View Full Version : Favorite Dog?
Strike For The South
10-12-2009, 19:18
I love Dogs and have given some thought of buying one of my own once I get the money and sufficent space for it.
Growing up my family always had black labradors as that was my Dads favorite but I am much more partial to the heeler. I love those dogs.
So how bout you?
Louis VI the Fat
10-12-2009, 19:25
My poodle. 'Fluffy'. I had him shaven to the latest fashion, and died him pink. Quite the fashion statement. :book:
LeftEyeNine
10-12-2009, 19:32
Being a cat-oid as I am, the only dog I could love were Golden Retrievers. Should I ever pet one, I'll name him "Fourth Nipple".
You're not alone, SFTS.
Growing up my family always had black labradors as that was my Dads favorite but I am much more partial to the heeler.
A black labrador has been the family dog the last ten years. Awesome creature. :smash:
AlexanderSextus
10-12-2009, 19:37
I like Pit bulls. They're not the monsters people make them out to be.
https://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y222/mahoes/dogs/01-26-08She.jpg
D'awwwww! (and look at the muscles on that pup too! WHOA!) :beam:
We've had dogs since before I was born. All but two have been golden retrievers, one was a black lab and the other was a rather nasty beagle that bit everyone and didn't live long (got hit by a car). Current animal inventory includes:
One (1) rotten golden named Ginger that lives under this roof. Attention starved, sweet as can be, spoiled totally rotten by Mrs. Whacker and her parents, and sheds enough to turn our floors this reddish-blonde color. Just got a bath in fact, and is rocketing around the house shaking water on everything. Also known as "pig".
Two (2) rotten goldens named Lucy and Sophie that live with mom and dad. Both are massive, and weigh above 100 lbs. Lucy is getting old and cranky, but is still the smartest. Sophie is incredibly stupid, but sweet as a can be and loves to greet people by headbutting them with her muzzle in their crotches. Mom and dad are in the process of moving to the deep south to become rednecks, and it sounds like we will end up getting all three retards for a month or so. Both animals respectively referred to as "bear" and "stupid".
:balloon2:
https://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y222/mahoes/dogs/01-26-08She.jpg
PURE EVIL!!!!!!!!! :scared:
Get a pure white Alaskan Malamute.
http://giantalaskanmalamute.org/images/av1-255x420.jpg
http://www.innocentenglish.com/cute-pictures/wp/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/cute-alaskan-malamute-puppy.jpg
http://www.alaskanmalamutepups.com/files/pictures/Sunshine/Sunshine-5-800.jpg
seireikhaan
10-12-2009, 20:23
My family's only ever had Australian shephards. Pretty good dogs, so long as you neuter the males. Otherwise, they can be a tad aggressive for folks in town. But if you're in the country, they're a great dog to have.
Hosakawa Tito
10-12-2009, 20:27
Growing up we always had Springer Spaniels. My Dad loved to hunt pheasant, grouse, woodcock & such so our dogs were always active hunters.
My first wife loved her Rottweilers. One in particular that I became especially attached to, Apollo.
Biggest dang dog I ever had to feed, about 150lb.'s with a head the size of a 5 gallon bucket. Even though he had a bark like Cujo he was the sweetest tempered, always grinning, I really miss my Big Dumb.
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/hoppy84/apollogrin.jpg
Samurai Waki
10-12-2009, 21:07
Get a pure white Alaskan Malamute.
http://giantalaskanmalamute.org/images/av1-255x420.jpg
http://www.innocentenglish.com/cute-pictures/wp/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/cute-alaskan-malamute-puppy.jpg
http://www.alaskanmalamutepups.com/files/pictures/Sunshine/Sunshine-5-800.jpg
Unless Strike wants a hole through his door, fence, maybe the neighbor's fence, and a police complaint for missing mailboxes Alaskan Malamutes are best left in Alaska or for guys who dogsled. Love those dogs to death, but they can be like Giant Jack Russel Terriers. I have some great stories about my Alaskan Malamute growing up.
If you want a good intelligent dog, that's compact enough to live in an apartment sized area, but also robust enough to handle terrain meant for the best of them, I'd suggest a Welsh Corgi. I've taken my Pembroke on a few expeditions, and he was a trooper (as well as good company) the entire time.
