just dogs

Dogs?

  • Sit

    Votes: 41 16.2%
  • Fetch

    Votes: 46 18.2%
  • Belly Scratchers

    Votes: 80 31.6%
  • Dog Farts

    Votes: 69 27.3%
  • Leg Humps

    Votes: 28 11.1%
  • Cookie? Good boy..

    Votes: 58 22.9%
  • @Ceasar Milan, Fuck you!

    Votes: 103 40.7%

  • Total voters
    253

Laughing Grass

Well-Known Member
I gave Blue a couple calming chews so he could sleep.

I watched TV with the headphones and the wife ate some RSO so we were good.

It may only be six weeks until we can trust her enough. She's already jumped up on the kitchen table so she has to be watched like a hawk for a while.

It's OK for her to be in the kennel at night for her own good. Don't want her eating something in the middle of the night. Like a lamp. Lol.

2 months and she'll probably have her run of the house like every other dog did.

Safety first. My wife slept on the kitchen floor with our first dog 30 years ago for a couple weeks. We're a bit old for that now.
I wasn't judging, our dog was crate trained from a pup too. Three years of training went out the window when my sister watched him while we were on vacation. When we got home his new thing was crying and drooling if he was left alone with the door closed. I can't even take a bath now without the door being open a bit. He won't go in the bathroom, he just sits at the door and stares at you until you get uncomfortable and get out. We've come to an agreement on the bedroom, he can come in, but he has to sleep in his kennel on the floor.
 

Singlemalt

Well-Known Member
I wasn't judging, our dog was crate trained from a pup too. Three years of training went out the window when my sister watched him while we were on vacation. When we got home his new thing was crying and drooling if he was left alone with the door closed. I can't even take a bath now without the door being open a bit. He won't go in the bathroom, he just sits at the door and stares at you until you get uncomfortable and get out. We've come to an agreement on the bedroom, he can come in, but he has to sleep in his kennel on the floor.
smart doggie
 

raratt

Well-Known Member
Went out to check on Roxy this morning, she prefers to lay out in the sun in the back yard, and she is nowhere to be found. I go out front and call her and she comes tearing home from across the street. My neighbor's kid is out front and asks if that is our dog (duh). She has been chewing on a cross board on the fence and I guess she decided to make adjoining back yards by pushing on the two uprights that were freed by removing a part of the cross board. My neighbor must have let her out of their backyard when he found her, I guess he had never seen her before. ANYWAY she is back home now after causing a small aneurysm in my brain. Her pic made the local facebook page already by the time I brought her home.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
Went out to check on Roxy this morning, she prefers to lay out in the sun in the back yard, and she is nowhere to be found. I go out front and call her and she comes tearing home from across the street. My neighbor's kid is out front and asks if that is our dog (duh). She has been chewing on a cross board on the fence and I guess she decided to make adjoining back yards by pushing on the two uprights that were freed by removing a part of the cross board. My neighbor must have let her out of their backyard when he found her, I guess he had never seen her before. ANYWAY she is back home now after causing a small aneurysm in my brain. Her pic made the local facebook page already by the time I brought her home.
I hated that feeling. I had a Dobe that was a real escape artist.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
isn't this the cutest lil' shit?
1572992924741.png

"A young, stray puppy believed to have been dropped from the sky and into the backyard of an Australian family's property was actually a rare purebred dingo — an endangered wild dog breed native to Down Under.

The animal was discovered in Wandiligong, in the state of Victoria, around 200 miles northeast of Melbourne, in August. Jane Guiney, who found the animal whimpering in her backyard, suspected the furry creature was a dog or a fox and was dropped on the ground by an eagle flying by.

Guiney's family cared for the dog for a day before taking it to a veterinarian to be treated for injuries, where it was determined the dog was actually a dingo.

"He had a mark on his back [from what is believed to be an eagle's claws] and there were no other pups nearby," veterinarian Dr. Bec Day told Australia's ABC News. "The resident hadn't heard any [other dingos] calling. So he was just a lonely little soul sitting in a backyard."

The animal's DNA was tested for confirmation of its breed, and while they awaited results, the pup was taken to the Australian Dingo Foundation sanctuary. The test determined the dingo is a purebred Victorian Highlands Dingo, the sanctuary wrote on Instagram.

The dingo, which has since been named "Wandi," is fitting in nicely at the sanctuary, according to foundation director Lyn Watson"
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
isn't this the cutest lil' shit?

"A young, stray puppy believed to have been dropped from the sky and into the backyard of an Australian family's property was actually a rare purebred dingo — an endangered wild dog breed native to Down Under.

The animal was discovered in Wandiligong, in the state of Victoria, around 200 miles northeast of Melbourne, in August. Jane Guiney, who found the animal whimpering in her backyard, suspected the furry creature was a dog or a fox and was dropped on the ground by an eagle flying by.

Guiney's family cared for the dog for a day before taking it to a veterinarian to be treated for injuries, where it was determined the dog was actually a dingo.

"He had a mark on his back [from what is believed to be an eagle's claws] and there were no other pups nearby," veterinarian Dr. Bec Day told Australia's ABC News. "The resident hadn't heard any [other dingos] calling. So he was just a lonely little soul sitting in a backyard."

The animal's DNA was tested for confirmation of its breed, and while they awaited results, the pup was taken to the Australian Dingo Foundation sanctuary. The test determined the dingo is a purebred Victorian Highlands Dingo, the sanctuary wrote on Instagram.

The dingo, which has since been named "Wandi," is fitting in nicely at the sanctuary, according to foundation director Lyn Watson"
That looks like a baby just waitin' to get et

1573235120668.png

1573235155291.png

1573235197350.png

1573235215418.png

1573235316304.png

1573235435517.png

1573235515558.png
 
Top