SillySausage
Well-Known Member
One was bred by a family friend and the other bred by my uncle!
Ask yourself this, "If they are such wondrous and loveable creatures, then why have they been dumped upon a very well meaning, but swamped, re-homing centre"?
It isn't my intention to be controversial, but I would tell you that most of the dogs which end up in re-homing centres will arrive on your doorstep with their own agenda and their own set of specific problems. I'm sorry but that's the truth. Ask yourself this, "If they are such wondrous and loveable creatures, then why have they been dumped upon a very well meaning, but swamped, re-homing centre"?
The most experienced don't generally want to take them on, and why should they, is it really worth the grief? If I'm looking for a dog, then I will buy a puppy. I like to think that I have a rough idea what I'm doing. If I, in my admittedly pompous worldo), find the dogs which are misfits, to be a struggle, then what chance do those who are first time owners, and blissful in their ignorance of the canine mind, stand?
All so often I read on here of those who with the best of intentions, have taken on the fruitcakes, and then told us that after NINE YEARS, the bloody thing's starting to calm down.......... It just goes on, and on.
Those of you who work for the greater good, I applaud you. Those of you who are looking for a dog, do your research, buy your puppy, and if you make a mess of it, sort it through sound advice, or put it to sleep, rather than dump it on those lovely people on here who continue to give false hope, to so many.
I wont wear my tin hat. I mean what I say.
Alec.
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Many many many dogs end up in rescue because humans see dogs nowadays like everything else- a disposable commodity
Dont tar all rescue dogs with the same brush, as actually it is simply not true. ..........
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Alec I think the view that rescue dogs have problems is so damaging and some people may now not adopt a dog and go to a back street breeder instead as any puppy no matter its origins is better than an older rescue dog with supposed issues.
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Para 1. How I agree with you, and your thoughts would prompt the question, "Why did they buy the dog in the first place"?
Why is it that most of those who keep the rescue centres "supplied" with dogs, have been of the view, that if things don't work out (and with that approach, patently they often wont), then all that we have to do is seek out "That nice lady from the charity, and she'll make us feel better about the fact that we are idiots".
I am NOT knocking the rescues centres, except to say that their very presence supports the previously mentioned idiot. Say what you like, you're the answer to the idiot's prayers, and when they've dumped their misfit upon you, then they feel so much better about themselves. Then, quite clearly, their failures were the result of the breeder, or the dog itself (), so what do they do? Yep, you've got it, they go out and try, yet again.
I'm genuinely pleased to hear that there are those on here who've been successful with rescues. Honestly I am, but you have to admit that all so often, as the previous damage has been done, the puppy grows to maturity with a learned and often entrenched view of life, other dogs and people, and when the well intentioned "innocent" wanders in to a rescue centre, do the bulk of them know what they're taking on? Obviously not, which is why we see so many dogs which have been re-homed, more than once, and some on multiple occasions.
I'm not knocking the rescue centres, but they are all so often, a salve for those who being the wrong person to own a dog, have quite coincidentally, chosen an entirely inappropriate breed.
My sympathies don't lay with those who buy the wrong dog, for the wrong reason.
Alec.
I would also advise others to follow the same path.
Alec.