On the other hand, we have two rescue beagles who are very clearly 100% beagle. I never even questioned whether they had any percentage of pit (or other breed, for that matter). |
| I rescued in 2011 and basically just walked in and walked out with my dog. When I tried to rescue in 2021 I applied everywhere for a year and could get nowhere so I bought a dog and my puppy is the bestest. This is likely my last dog so glad I am able to raise her from a puppy. |
Our Lucky Dog rescue came back 7% pit. She looks like a hound. I don't consider that enough pit DNA to be any risk. We met her at a PetSmart event and she's been an excellent family pet. I think you can choose a rescue that doesn't look at all like a pit with some confidence. Don't assume that just because you get a dog from a rescue that you know what you're getting. My coworker's designer doodle is obsessed with chewing on her kitchen cabinets to the extent that they now all need to be replaced. They've spend a fortune on training, but she goes for the cabinets the moment you turn your back. Her beautiful kitchen in her $2m house is a mess and the dog cannot ever be left unattended. As another anecdote, my father got a purebred yellow lab puppy from a breeder. The dog is now 130 lbs and the size of a black bear. It's the biggest lab you've ever seen. He was expecting a dog in the 60-80 lb range but his lab is double that size and really too much for a senior who can get knocked over. |
Just curious. How high were the fences and how far apart were they spaced? If they kept pits out for 2 years it must be an effective arrangement. |
Plenty of rescues allow toddlers. I've adopted from Big Fluffy and Wolf Trap with toddlers in the house. I would recommend both, particularly Wolf Trap as it can be hard to meet the dogs from Big Fluffy since they are spread out geographically. Wolf Trap is mostly puppies though. |
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I foster for one of the rescues mentioned here.
Recently I fostered a little of rat terrier/pittbull terrier mixes. They were docile and trainable, even as a group. Many dogs you get from rescues, despite not looking like pitts, could potentially have pittbull genes, so you'll have to determine whether you're comfortable with any admixture of pitt and if so, how much. There's a whole other conversation about whether it's sufficient for the dog to not have the pitt jaws, which were bred to never let go, and exert 242 pounds of pressure per square inch, or whether pitts have innately aggressive personalities (which I don't believe, personally). And if the former is your concern, ***then you need to also avoid any dog that has a jaw structure with the strength similar to a pittbull's***: German Shepherds, Rottweilers, Bulldogs, and Mastiffs, Chow Chows, Belgian Malinois, Dobermans, and Boxers. Labrador Retrievers also have a strong bite, but they are the American family dog par excellence, so people don't want to believe it... |
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If you have young kids, you want to know the history of the dog and if dog was properly socialized. Especially if you don’t have a lot of experience with a dog.
We wanted a shelter dog, but realized with a young kid and first time owning a dog as an adult, we didn’t want the risk. It was worth it to buy a family friendly breed. |
This is a good point. In most cases you’re going to be better off with a very young mixed breed puppy that you can raise and train yourself than an adult dog with unknown trauma in the past. Puppies are a lot of work, but it’s worth it in the long run. |
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OP, check out Project Second Chance, an organization that rescues homeless and abandoned dogs form Puerto Rico. I believe they perform DNA tests, and have had numerous dogs that don't have any pit in them. We have two old ladies we adopted from them, and they're the sweetest creatures you've ever seen.
https://www.project-secondchance.org/ |
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For those commenting about low % of pit genetics, there are two factors - the behavioral and the physical. Both together can be lethal. But if your 20% pit has the body and jaws of a hound, even if it snaps and goes crazy, chances are it won't do the same kind of damage a full pit could do. If it attacked someone or something, you could probably pry it off. To me, this puts it back into the category of "any dog that could attack and wound someone but probably not kill."
What scares me about pits more than other dogs is that even grown men can't stop them if something goes wrong. And despite that, you have all these petite women wearing flip flops walking two pits while saying that they're just the sweetest things that would never hurt a fly. IMO, no one should have a pet that they can't literally and physically handle. |
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OP, City Dogs has some dogs that might be good for you.
https://www.citydogsrescuedc.org/adoptable-dogs.html |
Why wouldn’t she just keep the dog out of the kitchen? Baby gates work wonders. |
I am so happy to hear that! I hope your adoption experience with us was a good one. Sometimes things fall through the crack, but by and large, we try to turn applications around quickly. PPs talking about Pit %. I have numerous friends with pit bulls and mixes. With the exception of one, none have been human aggressive. That one, was half Malinois, and spent the first 8 months of her life stuck in a crate, so had some issues to overcome. The one dog that I was absolutely certain was a pit bull, was my SIL's dog. She turned out to be Lab/Husky/Chow/bunch of things instead. Dog selective, but great with people. |
We adopted a rescue dog when DD was 5 years old. He was the best pet ever. I miss him every day 😢 |