Craterus
10-12-2009, 21:17
Dachshund, obviously. But I'm more of a cat person...
tibilicus
10-12-2009, 21:29
Speaking in terms of the easiest "first dog" a Labrador is an ideal breed, no other dog is as well suited to domestication.
If I could have any dog however, minus my current Chocolate lab, Id' probably say Siberian Huskey. Obviously such dogs aren't really all that well suited to being pets, unless being trained from an early age. Apparently if they're not trained and you let one of the lead it wont be coming back, period.
Other than that it would have to be a Border Collie.Great temperament and really friendly dogs, I'm not really sure if you could get them down in Texas though, they're very much a "British dog".
Oh, and if you don't mind a big dog the St.Bernard is totally awesome, and lets be honest, Who's going to try and rob your house with one of these behind the door..
I have a Boxer and a Pug, the French Bulldog having died this spring (he was very, very old). If I could have any dog at all, with no regard to my living space, children, or wifely preferences, I would go with the king of all Molassers (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molossus_%28dog%29), the Bullmastiff. Now that is a dog.
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/bullmastiff.jpg
Strike For The South
10-12-2009, 21:45
...
I started a serious thread! Are you proud?
Guys thanks for all the contributions but I still think I'm going to get a heeler I am absolutley in love with these things.
Since I have 4 of them, I would have to say Siberian Huskies. :2thumbsup: Probably not the best choice for your situation though, and they would be miserable in Texas.
Whatever you do, don't get a dog from a puppy mill or pet store. They may be cheaper up front, but the medical bills will kill you down the road...
Veho Nex
10-12-2009, 22:08
I love German Sheppards beyond any type of dog in the world. I would rather have a very annoying German Sheppard than do my favorite past time, kicking the small yippie yap dogs between goal post.
Hooahguy
10-12-2009, 22:51
Schnauzer. not sure why.
Hosakawa Tito
10-12-2009, 22:53
I started a serious thread! Are you proud?
Guys thanks for all the contributions but I still think I'm going to get a heeler I am absolutley in love with these things.
Ol' Blue Heelers are nice dogs but need plenty of room to run & activity. Locking them up in the house while you work or go to school will drive them nuts and they will likely do bad things in the house if left alone too long.
Hehehe, a friend had a mutt, part Red Bone coonhound, named Rosie. He & his wife both worked, and with no fenced in yard Rosie ended up spending most of the day in the house. She got bored and started chewing everything, the furniture, kitchen cabinets, shoes, even chewed the phone right off the wall. When you let her outside she'd run laps around the neighborhood for hours and usually did something to pee off the neighbors. My favorite was the time a neighbor came home with a takeout pizza and a bag of groceries, decided he couldn't carry both and unlock/open the door. He left the pizza on the porch swing took in the groceries and came out just in time to see Rosie running down the driveway with that pizza. :laugh4:
Rosie was a good dog in a bad situation. She was a farm/country dog that needed room to run and good doggy things to do. Get your Heeler when you can take care of him properly and provide the space & attention they need. You'll both be a lot happier.
AlexanderSextus
10-12-2009, 23:36
Another Pit puppy pic to "D'awww" over.
https://forums.totalwar.org/vb/picture.php?albumid=57&pictureid=1782
pevergreen
10-12-2009, 23:42
http://photos-c.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs154.snc1/5733_123320684084_701599084_3139146_714648_n.jpg
http://photos-e.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs134.snc1/5733_123320694084_701599084_3139148_6058270_n.jpg
http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs154.snc1/5733_123320689084_701599084_3139147_910565_n.jpg
http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs134.snc1/5733_123320699084_701599084_3139149_4263661_n.jpg
Tricolour beagle. Can't beat em.
Growing up we always had Springer Spaniels. My Dad loved to hunt pheasant, grouse, woodcock & such so our dogs were always active hunters.
My first wife loved her Rottweilers. One in particular that I became especially attached to, Apollo.
Biggest dang dog I ever had to feed, about 150lb.'s with a head the size of a 5 gallon bucket. Even though he had a bark like Cujo he was the sweetest tempered, always grinning, I really miss my Big Dumb.
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/hoppy84/apollogrin.jpg
Funny, my sis has a dog that looks EXACTLY like that Hosa. I love Rotts. They are big, lovable angels.
