Anonymous wrote:If I ever get a dog, its going to be a cute cavapoo. I cannot imagine taking care of a pitbull. Especially if you have a baby or kids in the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your dog will slow down a it ages. It' still young and energetic and demanding. After about 5 it will settle down in the house but still need exercise (tired = good, as I'm sure you've heard). After 7 or so its exercise needs will start to decline. My 15 year old dog basically sleeps all day, although having a very old dog comes with other challenges and we really can't board her anymore at this age.
Anyway, you are approaching the sweet spot of a mature dog that is fun but not as needy.
I’m guessing OP shudders at the thought of the dog reaching 15 years old. We have a 16 year old dog and are in the same boat - can’t board him. But OP, it’s pretty uncommon to have a dog that reaches such an old age, so don’t think about that now. Outsource care, find a dog sitter that can come on short notice, and feel good about all benefits to your kids. Usually, familiarity breeds contempt, but with a dog, familiarity leads to affection, so I bet one day you will realize that you love the dog. You are a good egg for taking care of the dog and being a good dog mom.
Can you and P-PP explain why you can’t board your senior dogs anymore?
I have an 8-year-old Bulldog, and she still boards. I’m wondering if there is something I’m missing. (Bulldogs aren’t long lived, so 8 is quite senior.)
[NP]
The only positive is her life expectancy is about 10 yrs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your dog will slow down a it ages. It' still young and energetic and demanding. After about 5 it will settle down in the house but still need exercise (tired = good, as I'm sure you've heard). After 7 or so its exercise needs will start to decline. My 15 year old dog basically sleeps all day, although having a very old dog comes with other challenges and we really can't board her anymore at this age.
Anyway, you are approaching the sweet spot of a mature dog that is fun but not as needy.
I’m guessing OP shudders at the thought of the dog reaching 15 years old. We have a 16 year old dog and are in the same boat - can’t board him. But OP, it’s pretty uncommon to have a dog that reaches such an old age, so don’t think about that now. Outsource care, find a dog sitter that can come on short notice, and feel good about all benefits to your kids. Usually, familiarity breeds contempt, but with a dog, familiarity leads to affection, so I bet one day you will realize that you love the dog. You are a good egg for taking care of the dog and being a good dog mom.
Can you and P-PP explain why you can’t board your senior dogs anymore?
I have an 8-year-old Bulldog, and she still boards. I’m wondering if there is something I’m missing. (Bulldogs aren’t long lived, so 8 is quite senior.)
[NP]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your dog will slow down a it ages. It' still young and energetic and demanding. After about 5 it will settle down in the house but still need exercise (tired = good, as I'm sure you've heard). After 7 or so its exercise needs will start to decline. My 15 year old dog basically sleeps all day, although having a very old dog comes with other challenges and we really can't board her anymore at this age.
Anyway, you are approaching the sweet spot of a mature dog that is fun but not as needy.
I’m guessing OP shudders at the thought of the dog reaching 15 years old. We have a 16 year old dog and are in the same boat - can’t board him. But OP, it’s pretty uncommon to have a dog that reaches such an old age, so don’t think about that now. Outsource care, find a dog sitter that can come on short notice, and feel good about all benefits to your kids. Usually, familiarity breeds contempt, but with a dog, familiarity leads to affection, so I bet one day you will realize that you love the dog. You are a good egg for taking care of the dog and being a good dog mom.
Can you and P-PP explain why you can’t board your senior dogs anymore?
I have an 8-year-old Bulldog, and she still boards. I’m wondering if there is something I’m missing. (Bulldogs aren’t long lived, so 8 is quite senior.)
[NP]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your dog will slow down a it ages. It' still young and energetic and demanding. After about 5 it will settle down in the house but still need exercise (tired = good, as I'm sure you've heard). After 7 or so its exercise needs will start to decline. My 15 year old dog basically sleeps all day, although having a very old dog comes with other challenges and we really can't board her anymore at this age.
Anyway, you are approaching the sweet spot of a mature dog that is fun but not as needy.
I’m guessing OP shudders at the thought of the dog reaching 15 years old. We have a 16 year old dog and are in the same boat - can’t board him. But OP, it’s pretty uncommon to have a dog that reaches such an old age, so don’t think about that now. Outsource care, find a dog sitter that can come on short notice, and feel good about all benefits to your kids. Usually, familiarity breeds contempt, but with a dog, familiarity leads to affection, so I bet one day you will realize that you love the dog. You are a good egg for taking care of the dog and being a good dog mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel the same way as you. My husband wanted a dog and does the bulk of the work but dog is worse than a newborn.
We adopted a 1yo dog a few years ago. She definitely has never been as much work as a newborn. Not even close.
My 3 year old dog still wakes me up in the middle of the night.
That’s extremely unusual. Our 13 week old lab puppy is in a crate in our bedroom from about 10:30pm-6:30am. Once she’s able to sleep outside the crate, we will get an auto feeder and set it to put out her kibble at a reasonable breakfast time. Then we will be able to sleep for as long as we want to. Potty is taken care of because we have a doggy door that goes out to a fenced in backyard.
Point being, your situation is not typical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel the same way as you. My husband wanted a dog and does the bulk of the work but dog is worse than a newborn.
We adopted a 1yo dog a few years ago. She definitely has never been as much work as a newborn. Not even close.
My 3 year old dog still wakes me up in the middle of the night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel the same way as you. My husband wanted a dog and does the bulk of the work but dog is worse than a newborn.
We adopted a 1yo dog a few years ago. She definitely has never been as much work as a newborn. Not even close.
My 3 year old dog still wakes me up in the middle of the night.
Our dog wakes up 1-2 times to potty. We don't feed after 6, watch liquids. Far more work. Walk 2-3 times a day. Freaks out being home alone. Has to be in a room with one of us despite small house. It probably depends on the breed and dog. Picky eater.
Also depends how difficult/easy the newborn you’re comparing it to is.
I had a newborn with medical and feeding issues who had many developmental delays until late elementary school who needed daily therapies. Still far easier.
Anonymous wrote:I hope every person who's on the verge of caving into demands by the rest of the family for a dog reads this.
I have a dog, I love my dog, and he is very easy but the best imaginable dog is still a ton of work