I would definitely suggest that he be
placed in a home with other dog (s), preferably either younger dogs or high energy dogs.
Unfortunately, she's had a few bad experiences with other dogs, so she's skittish around them; we don't recommend that Willa be
placed in a home with other dogs.
She would do best being the only dog in the household, but with slow introductions can be
placed in a home with other dogs so long as the other dogs are not hyper.
Effective September 1, 2012, no PAWS Assistance Dog will be
placed in a home with any other dog, unless it is a retired PAWS Dog or working Assistance Dog from an Assistance Dogs International or International Guide Dog Federation - accredited agency for someone else in the household.
Not exact matches
I am retired and
in my own
home with horses
dogs cats and almost 2 acres of land here to take care of, I would like a nice friend to do things
with and go
places, my friend jim jollo married a lady by the mane of vergie and moved to Arizona and is real happy
with each
other she was from the philipin...
When you first bring your
dog home, you should
place him
in a carrier that prevents him from having physical contact
with your
other pet and vice versa.
• Uncontrollable at
home, on walks, or
in other places • Openly aggressive towards
other dogs and / or people • A danger to themselves or
others • Selectively aggressive (i.e.
with their food, toys, people;
dog parks, etc.) • Fighting
with other dogs in the
home
Males like to be dominant, especially over
other large breeds, which can result
in a hard time at
home if you have
other large
dogs; but they tend to be okay if you establish your
place as dominant over both
dogs, or if they live
with smaller or non-dominant breeds.
We've spent the night
in hotels, he has gone to work
with me, and after he and I passed a therapy
dog test, he has been to nursing
homes and
other places where therapy
dogs are allowed.
Associate a word or phrase
with elimination
in order to have a cue to give when you're away from
home or
in some
other situation where you need to tell the
dog this time and
place is acceptable for elimination.
We offer to work
with any rescue organization (located
in the northeast) or animal shelter that needs help
placing a German Shepherd
in their care by cross posting the
dog's story on our website and
other social media outlets, as well as aiding
in the adoption application process, including
home visitations, transportation and meetings between adopters and
dogs.
* Note: it is good to test a
dog's level of arousal to cats, since a
dog prone to chasing a cat
in play or due to prey drive should not be
placed in a
home with cats or
other small animals.
Through our Petco Adoption Center
in Overland Park, Kansas and 5
other local Petco stores
with cat habitats
in the Kansas City area, we
placed 1,379 cats and
dogs from our shelter into new
homes in 2016 — resulting
in 22 % of all adoptions from our shelter last year occurring through a partner Petco store!
We rarely assist
in placing dogs with special needs or aggression — we simply are not equipped to rescue these
dogs, as our
dogs are heavily socialized
with others (a doggy daycare environment), or
in foster
homes, almost all of which have children and
other pets.
I am saddened when pit rescues tell people that they can not be
placed in homes w /
other dogs because of their tendancy to be
dog aggressive because I just don't believe it should be a generalization prohibiting decent people and good leaders from providing good
homes,
with the companionship of another
dog (s).
If the foster
dog is not able to get along
with your
other dogs, cats or family members, we would work to
place the
dog in another
home.
Would not recommend she be
placed in a
home with cats or
other dogs — she needs to be the only pup.
When compared to 20 cases of dominance aggression treated
with conventional behavioral or
other habit modification over the same time period, only 11
dogs improved > 25 % and of the remaining 9 cases, 3 failed to improve and 3 were euthanized or
placed in another
home.
In collaboration with local shelters, other rescue organizations, and concerned citizens, the AWLFC provides foster care for cats and dogs and then places them in a permanent home via our adoption proces
In collaboration
with local shelters,
other rescue organizations, and concerned citizens, the AWLFC provides foster care for cats and
dogs and then
places them
in a permanent home via our adoption proces
in a permanent
home via our adoption process.
He can go to a
home with another right matched
dog as he is playful and, social, yet, as long as the
home has a strong network
in place for him to be able to continue to interact
with other dogs (
dogs need their friends too!)
Maisie is good
with compatible male
dogs in the
home and good around
other dogs at
places similar to Fort Funston.
Unlike
other agencies, ADW
dogs live primarily
in staff trainers»
homes until
placed with clients.
