Anonymous wrote:Euthanize the dog. Get a new one when the kids are older.
Anonymous wrote:Your baby comes first. PERIOD.
Anonymous wrote:You wont know until you have a baby but even if your dog is essentially a floor rug, you still never leave the two alone, ever. I have a great dog but I dont leave him alone with my under 10 yr old kids. Their unpredictability stresses him out. A toddler is really stressful to a dog.
Anonymous wrote:If he becomes reactive to the baby you will re home him. You won’t hesitate because you will be very protective. I think it’s likely he will since the stress/change level will explode in the house. But the decision will not be as hard as you think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had twins and a small dog who loved only us. He didn't worry too much about them when they were babies. They didn't do anything to bother him. When they started moving, we kept the areas where the kids were gated off from the dog areas for several years.
Wasn't easy, but we knew we couldn't trust him 100% with the kids and realistically we couldn't trust the kids not to hurt him too.
When they were around 4, he realized that they were higher on the pack order that he was and stopped bothering them.
A few years later when he developed heart failure, we would often find him snuggled next to one of the kids for comfort. I think they made him comfortable during his last years.
Had your dog bitten before?
I’m guessing you stayed home or had local family to help because that sounds like a whole pain in the ass for working parents
Anonymous wrote:We had twins and a small dog who loved only us. He didn't worry too much about them when they were babies. They didn't do anything to bother him. When they started moving, we kept the areas where the kids were gated off from the dog areas for several years.
Wasn't easy, but we knew we couldn't trust him 100% with the kids and realistically we couldn't trust the kids not to hurt him too.
When they were around 4, he realized that they were higher on the pack order that he was and stopped bothering them.
A few years later when he developed heart failure, we would often find him snuggled next to one of the kids for comfort. I think they made him comfortable during his last years.