Anonymous wrote:What's up with people bringing their damn dogs EVERYWHERE? Seriously. It's getting so out of hand.
Anonymous wrote:Annoying but task someone to be on dog duty and let it go. Love the title of your thread. I chuckled.
Anonymous wrote:during a pandemic people understand weddings are much smaller and not every Tom, Dick and Harry will be invited. Guarantee there’s a friend, neighbor, acquaintance or someone OP knows well enough to ask but not well enough to invite to a pandemic wedding.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have him call back and say he was wrong.
I would also consider asking a non-invited friend to take care of your dog that day. Parties can be really stressful for dogs. But you know your dog best.
NP.
You cannot be this senseless!
during a pandemic people understand weddings are much smaller and not every Tom, Dick and Harry will be invited. Guarantee there’s a friend, neighbor, acquaintance or someone OP knows well enough to ask but not well enough to invite to a pandemic wedding.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have him call back and say he was wrong.
I would also consider asking a non-invited friend to take care of your dog that day. Parties can be really stressful for dogs. But you know your dog best.
NP.
You cannot be this senseless!
I was literally just going to say this! You don’t just show up with a dog and expect to leave it there. There’s a lengthy process involved which is why in my response upthread I told her to rethink marrying this guy and/or tell the cousin herself that the dog absolutely cannot come. OP can decide for herself what to do with her own dog, but I’d probably stick with the original plan of sending it out for the day.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doggy daycare. For both dogs.
https://northernvirginiamag.com/family/pets/2020/07/16/16-doggy-day-cares-in-northern-virginia/
Even if cousin wanted to leave dog alone at hotel, it is against most hotel policies.
Most places like this require vaccination records and a trial day. You can't just show up with dogs who haven't registered and been there before.
Anonymous wrote:Have him call back and say he was wrong.
I would also consider asking a non-invited friend to take care of your dog that day. Parties can be really stressful for dogs. But you know your dog best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your fiancee is like this for many things, please reconsider marrying him. It will get worse.
If you wish to go through with this wedding, then put your foot down now. Dogs DO NOT DO WELL in home wedding situations at all - they feel your stress, they're overstimulated by the unfamiliar smells (so many of them!), and they will bark, nip, pee on someone's leg or eat something they shouldn't, and fight if there's a stranger dog.
So please call back this cousin and tell him that his dog stays at the hotel (in a crate, with chew toys). And board your own dog, or have a neighbor take care of him for the day. Do not leave your dog inside the house - people will go in and out, he'll sense the excitement outside, and may be destructive or escape.
In a crate with chew toys for 12 hours, so they're covered in their own p!ss & sh!t when you come back from the wedding?? Sounds fun.
If the hotel accepts dogs, there's no need to
crate them... and it's not the OP's place to dictate what the cousin does at the hotel anyway.
You sound like a control freak.
Anonymous wrote:Doggy daycare. For both dogs.
https://northernvirginiamag.com/family/pets/2020/07/16/16-doggy-day-cares-in-northern-virginia/
Even if cousin wanted to leave dog alone at hotel, it is against most hotel policies.
Anonymous wrote:We're having a small wedding ceremony at our house (half inside and half outside) in NOVA in September (we've owned the house together for about a year). We have a dog, who I wanted to have out of the house for the day, but my fiancee disagreed and said it'd be fine (which it probably would be so I was okay). Then, my fiancee's cousin asked if he could bring his dog. Apparently the hotel where he's staying allows pets, but he doesn't want to leave the dog in the hotel room for the day, and also doesn't want to kennel it for the weekend while he's away. My finance said yes.
Am I right to be annoyed? I've got a lot on my plate... when we decided to go ahead with these plans, covid cases were way down... and now I'm really stressed... about covid, caterer, rain plan (we don't really have one), getting rentals set up (tables, chairs, etc.). I'm sort of doing this on my own, don't have a planner or someone to help, etc.
I said I thought we should say no, but my fiancee insisted it's an old dog and will be fine. Also, our dog doesn't always do well with new dogs, and I'm wondering how our dog is going to react to this dog. My fiancee says that if there's a problem with the two dogs together, the cousin will handle it. But I know from experience that if there's a problem, it will go something like... my fiancee doing nothing, I'll need to be the bad guy and ask him to ask his cousin take care of the dogs, and the cousin won't want to and will claim his dog is not the problem. This cousin hasn't exactly been helpful in the past. He is a selfish spoiled brat who just does what works for him without regard for anyone else.
Honestly I'm just so mad that I have to add this to the list of other things I'm stressed about. It's really stressing me out. I think it's an unreasonable request. People that I'm not even that close with are asking if they can help, and someone who's pretty close family is just putting more demands on us on what will already be a stressful day.
Am I out of line to be upset? Should I just let it go?
Anonymous wrote:So your plan was no dogs in the house during the wedding day, including your own. Fiancee disagreed and decided without talking with you first that 2 dogs it is. Wonder if anyone else will bring their pets.