Myth 1: I have small children,
so I want a puppy.
Without a doubt, this is the most common
reason people want a puppy. A sweet, small puppy just seems like the best
choice for sweet, small children.
You know that cute Kodak commercial with the
puppies climbing all over the giggling little boy? Have you ever noticed how
short it is? That’s because they could only film for a few seconds before
the welts rose, the blood dripped, and the boy began to scream for his
mother. Puppies have needle-teeth that they happily sink into anyone who
walks by. They also have sharp nails that scratch when they jump up -- and
on little Ryan, those front feet land right around his face.
Puppies
leave "presents" that your toddler always seems to find before you do.
Puppies wake your children during the night. And a puppy doesn’t know the
difference between his stuffed toy and Sarah’s Piglet that she MUST have to
fall asleep.
And suppose you get a puppy when little
Morgan is 2. In six months, Morgan will be about 1 inch taller and 3 pounds
heavier. However, the 8 month old puppy will now be as tall as Morgan and
outweigh her by 30 pounds. And those baby teeth will have been replaced by
big snappers that need to chew.
Of course, puppies and small children do
successfully cohabitate. But, in our experience, your child will go through
far less Neosporin and Band-Aids with a calmer 2 + year old dog who is
road-tested with children.
Myth 2: It’s better to get
a
puppy. With an older dog, you never know what you’re getting.
Seems to make sense, except the exact
opposite is true. All puppies are cute; all puppies love everyone. It’s not
until a dog hits sexual maturity that some innate behavioral problems start
to surface. We can’t even estimate how many calls we’ve had from people who
paid thousands of dollars for a purebred puppy, who is now a year or two old
and biting people, attacking other dogs, or engaging in some oddball
neurotic behavior. Purebred is not the same as well-bred, and sometimes it
feels like the disreputable breeders grossly outnumber the responsible ones.
The truth is this: when we list a 4 month
old puppy, we can only guess what kind of adult she’ll make. When we list an
18 month old dog, we can predict pretty accurately what kind of dog you’ll
have forever.
Myth 3: If you train your dog
right, he’ll stay in the yard without a fence.
Many people believe this, right up until the
moment the dog is hit by a car, eats poison in the neighbor’s garage, or is
stolen. We insist on a fence or leash walks. Rescue dogs are typically
either strays (which means they have a history of wandering) or
owner-surrenders (which means they’re going to go look for their ex-owner
first chance they get). We just can’t risk it.
Myth 4: When I was growing up,
we had a PERFECT German Shepherd.
No, you didn’t. Trust me, he was only
perfect because you were 8 and didn’t have to clean up after him and be
responsible for him. I know you believed he was perfect, but you also
believed in Santa and honest government then, too.
I had a perfect GSD named Max when I was
growing up. He died in my freshman year of college, and has since, in family
lore, gone on to be canonized as "Saint Max". Bow your head when you say
it. Everyone in my family seems to forget the time St. Max was hit by a car
he was chasing. Or the time he bit the kid biking by. Or how he used to
sneak in and sleep on the furniture when no one was home. Or the time he had
diarrhea all over the hardwood floors. Or how he used to eat the Christmas
ornaments off the bottom half of the tree.
Since I’ve been an adult, I’ve never had a
perfect German Shepherd--but every single one of them was perfect for me!
Myth 5: German Shepherds stop
being puppies around a year old.
BUUUUZZZZZ! I’m sorry. Try 2 or 3. Many
shepherds don’t calm down and hit their stride until they’re 4 or 5. And
you know that wonderful mental image you have of the stoic and noble
shepherd sitting on the hill surveying his domain? He’s 9!
Myth 6: I want a dog without
dominance issues, so I want a female.
In the wacky world of GSDs, that’s just not
true. For starts, it’s impossible to make gender-based absolutes. But once
you spend time around GSDs, you’ll start to notice there are plenty of
hyper, dominant females out there. You’ll also notice lots of mellow,
roll-with-the-punches males (especially after they make that all-important
trip to Dr. Knife).
It all depends on the individual dog, but
don’t think for a minute that a female is a sure ticket to a passive,
submissive pooch.
