Anonymous wrote:I can only laugh when I read the posts about Siberian Huskies. My childhood husky ran like the wind. The first day we adopted him we thought we were prepared because we had a tall fence.
Then we saw him jump right over it. From a standstill.
That said, he was a great dog and not overly needy. But the hair oh god the hair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I currently hate my Jack Russell Terrier. She will be 1 year old this week. She peed on the floor last night during the election. She runs through the house like an insane creature whenever she is out of her crate--She's out of her crate 6-8 hours a day. She gets an hour of flat out running and tussling with other dogs at the dog park every day. She never gives any warning that she needs to pee--she just pees. She is impossibly cute with a scruffy muzzle. I hate her but yeah, I am her slave.
Perhaps doesn't like spending 16 -18 hours a day in a crate?
+1000.
Anonymous wrote:Pugs.
I have two highly bred show Pugs. They are the best temperament E.V.E.R. but I will never get another one. If a Pug is bred to show standards (vs. back of the WaPo classifieds puppies/ cash only, WV address), Pugs are one big long expensive health nightmare. And the trend in the standard is to get even MORE extreme features, so puppies of today are even more fucked up and sicker than my own two -- which is hard to imagine.
Here's a bit of trivia I bet you didn't know: Pugs that meet the breed standard cannot conceive puppies on their own. (IVF) They can't give birth vaginally without killing the mom or her babies (all C-sections). Modern Pugs don't have nostrils, just slits where the nostril would be. Their throats collapse in on themselves somewhere around the 5-6 year mark (C-Pap machine).
In addition, my dogs have been to neurosurgeons, orthopedists, opthamologist surgeon, and a canine allergist. One had to go on Prozac for several months, and the other one continues to have some OCD tendencies that aren't debilitating, so we don't medicate him.
Next dog: stuffed animal.
Anonymous wrote:
Here's the CDC list of dogs most likely to kill humans.
-Pitbull-type dogs
-Rottweilers
-German Shepherds
-Husky-type dogs
-Malamutes
-Doberman Pinschers
-Chow Chows
-Great Danes
-Saint Bernards
-Wolf hybrids
-Mixed breeds
Bear in mind that there's a huge difference between the top of this list and the bottom.
Between 1979 and 1998, 76 people were killed by "pit bull types" vs. 7 by a Great Dane and 7 by a Saint Bernard. The Pit bulls, Rotweillers, and German Shepards combine to account fo rmore than half of all fatal dog attacks.
Anonymous wrote:Dachshund and beagle -- never again.
Anonymous wrote:Dachshund. Cute and adorable. Bladder problems. Pee everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Miniature Schnauzer. Two different family members had miniature schnauzers that were well-trained, sweet, and affectionate to all adults. The minute a child entered the room (or even a friend who was a grown person, but unusually small in stature) they became hostile. Both dogs were raised from puppyhood by the family, and had never been mistreated by children. One of the dogs crossed the room to bite a small child who was completely ignoring the dog at the time. At the time, our vet told us that Schnauzers are known for not being good with children.