As far as my favorite dog breed, Rotts rock, and Pointers rock. Best dog I have ever had (in physicality, temperment, personality, etc) was an English Pointer Rottweiler mix. He was the sweetest, toughest little tyke you have ever seen, and he has a bark that can shake a building. :P People are always afraid of him, but he is nothing but a big bucket of love. From everything I know about dogs I have always considered Rotts and Pointers (along side Doberman, Shepards, and Labs) to be the best dogs around, and I was lucky enough to get a two for one sale! Give me a few secs and I will dig up a picture of him for you.
EDIT:
Here he is, the old Mikeroo!
https://img106.imageshack.us/img106/8848/mikeroo.jpg
Don't be fooled by the pick, he is not as mean as I make him look. I deliberately picked this one because it is so funny. :P
EDIT2: Oh yeah, and he weighs in at 110 lbs, so he is no small dog. I got him as a pup from a family who starved him near to death, so that is a darn good weight considering his breed, his undernurishment as a puppy, and the fact that he does not keep an inch of fat on himself.
Here is one where he looks a lot nicer. ~;)
https://img26.imageshack.us/img26/5451/dscn0150hf.jpg
Schnauzer. not sure why.
:2thumbsup:
The mini is smarter and more compact though. I've never met a dog that smart, well except maybe my Snoodle. Affectionate and intelligent, although she does get pretty excitable.
Other than that I'd want a Rhodesian or Thai Ridgeback, if I had the space. Why? Because they look cool, have a good temperament and can tackle a lion. :balloon2:
I love any dog that can't be described as small and yappy, but I especially love labs, they are the most relaxed, laid back, and playful dogs in existence. Got a black and a yellow lab back home, the black one is pretty bloody stupid and she has a very hard head. Once I was playing cricket and she jumped up to get the ball just as I swung the bat, caught her clear on the end of the snout and snapped the bat clean in half, it was even a knocked in bat, she just looked at me like I'd clipped her behind the ears for being naughty and walked off completely unfazed.
Other than that it would have to be a Border Collie.Great temperament and really friendly dogs, I'm not really sure if you could get them down in Texas though, they're very much a "British dog".
I love these dogs, they are fairly common ever here as well. I am convinced they are the smartest breed of dog in the world. Because of those smarts and boundless energy, they need plenty of room and a patient trainer with A LOT of free time.
I started a serious thread! Are you proud?
Guys thanks for all the contributions but I still think I'm going to get a heeler I am absolutley in love with these things.
Same as I just said with the collie, blue heelers are very smart and they have an endless supply of energy, they will absolutely destroy your home and garden if they get bored, and they are exceptional artists, a daily hole check is almost essential for ensuring your dog doesn't run away.
AlexanderSextus
10-13-2009, 06:08
Once I was playing cricket and she jumped up to get the ball just as I swung the bat, caught her clear on the end of the snout and snapped the bat clean in half, it was even a knocked in bat, she just looked at me like I'd clipped her behind the ears for being naughty and walked off completely unfazed.
I saw a pit bull get hit by an SUV going about 45 MPH, fly at least 10 feet, skid along the ground for 5 more feet, get up, wobble a bit, and then try to chase another car before it's owner caught it.
I swear those dogs must be made of steel. The owner said to me "I really thought she was dead at first. That's why i didn't grab her as soon as she got up. I was frozen in amazement."
I still see the guy walking that dog sometimes.
A Very Super Market
10-13-2009, 06:21
Well, sometimes, it is still about the breeding of a dog. One of my neighbours owns a Rough Collie, and.....
Well, it's Lassie right? Lassie was smart, so it must be smart too! Nope. Absolutely not. The dog is an absolute nightmare, barking at all times of the night, totally idiotic and running into traffic, I actively despise it.
The dog breed has an impact on how a dog will behave, but the biggest impact is how it was raised. Some breeds are more likely to go bad in a bad environment though, a badly treated pit bull is far more likely to be vicious than a badly treated lab.
Alexander the Pretty Good
10-13-2009, 07:29
No love for the all-American mutts? For shame!
Though my family once had a Samoyed. Good dog, not all that into people though. :P
I'm happy with my beagle-mix (more mix than beagle though).
