Vet bills are minimum. No grooming- I did buy a dog brush. Because I am home a lot and am able to exercise the dog regularly we don't have to trim nails (the sidewalk does it) and medium-length hair doesn't need professional grooming. I had NO IDEA how much work it is- double or triple the vacuuming! It always becomes the Mom's Dog so be aware. Puppy year is the worst- chewing everything in reach. Can't count the $ spent replacing headphones, shoes, books, loaves of bread and cakes of butter and fresh baked cookies on the kitchen bench! Yikes! When we travel we use Rover.com and it's about $35/night for great care - which is less than in the DC area but usually adds at least $500 to every vacation. It's great for DS because he has something warm and fuzzy to hug on and a good reason to go for long walks alone- this is good for this boy. 60-lb dog requires at least 1 hr exercise/day. That's bare minimum- 24hrs in a day and one hour out of the house. Not a lot. Dogs are smart and require a lot of stimulation. |
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~$2K / year vet inclusive of 1 or 2 emergencies
~$5K / year walking, 5 days / week ~$3K / year boarding while traveling, this was high as we traveled a lot last year ~$700 / year food some other stuff. My personal capital shows 2019 expenses of ~$12K we can afford it, but ya it's crazy. |
Better for the OP to get whatever breed of dog that they want. They are the ones that will have to live with the dog for many years. |
Or not. They might get frustrated and send the dog to a shelter. |
I think someone would get more frustrated with a breed of dog that they didn't want in the first place rather than one they wanted. |