TayloredEq
Well-Known Member
I know that GSDs have the double coat thing going on so that they don't really feel the cold - but at what temperature do they start to get cold?
Bear and I are sleeping in the lorry at the moment whilst I am on colic watch for a clients horse. Bear certainly seems to enjoy his creature comforts. He sleeps on the bed at night and I will often find that I am being pushed off my pillow by his big fat head! He will always choose to lie on the bed, duvet, make himself a pillow etc as opposed to lying on the floor. Yet when we had some Americans here for some clinics they turned him really soft and he used to lie as close to the gas fire as he could get.
He doesn't seem at all bothered by the temperature outside at the moment (-6 this morning) but I just wondered at what point he might start notice it.
Sorry - bit of a waffly post!!
Bear and I are sleeping in the lorry at the moment whilst I am on colic watch for a clients horse. Bear certainly seems to enjoy his creature comforts. He sleeps on the bed at night and I will often find that I am being pushed off my pillow by his big fat head! He will always choose to lie on the bed, duvet, make himself a pillow etc as opposed to lying on the floor. Yet when we had some Americans here for some clinics they turned him really soft and he used to lie as close to the gas fire as he could get.
He doesn't seem at all bothered by the temperature outside at the moment (-6 this morning) but I just wondered at what point he might start notice it.
Sorry - bit of a waffly post!!