Anonymous wrote:Do you have a plan for who will take care of this dog should you get sick and die? Late 50s is too old imo unless you are getting a big dog that won’t live 10 years. If you are getting a small dog who could live 18 years, very selfish.
Puppies are like infants. They need to go outside every hour while being trained, and they don’t sleep through the night.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone could die at any time.
I wouldn't get a puppy just because I don't want all that work.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a plan for who will take care of this dog should you get sick and die? Late 50s is too old imo unless you are getting a big dog that won’t live 10 years. If you are getting a small dog who could live 18 years, very selfish.
Puppies are like infants. They need to go outside every hour while being trained, and they don’t sleep through the night.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a plan for who will take care of this dog should you get sick and die? Late 50s is too old imo unless you are getting a big dog that won’t live 10 years. If you are getting a small dog who could live 18 years, very selfish.
Puppies are like infants. They need to go outside every hour while being trained, and they don’t sleep through the night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TLDR whole thread but I do dog adoptions for a living. You can't leave a 4 month old puppy home alone all day. That's cruel. Even a dog walker is insufficient for the training and socialization a young puppy needs. Dog daycare would give it socialization but not a lot of one on one training. I'd get an older dog.
People like you are the reason people Shop instead of adopt.
Is ideal? No but it’s doable and dogs are just fine. You don’t need doggy daycare. A dog walker is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Are you active and mobile? Also depends on the breed you are getting, some breeds are very chill and don’t do much. Puppies are a LOT of work the first 6mths and then a little less 6-12 months. Most stabilize around 12-18 months. Can you be highly present during that time frame? If so, get the puppy. If not, you could be instilling a bad foundation from the start and you could have problems for years to come. Get a dog breed based on your lifestyle, there is one for everyone. DO NOT GO OFF APPEARANCE. Commit to this dog for 12 months and you will have a wonderful family member, if you can’t well that’s not fair to your family or the dog. It’s not a stuffed animal, it’s a breathing life.
Anonymous wrote:TLDR whole thread but I do dog adoptions for a living. You can't leave a 4 month old puppy home alone all day. That's cruel. Even a dog walker is insufficient for the training and socialization a young puppy needs. Dog daycare would give it socialization but not a lot of one on one training. I'd get an older dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have a plan for who will take care of this dog should you get sick and die? Late 50s is too old imo unless you are getting a big dog that won’t live 10 years. If you are getting a small dog who could live 18 years, very selfish.
Puppies are like infants. They need to go outside every hour while being trained, and they don’t sleep through the night.
Most of us plan to love beyond 68! Plus many of us have family who love our pets.
I would get a dog at 80, too. I hope to never not have one (or two).
You are very selfish. My dad also planned to live beyond 68, but unfortunately he got cancer and died at 67. It is not fair to the animal to lose it's home too.