A dog is a lifetime companion, not a disposable object. Here are  important things to consider before you add this newest member to your  family.
        "Select" is defined in the dictionary by such phrases as "a  preferred choice" or "carefully chosen". Selecting the family dog should  be a well-researched and carefully soul-searched activity. Are you and  your family willing to make a 10 - 15 year commitment to this sentient  being in sickness and in health, for richer and for poorer, for as long  as all shall live? Let's pose some of the questions family members  should discuss before obtaining a dog.
How Old Are the Members of My Family?
If  the youngsters in your household are under seven years old, they are  usually not developmentally suited for puppies 5 months old and under or  toy-sized (under 15 pounds) dogs of any age. Puppies have ultra sharp  "milk teeth" and toenails and often teethe on and scratch children,  resulting in unintentional injury to the child. The puppy becomes  something to be feared rather than loved.
Toy dogs are  fine-boned, touch-sensitive creatures that do not weather rough or  clumsy handling well. They break relatively easily and are quicker to  bite than their larger boned, mellower relatives.
Unless your  children are unusually sensitive, low-key, respectful individuals, a  medium-to-large sized dog over 5 months old is usually the safer choice.  Regardless of size, all interactions between small children and dogs  should be monitored by a responsible adult. When there is no one to  watch over them, they should be separated.
At the opposite end of  the spectrum, are there frail elderly or physically challenged  individuals in the household? If so, strong vigorous adolescent dogs are  not a wise idea. No aging hips or wrists are safe from these yahoos.  People who were one-breed fans throughout their lives may one day find  that their favorite breed demands more than they can physically handle.  The new dog must fit the current physical capabilities of his keepers  with an eye toward what the next 10-15 years will bring.
Who Will Be the Dog's Primary Caretaker?
A  decade or so back, this was an easy question to answer-- Mom. She  stayed home and cooked, cleaned and raised the family dog. Most families  these days do not have that option. All adults have to go to work and  the kids head off to school. This leaves the family dog to be sandwiched  in between lessons and sports and household chores and so on. One  parent should be designated Primary Caretaker to make sure the dog does  not get lost in the shuffle.
Some parents bow to the pressure  their children put on them to get a dog. The kids promise with tears in  their eyes that they will religiously take care of this soon-to-be best  friend. The truth of the matter is, during the 10 - 15 year lifespan of  the average dog, your children will be growing in and out of various  life stages and the family dog's importance in their lives will wax and  wain like the Moon. You cannot saddle a child with total responsibility  for the family dog and threaten to get rid of it if the child is not  providing that care. It is not fair to child or dog.
Choosing the  family dog should include input from all family members with the  cooler-headed, more experienced family members' opinions carrying a bit  more weight. The family dog should not be a gift from one family member  to all the others. The selection experience is one the entire family can  share. Doing some research and polling each family member about what is  important to them in a dog will help pin down what you will be looking  for. Books like Daniel Tortora's THE RIGHT DOG FOR YOU or The ASPCA  Complete Guide to Dogs can be tremendously helpful and can warn you away  from unsuitable choices for your family's circumstances.
How Much Can I Spend?
The  price to obtain a dog runs the gamut from free-to-a-good-home to  several thousand dollars. It does not always hold true that you get what  you pay for. The price you pay in a pet shop is usually 2 to 3 times  higher than what you pay a reputable breeder for a puppy of similar (or  usually better) quality.
Too many folks spend all their available  cash on a pet shop purchase and then have no money left for initial  veterinary care, a training crate or obedience classes--all necessary  expenses. Remember, the purchase price of a dog is a very small part of  what the dog will actually cost. Save money for food (especially if it  is a large or giant breed), grooming (fancy coated breeds such as  Poodles, Cockers, and Shih Tzus need to be clipped every 4 to 6 weeks),  chew toys (the vigorous chewers like a Bull Terrier or Mastiff can work  their way through a $8.00 rawhide bone in a single sitting), outerwear  (short-coated breeds like Greyhounds, Chihuahuas, and Whippets must have  sweaters and coats in the winter or in lavishly air conditioned  interiors), and miscellaneous supplies (bowls, beds, brushes, shampoos,  flea products, odor neutralizers for accidents, baby gates, leashes,  collars, heartworm preventative etc.).
And then, there is the  veterinary emergency! Very few dogs live their entire lives without at  least one accident. Your puppy eats a battery or pair of pantyhose, your  fine-boned toy breaks a leg, your big boy has bad hips, your dog gets  hit by a car or beaten/bitten by the neighborhood bully. These surprises  can cost $500 or more. Unlike our children, most of our dogs are not  covered by health insurance.
But "How much can I spend?" is not  only a question of money. How much time and energy can you spend on a  new dog? Various breeds and ages of dog make different demands on our  precious spare time. In general, the Sporting, Hounds, Herding, and  Terrier breeds will demand more time in training and daily exercise than  will the Guardian or Companion breeds. A puppy or adolescent will need  more exercise, training, and supervision than will an adult dog. And the  first year with any new dog regardless of age or breed type will put  more demands on the owner than any other time, for this is when you are  setting up house rules and routines which will last for the lifetime of  your dog.
Choose wisely, for when the bond breaks, everybody concerned suffers. Make selecting your new family dog a life-affirming act.
Frm petfinder admin
Monday, February 28, 2011
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