mistoffolees
Senior Member
Or a Jehovah's Witness...Ha! For me too. While stealth is probably right, I suppose I ascribe to the "OR maybe the stranger is an axe murderer we haven't met yet" like of thought.
Or a Jehovah's Witness...Ha! For me too. While stealth is probably right, I suppose I ascribe to the "OR maybe the stranger is an axe murderer we haven't met yet" like of thought.
Good grief. My ten year old subscribes to this. Hence why she dragged an appeals court judge over to meet me when we went to a party and when the JUDGE tried to tell her she shouldn't talk to strangers, she said, "How am I supposed to make new friends then? Strangers are just people I haven't met yet and I need to make new friends. You HAVE to meet my mom anyway."LOL You are all too silly!
Oh lord...LOL.Or a Jehovah's Witness...
See! I thought "Gawd, that doesn't really SOUND like Stealth." LOLNO!!! I mean y'all are too silly to think I actually do this!
A Mastiff? As in one of those giant dogs Mastiff? How big is yours?See! I thought "Gawd, that doesn't really SOUND like Stealth." LOL
Ldi - I had a similar issue once upon a time. I finally lost enough of my inherent politeness to refuse to corral the german shepherd when they pulled in the driveway.
And now, I have a mastiff. And a gate that locks. And I don't answer my front door. Ever.
He's an American Mastiff, so won't be quite as big as the English Mastiffs you're picturing. The vet thinks he'll top out around 160lbs. And he's less drooly than his English cousins.A Mastiff? As in one of those giant dogs Mastiff? How big is yours?
Wait... Austrailian Shepherd/ Border Collie cross?He's an American Mastiff, so won't be quite as big as the English Mastiffs you're picturing. The vet thinks he'll top out around 160lbs. And he's less drooly than his English cousins.
Right now, he's 10 months old and 75 lbs. However, in the past month, he's grown enough to go from the smallest setting on his collar to the largest. He can fit my other dog's entire head in his mouth. LOL the other dog is a collie/shepherd cross.
Dear God no. Do you think that cross would even survive puppyhood? They'd be so hyper, I'd picture them just going POP!Wait... Austrailian Shepherd/ Border Collie cross?
Well survive he did... my Bear, that is. He's pretty high energy, but he doesn't just POP with it, LOL! Even at 7 he still corrals and sorts the same way he did when he was two.Dear God no. Do you think that cross would even survive puppyhood? They'd be so hyper, I'd picture them just going POP!
Finnegan is a collie (real collie) / GERMAN shepherd cross. 65lbs of happy go lucky yet lazy hair.
I had a border collie before Twain was born. She was 4, and still so insane she couldn't be in the house when any of the kids were home. She'd just do laps. Hallway to the back of the couch to the chair to my bed to the kitchen to the hallway to the back of the couch...Well survive he did... my Bear, that is. He's pretty high energy, but he doesn't just POP with it, LOL! Even at 7 he still corrals and sorts the same way he did when he was two.
I had a border collie before Twain was born. She was 4, and still so insane she couldn't be in the house when any of the kids were home. She'd just do laps. Hallway to the back of the couch to the chair to my bed to the kitchen to the hallway to the back of the couch...
I can't imagine tossing an aussie in with that! lol
I love that Finnegan and Beauregard can go out in the yard and run off their energy and then come in, crash on the couch, and be out for 6 hours.
Oh, I know that's true. It's true of kids too, by the way.Issue with herding dogs is that they are easily bored. That manifests itself as behavioral ticks, so to speak. She just needed a job and a purpose. The Border collie breeder I spoke with when I started Bears training said that he wouldn't touch a border pup for the first two years. I got a lot of conflicting advice, but the one piece of advice that I've received time and again is that dogs that are bred for a specific purpose (shepherds, collies, labs, etc) need to have that drive fulfilled. They need constant challenges.
I guess that explains why Mikey the wonderdog (the yellow lab I used to have) could open deadbolts, car doors from the inside and outside, could slip any collar or harness anybody put on him, and never met a convenience store hot dog rack he couldn't get at.Issue with herding dogs is that they are easily bored. That manifests itself as behavioral ticks, so to speak. She just needed a job and a purpose. The Border collie breeder I spoke with when I started Bears training said that he wouldn't touch a border pup for the first two years. I got a lot of conflicting advice, but the one piece of advice that I've received time and again is that dogs that are bred for a specific purpose (shepherds, collies, labs, etc) need to have that drive fulfilled. They need constant challenges.