Myth 7: White GSDs are mutants.
Well,
if they are, more breeds should mutate.
People who don’t like white shepherds are
often, coincidentally, the same people who have never spent any time around
them. While the AKC does not YET recognize the whites, most other
registration organizations, like the UKC, do!
Many die-hard black and tan’ers have had
their minds changed by the fabulous whites that have come through NSR. And
if you still don’t believe me, check out our Success
Stories page. For more information on the MANY GSD colors go
here.
Myth 8: My 8 month old German
Shepherd is biting people. He’s not lunging or growling, but he makes little
nips on arms and legs. I can’t keep an aggressive dog.
The secret here is to look at the last 4
letters in the breed name: herd. German Shepherds herd. It’s what they do.
And chances are, that’s all he’s doing to your friends and family.
This is called this mouthing. It’s what
happens when those cute little puppy bites go uncorrected. And if your dog’s
doing it, he will continue to do it--and do it harder and stronger--until
you DO correct it.
Fortunately, it is relatively easy to fix in
most dogs. There’s lots of tips on the internet (just search for "dog
mouthing") and your vet can probably help as well. If the problem is really
out of hand, you may need to call in a trainer for a few sessions.
Myth 9: I’m unsure about
getting a rescue dog, because I’m afraid he won’t bond to me.
That sound you hear is all the people with
rescued dogs falling over laughing. Because the exact opposite is nearly
always true--your rescue dog will CLING to you.
Look at it from the dog’s perspective. He’s
spent the bulk of the last year on a 6 foot chain in someone’s back yard
because he committed the unconscionable sin of no longer being a puppy. At
some point during the day, someone may remember to bring him food and water.
The only attention he gets is when they yell at him for barking - or worse.
Finally, they take him for a
car-ride--dumping him in a wooded area where he can have a "fighting
chance." Despite everything, he waits there for their return or tries to get
back home. He finds water somewhere. He raids trash cans and gets sick. If
he’s extremely lucky, he survives long enough for an animal lover to find
him and bring him to the shelter.
Then he sits in the loud, scary shelter run,
starting to lose faith that his family will ever find him. The kennel people
are nice, but he is one of a hundred needy dogs they have to care for so he
gets no real attention.
Finally, the shelter calls us. And you take
him home.
You not only bring him into your
house, you give him his own bed and bowl, and maybe a crate where he feels
safe. You speak quietly to him. When he messes on the carpet, you don’t seem
to mind--you just take him outside and then clean it up. You feed him
regularly AND give him toys and treats and nylabones. He sleeps in your
room. He may even have a big brother or sister to play with. He gets kisses
and hugs all the time for "no reason". And when he goes out in the car, he
always comes back.
Your rescue dog’s biggest fear is that you
will spontaneously combust. GSDs are particularly sensitive about the
connections with their people so once they have the attention they so
desperately crave and need, they do whatever they can to ensure they never,
ever lose it.
He’s not going to let you out of his sight
for one minute. People with rescue dogs learn to function with a 70 pound
shadow following us everywhere.
That said, there are some dogs who just
never learned to connect with people, but that becomes apparent very
quickly--long before we place him with you.
Myth 10: I don't want to have
my rescue dog spayed or neutered because it's not natural/ she should be
able to have a litter/I want my children to see the miracle of birth/etc.
MAGSR's spay/neuter policy is not
negotiable. If everyone prevented irresponsible breeding, we'd be happily
out of business. Do not humanize your dog--no one's asking you to neuter
yourself. Your dog will be healthier and more comfortable once s/he's
shifted into neutral--and will also be a much more pleasant companion.
Neutered male dogs roam less, mark less
territory, and are generally less aggressive. Spayed female dogs avoid the
messy and annoying heat cycles, and are not at risk for unwanted pregnancy.
And both males and females are less likely to get certain illnesses.
As for the miracle of birth, well, there's
another "rite of passage" occurring to 20 million dogs a year in this
country, 25% of them purebred - euthanasia. It happens every day at your
local animal shelter. But most parents are not as eager for their children
to see that.
Article by Betsy Morris of
MAGSR. Reprints (and modifications for breeds) permitted as long as you give
us credit!