The dog my family had when I was a baby did the same. My older sisters resented me for being the reason they had to give up their dog. |
I see what you did there.
|
Agree. It’s mental illness to delay parenting an actual child until your old dog dies. |
| You could ask a breed rescue about potentially rehoming, they may not take. Your best bet is likely to find a no kids home yourself. Shelters tend to put down biters. I'd ask your behaviorist for suggestions. |
| PETA advises to let the dog eat the baby. It's natural. |
|
My 25 lb mutt loves kids. Hates my own. Vet thinks he’s jealous. Just lots of growling and acting like a disgruntled old man.
Look up Dog Meets Baby in Instagram. You don’t need to buy a course, she has lots of tips if you just follow long enough. You know your dog best but she has suggestions for rules like dog gets off the bed when baby is there. It could be helpful to start training the dog now. I think worst case if you don’t want to rehome the dog, you just have to keep them separated. Never together alone and even when supervised keep dog and baby separated by a sufficient gate. But like other posters said you just have to wait and see. The dog may change as it gets older too. |
My dog that hated all children - and I mean vehemently detested - though was fine with adults - also instantly adored our child. Literally was the first and only kid she ever loved. Still couldn’t bring another child close to her that wasn’t ours. |
|
I could never relax if my child was around a dog with a bite history. I believe kids and dogs should be supervised or separated, but if the dog has bitten people before, even a quick lapse in supervision say while you run to the stove because the rice is boiling over wouldn't be worth the risk for me. Or you think your partner is walking the dog and you lay the baby on the floor activity mat while you shower but turns out they didn't leave because your partner took a work call.
With a dog who doesn't bite, the risk just isn't the same. |
The dog has ALREADY bitten someone (nipped delusional), and is prone to biting? This is not a kind dog. You should live in fear around your baby. Babies and toddlers are rough, they drop things, they fall, they hit, they pull fur. This dog? He’ll “nip” your babies face off. |
So you never had play dates? |
Thank you for your helpful suggestion. |
You are so gross. |
Of course it matters. Some dogs do damage when they bite, some don't. I would be less worried about a small dog than a dog that could take a child's face off. |
| Get rid of the dog. |
OP this is something else to think about. We have friends with a highly reactive dog. Kids cannot have anyone over, or if they do they send the dog to a relative’s house. It’s very disruptive. |