Advice Dog? (http://www.neosoft.se/dev/advicedog/)
Love French bulldogs WOOF
tibilicus
10-13-2009, 10:29
I love these dogs, they are fairly common ever here as well. I am convinced they are the smartest breed of dog in the world. Because of those smarts and boundless energy, they need plenty of room and a patient trainer with A LOT of free time.
Aye, they're normally sported by rural folk round here and are one of those breeds that really need endless fields to run across.
Well, sometimes, it is still about the breeding of a dog. One of my neighbours owns a Rough Collie, and.....
Well, it's Lassie right? Lassie was smart, so it must be smart too! Nope. Absolutely not. The dog is an absolute nightmare, barking at all times of the night, totally idiotic and running into traffic, I actively despise it.
Another favourite breed actually, incredibly loyal dogs in general and a really good "companion dog".
Also SFTS, if you were to get a dog do you live or plan to live in quite a suburban area which would provide access to lots of open space? I wouldn't recommend getting any form of dog if you plan to live in a city, it simply isn't feasible and most dogs end up cooped up all day being depressed.
Also, in the early months, or the "puppy phase" it's really useful if you or someone else is around the dog often. I would never recommend being in a situation where you go out to work and the pups at home all day, getting distressed, wrecking things ect.
AlexanderSextus
10-13-2009, 23:31
No love for the all-American mutts?
See: Pit Bull.
Centurion1
10-14-2009, 00:07
Growing up we always had Springer Spaniels. My Dad loved to hunt pheasant, grouse, woodcock & such so our dogs were always active hunters.
hmm maybe we have the same father. Except my papa was always an english setter man. Greatest dogs on earth, amazing with all children and loving to a fault. Abnd smart and you can actually use them for something Greatest bird dog ever. My last one lived to17!!!! and our current is 11. Very dignified dogs as they age as well
Actually GREATEST DOG EVER
Alexander the Pretty Good
10-14-2009, 00:47
See: Pit Bull.
Pit Bulls aren't mutts, aren't they a defined breed according to the American Kennel Club or whomever?
Beefy187
10-14-2009, 00:48
I was always a fan of beagle.
I was so tempted to ninja one of pevers when I first saw those cutey things..
Shiba Inu is also cute.
Then Tosa Inu :beam:
Samurai Waki
10-14-2009, 01:16
See: Pit Bull.
Actually it's AKC (and Original Name) is the American Bull Terrier.
Tratorix
10-14-2009, 14:45
Beagles are the best dogs. I have a beagle-cocker spaniel mix. She's crazy, but absolutely adorable.
AlexanderSextus
10-14-2009, 22:39
Pit Bulls aren't mutts, aren't they a defined breed according to the American Kennel Club or whomever?
Right, but aren't Cross-bred dogs generally referred to as Mutts?
Pit bulls were bred by crossing bulldogs and terriers. Various degrees of crossing them created three distinct types of Pit Bulldogs. The American Pit Bull Terrier, The American Staffordshire Bull Terrier, and the English Staffordshire Bull Terrier.
Beagles are the best dogs.
Sure, Beagles are great, but good luck with the housetraining phase. I hear it's brutal with Beagles.
pevergreen
10-14-2009, 23:49
Sure, Beagles are great, but good luck with the housetraining phase. I hear it's brutal with Beagles.
Surprisingly it wasn't that bad.
We got our first one at 8 weeks old. Give it two months of weeing inside, then hasnt happened again in the years since.
When we got the second one, she just learnt from the first and has never gone inside. From the time we brought her home (think only 5 weeks) she's always gone in the right place.
Surprisingly it wasn't that bad.
We got our first one at 8 weeks old. Give it two months of weeing inside, then hasnt happened again in the years since.
When we got the second one, she just learnt from the first and has never gone inside. From the time we brought her home (think only 5 weeks) she's always gone in the right place.
hmmm...we are not all that lucky. I had a Beagle Doberman mix once (it is a crime against nature that such a mix should ever exist :beam:), and that guy was just one compact pack of trouble. OMG, I have never had a more stubborn, gluttonous, lousy dog in my life. I did not form a good opinion of beagles. :P
pevergreen
10-15-2009, 02:36
Look at the pictures up above. Sooo cuuute!
Centurion1
10-18-2009, 17:21
^ The face of evillllll.
Fisherking
10-18-2009, 17:37
I have had some wonderful dogs.
