Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a big mistake. Get rid of the dog.
This is the number 1 problem and why animal shelters are full. People don't take their responsibilities seriously. A dog is a life long member of your family. Do not get a dog if you give it up. And if you do give up a dog please do not keep getting a new dog.
Giving up a dog you can't control or properly care for is not the problem. I wish more people would do this instead of just persisting in owning dogs that then become a nuisance to others and are poorly socialized and unhappy because their owners don't have the knowledge or will to give them a good life.
They real "number 1" problem is this ridiculous cultural belief that dogs are great pets for everyone, everyone should get a dog, having a dog means you're a good person, blah blah blah. No. A dog can be a wonderful pet for the right person but not everyone should have a dog and even people who are good with animals can be in living situations where a dog is not appropriate. People think you can just shoehorn a dog into any situation and you can't, not without making the dog or the people involved unhappy.
What we need to do is more thoroughly educate the public on what it means to be a good dog owner, more aggressively spay and neuter dogs, and reduce the number of dogs in the population overall. We should discourage people in certain situations from getting dogs unless they have a clear plan for overcoming obstacles. Like people who live in small apartments, people who work long hours or travel a lot, people with young children who occupy a lot of their time, etc. It's not impossible to have a dog in those settings, but you need to be ready to put real work in (getting a dog who requires less exercise, being willing to pay for lots of doggie daycare or walkers, giving up a lot of your own freedom, etc.). Too often people adopt dogs thinking they'll just figure it out and then it turns out they don't.
So yes, when this happens, these owners should give their dogs up. And then as a society we need to recognize there are too many dogs and do things to reduce the number of dogs out there. Especially the number of pits and pit mixes because these dogs are not well suited for many potential owners and will languish in shelters. It is cruel to the dogs, it benefits no one.
Stop telling people "get a dog! they are so great!" Often it's not.
Anonymous wrote:Urban life and dogs, particularly large dogs, don’t mix. The owners are inconsiderate, or at best driven to be inconsiderate by necessity. Inevitability owners push the leash and sanitation rules. We should have designated dog free neighborhoods in DC.
\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a big mistake. Get rid of the dog.
This is the number 1 problem and why animal shelters are full. People don't take their responsibilities seriously. A dog is a life long member of your family. Do not get a dog if you give it up. And if you do give up a dog please do not keep getting a new dog.
Giving up a dog you can't control or properly care for is not the problem. I wish more people would do this instead of just persisting in owning dogs that then become a nuisance to others and are poorly socialized and unhappy because their owners don't have the knowledge or will to give them a good life.
They real "number 1" problem is this ridiculous cultural belief that dogs are great pets for everyone, everyone should get a dog, having a dog means you're a good person, blah blah blah. No. A dog can be a wonderful pet for the right person but not everyone should have a dog and even people who are good with animals can be in living situations where a dog is not appropriate. People think you can just shoehorn a dog into any situation and you can't, not without making the dog or the people involved unhappy.
What we need to do is more thoroughly educate the public on what it means to be a good dog owner, more aggressively spay and neuter dogs, and reduce the number of dogs in the population overall. We should discourage people in certain situations from getting dogs unless they have a clear plan for overcoming obstacles. Like people who live in small apartments, people who work long hours or travel a lot, people with young children who occupy a lot of their time, etc. It's not impossible to have a dog in those settings, but you need to be ready to put real work in (getting a dog who requires less exercise, being willing to pay for lots of doggie daycare or walkers, giving up a lot of your own freedom, etc.). Too often people adopt dogs thinking they'll just figure it out and then it turns out they don't.
So yes, when this happens, these owners should give their dogs up. And then as a society we need to recognize there are too many dogs and do things to reduce the number of dogs out there. Especially the number of pits and pit mixes because these dogs are not well suited for many potential owners and will languish in shelters. It is cruel to the dogs, it benefits no one.
Stop telling people "get a dog! they are so great!" Often it's not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a big mistake. Get rid of the dog.
This is the number 1 problem and why animal shelters are full. People don't take their responsibilities seriously. A dog is a life long member of your family. Do not get a dog if you give it up. And if you do give up a dog please do not keep getting a new dog.
Anonymous wrote:This is a big mistake. Get rid of the dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here - so dog is 73 pounds at 1 and eats 6 cups a day. I assume given the large breeds in her she will probably gain another 10-15 pounds.
