Sentences with phrase «dog with little human contact»

He is an outside dog with little human contact but over all a good dog when I give him commands and he loves playing with the kids in the backyard.

Not exact matches

Leaving your dog outside chained up with no human contact (or very little) 3.
Puppy mills create a surplus of popular dogs and then either sell them for testing or euthanize them when they are too old to adopt out unless they can serve as a breeding dog in which case they will live in a cage with little human contact and never know the feel of grass under their feet.
They house dogs and puppies in dirty, cramped cages and provide them with very little, if any, human contact.
Dogs that are sold in pet stores are typically mass produced in large kennels with little human contact.
Many dogs live their entire lives like this with little human contact.
Irresponsible ownership primarily is: Irresponsible breeding Leaving your dog outside chained up with no human contact (or very little) Training your dog to fight Not giving your dog proper socialization with all kinds of people varying in age colour and sex Walking your dog off leash in public Not Spaying and neutering Not keeping your pet's shots up to date Not having your dog licensed by the city Not keeping your dog on a proper diet Not having a properly fenced yard Not having your dog obedience trained (These are in no particular order)
Many dogs brought up on farms have little contact with humans other than those they live with so have a natural distrust of people they are not familiar with.
The adverts often look very genuine and it is difficult to the untrained eye to determine if the dog you are buying is from an ethical breeder or a puppy mill with hundreds of breeding dogs kept in tiny, dirty cages with very little human contact.
Kat, my own thinking is it's not so much where you got the dog, as what his / her early socialization was (with a few notable exceptions, most dogs with little appropriate early human contact will not be stable enough to be therapy dogs, though they might make great pets).
The dogs are forced to spend their entire lives in these cages, with little or no human contact, exercise, health care, and training.
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