Although Midas gets along well
with other dogs, we will be
placing him
in a
home where he will be the only pet as he believes he should have all the toys and all the attention.
Whenever we suspect that a mill rescue may be «too far gone» for a fast paced family, we try to
place them
in experienced
homes; quiet
homes; or
homes with other dogs.
SOCIALIZE your puppy
with other dogs, people and
places, inside and outside of your
home in order for them to grow into an adult
dog everyone will love and enjoy being around.
Because we have already
placed them
in a
home environment, we can tell you about their habits and house manners and whether they get along well
with other dogs, cats, and children.
Since
dogs have and rely on their keen sense of smell and sound, your
dog will still be able to navigate around, especially
in the
home and
other places she knows, even
with significant vision loss.
* Important principles * Do not overuse the crate * Uses for crates * Crates can be used for mature
dogs as well as puppies * Choosing a crate * Where to set up the crate * How to make a crate a safe, comfortable and happy
place * Introducing your
dog to a crate * Teach your
dog to «go to your crate» (or «room» or «
place») * When you depart... when you return
home * Whining, barking and howling
in the crate * If your
dog continues to whine, bark or howl
in the crate * More tips for converting crate - hating * More tips * Using crates as housetraining aids * Housetraining hints
in conjunction
with crate - training * Accidents
in the crate * More words of wisdom * Alternatives to using a crate *
Other resources
The group's mission is to protect homeless, abandoned and mistreated Great Danes and
other dog breeds within our volunteer care organization; to work
with area animal shelters and humane societies
in rescue efforts to help
place adoptable animals into safe, loving, forever
homes; and to educate people about spay / neuter and the need for sterilization of all pets, proper health care of a pet, nutritional requirements, socialization and training.
While he gets along great
with other dogs, he is far too excited about cats to be easily
placed in a
home with cats.
A testament to Toni's dedication, within the first year, HEART
placed 9
dogs with pre-existing medical conditions
in happy
homes, a feat no
other local rescue group would tackle (broken legs, heart surgeries, hip replacements, blindness, and heart worm are just some of the conditions the now - adopted
dogs have made it through, thanks to Toni's help).
Adult
dogs can socialize
with resident
dogs, under your supervision and after a proper introduction, but should have a
place — a room or crate — where they be separated from
other animals
in the
home, if needed.
Even though animal shelters have come a long way
in the last few decades towards building more spacious facilities
with more opportunities for exercise and decreased stress levels, it is none - the-less traumatic for many
dogs to be torn from what they knew as
home and thrown into a
place where they are surrounded by the sounds and smells of
other stressed out
dogs.
If your
dog is too excited to meet new people or be
in new
places, or if he doesn't get along
with other dogs or people, leave him at
home.
The following explanatory variables were included
in the analysis: gender, breed, age of arrival to a new
home (
in weeks),
place of birth (at mother's
home / at breeder) amount of socialisation, number of children
in the household, number of adults, number of
dogs in the household, number of
other diagnosed diseases, the time the
dog has to spend alone during a normal day, amount of daily exercise, amount of activities done
with the
dog, dietary supplements, neutering status and type of food.
- character creation lets you choose skin color, face, eye color and haircut - later
in the game you can get glasses, pants, shoes and
other stuff - start off by meeting Tom Nook and his posse of Happy
Home employees - this includes Lyle the Otter and Digby the
Dog, who give advice and help to keep the game moving forward - Lottie the Otter is Lyle's niece and handles the front desk
in the game - she welcomes you every time you boot up the game and tells you what to do next - gameplay starts off
with placing furniture, but quickly evolves into something more -
place a house on the world map and cycle through seasons to see what you like - house can modified
with different roofs, doors, colors and more - every animal unlocks new furniture for you to use - completing a lot of requests is vital to getting a lot of content - characters will react to everything that you
place and remove
in the house - three pieces of furniture must be
in or outside of the house and these need to implemented into the final design - if you don't follow this rule, your animal customer will not approve - add wallpaper, carpets, lamps, signs, music covers, paintings and much more - by completing special objectives
in the office, which you pay for
with Play Coins, you can even expand the feature set - set background sounds, choose curtains, change up furniture, display fossils and get a bigger variety of fish and paintings.