Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Advice On Getting A Puppy
19 Answers
further to my previous posts about getting a dog, we have decided to get a puppy rather than a rescue.
We previously had a puppy, but we serendipitously got her when a friend of a friend's dog was pregnant (not a breeder)
We are not interested in pedigree, but would like a vaguely collie dog. We do not have sheep, so would not need to spend 12k like that one the other day :)
How on earth do you find reputable puppies, and know that they are not being farmed? Most of the puppies we are interested in seem to be available a LONG way from our home which means it's not so easy to check then out
We previously had a puppy, but we serendipitously got her when a friend of a friend's dog was pregnant (not a breeder)
We are not interested in pedigree, but would like a vaguely collie dog. We do not have sheep, so would not need to spend 12k like that one the other day :)
How on earth do you find reputable puppies, and know that they are not being farmed? Most of the puppies we are interested in seem to be available a LONG way from our home which means it's not so easy to check then out
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by bednobs. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This would be the safest path to pursue:-
https:/ /www.th ekennel club.or g.uk/se rvices/ public/ acbr/De fault.a spx
https:/
Collie type dogs need exercise and space. How old is your daughter? Do you have a fenced garden? Have you considered foster with option to keep? My grandkids, now 12 and 9 have been involved in fostering for years and soon understood that they were helping the puppies find forever homes. Some they were sorry to see go and some they were glad. We kept one who was born here, one older one who had been returned to the charity 4 times and one, aged 4 months, who as soon as he met Leo would not leave him alone and they sleep together three years later. Fostering first gives you all time to know each other and see how you get on. Rescue puppies will hopefully have been assessed as much as possible but it is difficult to ascertain how they will turn out. I found that mixed breeds were much easier to train than some purebreds. You really should see any puppy more than once before choosing and the parents, if possible
thanks all, husband and daughter went to see one yesterday, but husband did not get a fuzzy feeling so passed (actually i'm rather proud of him as he is like the kid in stories: can we have a puppy, can we have a puppy, can we have a puppy and so on ad infinitum).
Not to self and others: do NOT take an 8 year old to see a puppy unless you are sure you are bringing it home
Not to self and others: do NOT take an 8 year old to see a puppy unless you are sure you are bringing it home