Anonymous wrote:i had a neighbor with a papillon and it was one of the most high strung, bitey dogs i've ever met. would literally bite strangers' ankles. 0/10 do not recommend.
i have known a few delightful apartment-dwelling havanese. they are clever and eager to please. that is the dog I would pick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offense, but if your child is within the average for their age, they will end up dumping most of the care and training on you... which is the developmentally-appropriate response. Don't kid yourself that they will do agility with your dog.
Get the dog you can live with first, consider agility second.
I haven't mentioned how old my kid is, so I'm not sure how know what's "developmentally appropriate" for him.
His current dog is quite elderly, so I have had many years to observe his dog training and caregiving skills.
Anonymous wrote:No offense, but if your child is within the average for their age, they will end up dumping most of the care and training on you... which is the developmentally-appropriate response. Don't kid yourself that they will do agility with your dog.
Get the dog you can live with first, consider agility second.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My small dog is really opinionated and refuses to do that stuff.
Maybe you have a cat.
No, not a cat.
Anonymous wrote:i had a neighbor with a papillon and it was one of the most high strung, bitey dogs i've ever met. would literally bite strangers' ankles. 0/10 do not recommend.
i have known a few delightful apartment-dwelling havanese. they are clever and eager to please. that is the dog I would pick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My small dog is really opinionated and refuses to do that stuff.
Maybe you have a cat.
Anonymous wrote:My small dog is really opinionated and refuses to do that stuff.
Anonymous wrote:My small dog is really opinionated and refuses to do that stuff.