Anonymous wrote:Sorry but there are so many cockapoos available in shelters and rescues that are full bred, why bother going to a breeder?
If it's the age, just get a younger one from a shelter or rescue - 1 to 2 years - and you also get the benefit of it being housetrained already.
People relinquish pets for the most benign reasons - more work then they expected, cost, lost interest, dog ownership not as fun as they thought - they are not usually relinquishing them because they were "bad" dogs or had problems.
Anonymous wrote:I have never in a long lifetime of owning poodles and dealing with poodle rescues and breeders met an aggressive standard poodle. Toys can be yappy (I still wouldn't call them aggressive) but an aggressive standard, no.
Cockapoos are a different matter. I'm wary of them even though I have loved a few.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived next to a Standard Poodle breeder in California. The poodles are more aggressive than I expected and they do not like kids. They were fine when they were puppies, but as they grew, they seemed to think kids were a threat. Maybe it was a height issue?
Of course they don't have jaws that can maul like a bull breed, but still I wouldn't consider them for a family with smaller children.
Hello. I am the OP. My daughter is 9, so she isn't really a small child anymore. FWIW, I grew up with the most loving, gentle standard poodle - the dog of my childhood. A kid could pull his tail and I don't think he batted an eye. I guess dogs do have their own personalities. My standard was smart, gentle and passive, but he did like to get outside for exercise. Not aggressive in the least.
Anonymous wrote:I lived next to a Standard Poodle breeder in California. The poodles are more aggressive than I expected and they do not like kids. They were fine when they were puppies, but as they grew, they seemed to think kids were a threat. Maybe it was a height issue?
Of course they don't have jaws that can maul like a bull breed, but still I wouldn't consider them for a family with smaller children.