I have to say that my favorite Pure Bred is the Scottish Deer Hound but it isn’t a dog that everyone has room to keep.
They are great dogs though and worth any hassle in finding one.
I have had some wonderful dogs.
I have to say that my favorite Pure Bred is the Scottish Deer Hound but it isn’t a dog that everyone has room to keep.
They are great dogs though and worth any hassle in finding one.
They look pretty ugly. :P
Fisherking
10-19-2009, 07:32
They look pretty ugly. :P
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.:grin2:
So they look a bit like a dragon with hair...now how cool is that?:laugh4:
They are laid back and not excitable. Other dogs NEVER try to pick fights with them.
Outdoors they can run like the wind, indoors they make a nice carpet.
They do attract attention so if you don’t like being noticed don’t get one...but to know them is to love them.
Historically they could only be owned by the nobility who were quite jealous of them.
Their main problems are that they are not long lived and you can’t let them run free, especially in pairs. Their hunting techniques and strength can lead to some serious damage.
I was once out walking my dog.
A very large untied dog saw me from across a hedge and ran to attack me...until he came around the corner and saw who I was with.
It just turned and ran faster in the other direction.:laugh4:
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.:grin2:
So they look a bit like a dragon with hair...now how cool is that?:laugh4:
They are laid back and not excitable. Other dogs NEVER try to pick fights with them.
Outdoors they can run like the wind, indoors they make a nice carpet.
They do attract attention so if you don’t like being noticed don’t get one...but to know them is to love them.
Historically they could only be owned by the nobility who were quite jealous of them.
Their main problems are that they are not long lived and you can’t let them run free, especially in pairs. Their hunting techniques and strength can lead to some serious damage.
I was once out walking my dog.
A very large untied dog saw me from across a hedge and ran to attack me...until he came around the corner and saw who I was with.
It just turned and ran faster in the other direction.:laugh4:
lol, they sound like good dogs. I am going to school now though, so a dog a had to walk a lot would definately not be good for me. I can always leave Mike untied and he just runs all along. If you had the time though, that sounds like a good dog.
I was once out walking my dog.
A very large untied dog saw me from across a hedge and ran to attack me...until he came around the corner and saw who I was with.
It just turned and ran faster in the other direction.:laugh4:
I was waiting at a vet's, where my friend was getting his Rottweiler checked, and someone came in with a Scottish Deer Hound. My friend's Rottie is a great dog, friendly and affectionate, but still a Rottweiler. The Deer Hound came in, and I swear that the Rottie did a double take. You could see it in his eyes, "what the **** is that?!?" :laugh4:
Vladimir
10-19-2009, 16:35
I want a data dog (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cowboy_Bebop_characters#Ein).
Zradha Pahlavan
10-19-2009, 17:44
Do wolves count? Or how about raccoon dogs?
Well dogs(canis lupis familiaris) are just a sub-species of wolves(canis lupis) so they would count, as they are the same species, but racoon dogs(Nyctereutes procyonoides) are aren't even in the same genus, so they wouldn't count. Dogs, wolves and racoon dogs are however, all in the canidae family.
Zradha Pahlavan
10-19-2009, 20:33
Wolves it is.
Fisherking
10-19-2009, 21:58
Trust me, Wolves aren’t dogs!
They don’t act like doges, they don’t think like dogs.
Owning them is not for everyone...mostly because you don’t really own them. They just are.
They may look similar but that is about as far as it goes. DNA is not the full story.
Centurion1
10-20-2009, 03:11
Our english setter is about 35-40 pounds so a medium dog, but ive always like large dogs. alwayys seem very friendly.
want a laugh? look up skye terrier. My aunt's head is smaller than that dog.....
Samurai Waki
10-20-2009, 03:45
Trust me, Wolves aren’t dogs!
They don’t act like doges, they don’t think like dogs.
Owning them is not for everyone...mostly because you don’t really own them. They just are.
They may look similar but that is about as far as it goes. DNA is not the full story.
Theres a guy who lives a bit down the road form where I am, that owns a big ol' She Wolf. The animal is a sweetheart to say the least.
Now having that said, in her mind, she runs of the show over there and whenever I've stopped to say hi she's always had that look like "I don't mind if you're on my turf, but if you mess up, I'm gonna rearrange your anatomy."
