Generations is not that long in the dog world. A myth? Have you lived with or spent time with many of these dogs? Of course breeders can be specific for generations. I never saw a crazy hyper Eng lab or Am Lab. But there are many dogs passed off as Labs/lab mixes supposedly from Lab [am lab?]. Those dogs are like Ed the Hyena compared to pup Simba and adult Mustafa. |
+100 !! Two puppies will bond with EACH OTHER NOT YOU! |
It's ok guys, OPs trainer, vet, and breeder (who all TOTALLY EXIST, guys, she's totally not making them up) all say it's cool. Everybody just be chill, man. |
OP You are in for a mess. Even a mellow breed will be a nightmare with two. Dalmatian? It is not really the breed so much as that you will be third on the hierarchy no matter what you do, and that will make for behavior problems. Serious breeders love money just as much as anyone else, signed breeder myself. |
+1. Came here to post something similar. Every single breeder and trainer on this thread (I am the GSD one) has been in agreement. I tried to be kind in my response earlier, because I thought the OP was genuinely asking for help. Based on her latest response, it is clear that she is not. No responsible breeder would even sell two puppies from the same litter to one inexperienced buyer. So either this is a bad backyard breeder. Or the OP is lying. There are some legitimate scenarios when a breeder/trainer might keep a pup until he was older, but it is a huge red flag. It suggests a back yard breeder who is unable to get rid of puppies. Combine that with a breeder who is willing to sell her two? No. something about this story is not right. About half of high energy pups purchased from breeders end up being returned or end up in shelters within the first year. Good breeders know this and do everything in their power to ensure pups go to people prepared to care for them. We sell our GSD pups, but I consider them my dogs until the day they die. I am ultimately responsible for them. I would never in a million years sell a puppy to the OP based on what she has shared in this thread. |
I am the poster earlier with the rescue Dalmatian mix, and OP, I flat-out don't believe you at this point. If your breeder has no problem, your breeder is not a good breeder. If your vet doesn't warn you about littermate syndrome, your vet is not a good vet. If your trainer "has no issue," your trainer is an idiot. There are red flags all over your situation that any good breeder, trainer, or vet would notice in an instant. I don't say this often but I hope you are a troll. |
| It's cool guys; OP did her research by watching 101 Dalmatians. |
| Good luck, OP. Seriously. Maybe it will be great. If not, please don't dump one or both of your dogs at a shelter assuming someone else will take them. There are thousands of dogs in shelters already, and that's just within driving distance. |
| I worked at a vet for years during college. My only experience with Dalmatians is from a deaf couple that owned two of them and used the vet for which I worked. The dogs seemed normal until one day the make owner brought in one of the dalmatians to be euthanized because it had attacked and killed the other dalmatian! The owners never heard the fight. It was heartbreaking and I don't know why that would have occurred but I have never thought much of the breed since. Our labs are about 6 months apart and that worked for us. They had the benefit of being close in age for playing but the older one also helped train the younger one. Two puppies might outnumber you. |
Actually, you've ignored everyones advice....why even post OP, if your going to be a bigot towards anyone that disagrees with you. Were you hoping that someone besides yourself would assure you that you're doing the right thing? Sorry, but it doesn't look like anyone agrees with you. Do your homework next time. |
|
I only made it through Page 2.
#1. Absolutely crate train. If your dog has to go to the vet or be boarded, you'll really really be glad they are comfortable in a crate. #2. You need to train the puppies separately and have them establish independent bonds with the family. Getting 2 puppies from the same litter is not a good idea but what's done is done. Honestly, I'd see if you could change to only getting one and then in a couple years get a second. If this is an in-demand breeder, he'll have a waiting list to go to easily. |
It's not...not your fault though since you didn't read the entire thread. Just some backyard breeder with dogs that nobody wants, most likely found on craigslist. |
What does your pediatrician say? Dalmatians are often not good with kids at all. And two puppies around kids who aren't used to living with dogs? Ugh. |
Hahahha! You're going to be so miserable!! |
| The "favorite thread" thread brought me here. This has been very enlightening for a non-dog person! I've never heard of littermate syndrome, known what age pups are adopted out, and the one Dalmatian I knew was geriatric and acted like it. Very informative. |