Dh has right now taken on a little bit more but we will see when we get home if this sticks. It actually is easier when we are home because we have a routine and the kids are all in school. The worst is when the kids are home because then I need to take care of the kids and the dog.
Dog is not destructive where we are but tries to chase the cat who lives in the house we are staying at and so we keep her on a leash. She is fully crate trained and is in a crate when we can’t watch her.
So for now I guess we are keeping her since dh refuses to rehome her. At home our schedule is walking 1 miles in the morning to the bus stop, an hour at the dog park mid day (we go to a very small underused one and only meet up with dogs who she is already friendly with. If there is an unknown dog we leave) and running 2-3 miles in the afternoon. Then probably one more walk before bed that is less than a mile.
I am amazed you aren't worried that one day you dog is going to bite one of your kids or their friends who are over at your house you are going to regret not getting rid of the dog.
Why would you want a dog you have to keep in a crate when you can't watch it? That is why the dog needs so many walks. The dog would have a much better life living with someone who doesn't have little kids so the dog could roam around the house and backyard all day and not spend so much time in a crate.
A 1-year old puppy?! See, this is how we know you're an idiot.![]()
We puppy proofed our house and earlier than a year our puppy could roam inside and out. We shut all bedroom doors. The puppy burned a lot of energy doing things like looking for birds or butterflies in the backyard from an inside window and if she saw one would go chase them away. It isn’t an aggressive breed so we never worried it would bite our kids. It would have been cruel to keep the puppy crated up during the day or evening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - also I completely realize I have a husband problem. He works all the time and I am responsible for the dog and the kids.
He is also the one who said we can’t rehome because she is our responsibility and it would be cruel to rehome her.
I’d tell him to find three hours in his day to work with the dog, or it’s being re-homed. He needs to put his money where his mouth is.
This. It’s completely unacceptable for him to make that call unless he is the one who will do the work. Alternately, price out outsourcing the 3+ hrs/day and if he’s willing to pay for that, fine. But he doesn’t get to write a check that you have to cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here - so dog is 73 pounds at 1 and eats 6 cups a day. I assume given the large breeds in her she will probably gain another 10-15 pounds.
Dh has right now taken on a little bit more but we will see when we get home if this sticks. It actually is easier when we are home because we have a routine and the kids are all in school. The worst is when the kids are home because then I need to take care of the kids and the dog.
Dog is not destructive where we are but tries to chase the cat who lives in the house we are staying at and so we keep her on a leash. She is fully crate trained and is in a crate when we can’t watch her.
So for now I guess we are keeping her since dh refuses to rehome her. At home our schedule is walking 1 miles in the morning to the bus stop, an hour at the dog park mid day (we go to a very small underused one and only meet up with dogs who she is already friendly with. If there is an unknown dog we leave) and running 2-3 miles in the afternoon. Then probably one more walk before bed that is less than a mile.
I am amazed you aren't worried that one day you dog is going to bite one of your kids or their friends who are over at your house you are going to regret not getting rid of the dog.
Why would you want a dog you have to keep in a crate when you can't watch it? That is why the dog needs so many walks. The dog would have a much better life living with someone who doesn't have little kids so the dog could roam around the house and backyard all day and not spend so much time in a crate.
A 1-year old puppy?! See, this is how we know you're an idiot.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here - so dog is 73 pounds at 1 and eats 6 cups a day. I assume given the large breeds in her she will probably gain another 10-15 pounds.
Dh has right now taken on a little bit more but we will see when we get home if this sticks. It actually is easier when we are home because we have a routine and the kids are all in school. The worst is when the kids are home because then I need to take care of the kids and the dog.
Dog is not destructive where we are but tries to chase the cat who lives in the house we are staying at and so we keep her on a leash. She is fully crate trained and is in a crate when we can’t watch her.
So for now I guess we are keeping her since dh refuses to rehome her. At home our schedule is walking 1 miles in the morning to the bus stop, an hour at the dog park mid day (we go to a very small underused one and only meet up with dogs who she is already friendly with. If there is an unknown dog we leave) and running 2-3 miles in the afternoon. Then probably one more walk before bed that is less than a mile.
I am amazed you aren't worried that one day you dog is going to bite one of your kids or their friends who are over at your house you are going to regret not getting rid of the dog.
Why would you want a dog you have to keep in a crate when you can't watch it? That is why the dog needs so many walks. The dog would have a much better life living with someone who doesn't have little kids so the dog could roam around the house and backyard all day and not spend so much time in a crate.