A Very Super Market
10-20-2009, 03:57
Don't wolves have a tendency to compete with you for dominance? They aren't exactly domesticated, and I don't think that arriving home to an angry pair of jaws would be too much fun.
ajaxfetish
10-20-2009, 04:16
I've never owned a dog, but my favorite dog I've ever known was a Bernese Mountain Dog named Einstein. He was big, beautiful, and as friendly as they come. I don't even know who owned him, as he was allowed to wander around freely and roam the neighborhood, and I believe would sometimes spend the night with assorted neighbors. That dog just made me happy.
Ajax
Samurai Waki
10-20-2009, 06:08
Don't wolves have a tendency to compete with you for dominance? They aren't exactly domesticated, and I don't think that arriving home to an angry pair of jaws would be too much fun.
I guess it depends, if trained well, not so much. The ones you always have to worry about are the Alpha Male types, they're not friendly, even when they're trying to be friendly. Female Wolves, I think are protectors through and through, and the guy who owns her has probably had to physically enforce his rule of law in order for her to understand. Unlike Dogs, Wolves need to be smacked around from time to time to let them know whose boss.
But yeah, she still thinks that house is hers.
Trust me, Wolves aren’t dogs!
They don’t act like doges, they don’t think like dogs.
Owning them is not for everyone...mostly because you don’t really own them. They just are.
They may look similar but that is about as far as it goes. DNA is not the full story.
Yeah, I guess I could have said it better, but what I was trying to say is not that wolves are dogs, but that dogs are a type of wolf.
Fisherking
10-20-2009, 08:15
Wolves are just different from dogs. Their whole mindset is different. They aren’t protective or brave in the face of adversity. They would rather run than fight a needless battle.
Don’t confuse this with fear.
They are cautious but ever thinking. They come up with things you just wouldn’t expect.
Dogs are domesticated. If you have a wolf it may be tame on the outside but it is still a wild animal on the inside. Their movements are even different from dogs.
Wolves generally don’t bark. I don’t even know if they can, but they have a very wide range of sounds they make and use to communicate.
Most everything they do has a purpose...even if you think they have lost their mind, playing, jumping, turning summersaults, they are up to something. That behavior attracts attention, even birds come and watch...and then they leap for a bird, or grab some other creature that was being entertained.
One very important thing to know or remember about wolves before you even consider having one as a guest is where they live.
And just forget trying to change them, on anything...
They live in dens, which they dig, and they are not little holes either. They may like several of these.
They are much faster at digging and just about everything else than dogs. They can dig these things before you know they started and they may be 5 or 6 feet deep and much longer and deeper underground.
Like I said they are always thinking and they see everything that goes on, and get more ideas from it.
And don’t think that you can control or restrain them. They are a force of nature.
So, before you think you want one, just think about it for a while...
This is by no means complete...there are a lot of other things you should know...
Zradha Pahlavan
10-20-2009, 17:28
So far you've made me want a pet wolf even more.
Then there's those Alaskan sled dogs. Huskies or something. They're kind of cool.
If you want a wolf as a pet then you should get a dingo. They are as wild, intelligent and dangerous as a wolf, but they are more disposed to being kept as a pet. They are basically the opposite of a dog. A dog is a wolf that's been domesticated for 10,000 years, whereas a dingo is a dog that's gone back to being wild for 5,000 years.
Zradha Pahlavan
10-20-2009, 18:14
Could I train it to eat peoples' babies?
Samurai Waki
10-20-2009, 18:38
If you want a wolf as a pet then you should get a dingo. They are as wild, intelligent and dangerous as a wolf, but they are more disposed to being kept as a pet. They are basically the opposite of a dog. A dog is a wolf that's been domesticated for 10,000 years, whereas a dingo is a dog that's gone back to being wild for 5,000 years.
Yeah, same thing goes with Coyotes. I'm not sure if they were ever a domesticated dog, but they're trainable. Not that I'd ever want one, because they STINK!
AlexanderSextus
10-21-2009, 00:30
Pit bulls have been known to kill lone wolves that wander onto their owner's property.
Centurion1
10-21-2009, 01:18
Could I train it to eat peoples' babies?
borat and why he wanted a dog, enough said.
Zradha Pahlavan
10-21-2009, 16:36
You've never heard of the "A dingo ate my baby!" stories?
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