Jenko109
Well-Known Member
I simply cannot believe there were ever negative posts on here about Greyhounds!?
Hi, welcome to the forum.I’ll hold my hands up to restarting this thread
I basically searched for anything related to galgos in the hope of maybe somehow finding anyone who went through a similar (and really upsetting, stressful & awful) ordeal after adopting a Spanish Galgo from a particular charity.
From the story above about the elderly couple with the runaway Galgo & the information that the charity runs out of an office & uses kennels I suspect that is the same charity. If it is then nothing has changed ….. to the huge detriment of the dogs being brought over & to the adopters.
Of course we take our side in the responsibility as we adopted a foreign dog - I do however realise now the enormous difference between a retired greyhound (we had 2 wonderful greys previously) and a Galgo who despite being described as Spanish greyhounds our experience was vastly different.
Of course we take our side in the responsibility as we adopted a foreign dog - I do however realise now the enormous difference between a retired greyhound (we had 2 wonderful greys previously) and a Galgo who despite being described as Spanish greyhounds our experience was vastly different.
I appreciate the sympathy - thank you! I totally get it that flirt poles aren’t cutting the mustard when there’s hunting that could be happening (for us it was squirrels & rodents). Sadly the Galgo did not come with the sleepy gene & literally only settled down once it got dark! Not so bad in the winter but summer was horrific … still whining & crying to go for a walk at 9pm at night, after already having had 3 hours off lead during the day. So she’d make do with a squeaky ball in the garden for 10 mins!You have my sympathy! I have whippets. Of the current 2 one is a lazy, silly dufus and a delight. The other one is very sharp. An out and out athlete and working dog. I adore him, but do find him exhausting sometimes. Hes 20kgs but will take down full grown roe deer stags if he gets a chance, I spend my life on red alert for deer. Then he gets depressed if he's not allowed to hunt, wont be fobbed off with racing or flirt poles. He considers that just stupid.
He is the most amazing, clever, loving and loyal dog I've ever owned and I thank god on a daily basis that he does have the typical whippet sleepy gene and sleeps 18 hours a day!
I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your last paragraph. The charity made me feel like such a failure & also just fell off the radar contact wise as soon as we’d adopted.Its really sad for them, some do settle but once they've lived that sort of life and loved it, its incredibly hard to settle into normal life. Some are just hard wired to hunt. They get such a chemical high from it, it must be like being a drug addict. I sometimes feel sorry for my boy as he would have made the most outstanding working dog, but the sort of home I'd want for him don't really exist anymore, and while he wants to hunt, he wants to do an hour then come home, have his fancy carefully balanced expensive dinner and then be cuddled and cosseted and tucked up in my bed. Hes just woken up and come and flopped across me so I can cuddle him. Hes very spoilt. We compromise in that he's allowed to hunt rabbits and squirrels, that keeps him happy and means the deer are safe, and so is he as I have no doubt that if I let him he would chase them across the M1 if that's where they went. When they click into hunting mode they don't think about anything else, especially not their own safety!
I couldn't have coped with yours either, I don't think many people could have.