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Does your dog even lift brah? Have you considered cutting their kibble with oats and squat thrusts?
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 13:59 |
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# ? May 29, 2024 20:19 |
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Ausrotten posted:good way to avoid her melting down over less food is to replace part of her kibble with high fiber veggies. it'll fill her up without adding much in the way of calories This is useful advice, I will do this, thank you. Wheats posted:I like to trick mine by putting a tiny amount of kibble in the bowl and then spreading the rest between multiple puzzle toys, because dogs are bad at judging quantities. This is also useful advice and my god she loves her kong (though she's had a good go at destroying her black one and the red one's in bits) so I'll start splitting things so she has a kong of kibble taken out of her breakfast and can have that when I head to work. Psychobabble! posted:If you want an echo chamber of positive feedback, stay on Facebook hth I don't do dog stuff on fb apart from the odd picture of her if she's actually stayed still enough to photograph and I would not go near the pet page type things on there as I imagine they're much like the mum & baby pages which are hideous and sprinkle fairy loving dust all over the shop. But yeah, apparently people who don't have that much experience of healthy weight dogs don't know what a healthy weight dog looks like *shrugs* and if vets won't say 'lady, your dog needs you to be Jon to her Garfield' then unless you do come into places like this, you may never realise that what looks underweight (because we're used to fat dogs) is actually ok. paisleyfox posted:That was polite. The way you pouted and said how we SHOULD HAVE approached it is so far past Brit politeness it's bordering on hand holding a child. Sorry you heard something mildly unpleasant. Just as your dog does not care about her own past, we don't either. Aus stated a fact based on a picture in the present, yes your dog is fat.Is it a cute picture? Sure. She's also fat. Ok, yes, I get it, I was too defensive as has been pointed out by a fuckload of people before you got round to telling me how stupid I am so can we move on now? For some reason I thought this was a comedy forum rather than an arsehole one. I have said repeatedly that I have cut her food and will do the things people are suggesting. And thanks, I am sure she'll recover just fine as long as she doesn't decide to chew the wound...should be ok, will just give her extra toys to destroy for a bit One of the other things I'm taking from this is that a bit like with people, recommended daily intake isn't actually all that useful and that I need to get her to be ok with being picked up so I can weigh her (she hates being lifted or carried and will jump from a height because she's an idiot.)
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 14:41 |
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Train your dog to do a 'sit pretty' on the scale.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 14:45 |
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Kluliss posted:
quote:4. Don't take criticism personally. Critique of your animal's care or situation is meant to help improve both your life and your pet's. Getting defensive won't help anything! Ah... Its ok. This IS kind of an rear end in a top hat forum we are just incredibly stuck up our own asses and very elitist about it. Just realize walls of impassioned text, or itemized long responses tend to bring out the worst traits in people that cant resist poking a bit farther on the quest for the perfect online meltdown.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 14:50 |
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Rurutia posted:Train your dog to do a 'sit pretty' on the scale. I was looking for something new to teach her, this might be it... SneakyFrog posted:Ah... Its ok. This IS kind of an rear end in a top hat forum we are just incredibly stuck up our own asses and very elitist about it. Just realize walls of impassioned text, or itemized long responses tend to bring out the worst traits in people that cant resist poking a bit farther on the quest for the perfect online meltdown. Yeah, I got grumpy and forgot to step away from the internet. I haven't really partaken of the poking of forum people, for some reason I only poke the idiots on facebook. I guess it's easier there Thank you to all those who gave me useful advice, hopefully I'll be able to post in a couple of months going 'hey look at my normal weight dog'... (who hopefully will also not have anything actually wrong with her from all the lumps and skin tags)
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 15:12 |
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Kluliss posted:One of the other things I'm taking from this is that a bit like with people, recommended daily intake isn't actually all that useful and that I need to get her to be ok with being picked up so I can weigh her (she hates being lifted or carried and will jump from a height because she's an idiot.) You don't need a scale to figure out if a dog's at a good weight - checking her ribs is an easier yardstick. You want to feel ribs with a light touch.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 15:40 |
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We went to the park with my neighbor and his year old husky/GSD mix. His dog is about a year old and pretty good size, while my dog is only about 30 lbs at this point. She's not 6 months old, but I'm guessing she doesn't have a whole lot more to go as she's a ACD/Border collie mix. Maybe 40 lbs being generous? Anyway, they did pretty good together off leash. Then some folks with a full Husky and a Malamute showed up. My dog tried to keep up with the big dogs, but after being run over a couple of times mainly hid between the humans' legs and watched the action, or chasing behind at a safe distance. Should she be able to handle these other dogs? I feel kinda bad for her. She did okay when they weren't running her over, she jumped in on the ground when things were a little more calm and was a pretty good wrestler. It's hard to find dogs her size, most either either bigger or smaller - especially when I was looking for a dog in the first place, there are only a handful of breeds in the 40 lb range.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 15:43 |
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FogHelmut posted:I know it's a dog. You don't need to call it a "German Shepherd Dog." FogHelmut posted:We went to the park with my neighbor and his year old husky/GSD mix. FogHelmut posted:Should she be able to handle these other dogs? I feel kinda bad for her. She did okay when they weren't running her over, she jumped in on the ground when things were a little more calm and was a pretty good wrestler. It's hard to find dogs her size, most either either bigger or smaller - especially when I was looking for a dog in the first place, there are only a handful of breeds in the 40 lb range. The bigger dogs you pretty much have to keep supervised to make sure they dont crush the wee one, pretty much set the pace of play with a group of mixed sizes at the pace of the smallest one for safety, but as the dogs get accustomed to that they usually set their own pace pretty well. TehRedWheelbarrow fucked around with this message at 15:56 on Jun 14, 2016 |
# ? Jun 14, 2016 15:52 |
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FogHelmut posted:We went to the park with my neighbor and his year old husky/GSD mix. His dog is about a year old and pretty good size, while my dog is only about 30 lbs at this point. She's not 6 months old, but I'm guessing she doesn't have a whole lot more to go as she's a ACD/Border collie mix. Maybe 40 lbs being generous? obv. your dog shouldn't be abled to handle anything she can't handle
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 15:54 |
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Dog parks are often lowest common denominator when it comes to rough play, because people don't recognize and call their dogs off when the others get stressed. I would reward a dog heavily for opting out rather than snarking, and just go for a walk instead if she's not enjoying the park. One on one playmates are a better bet for encouraging dog sociability.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 15:56 |
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Kluliss posted:One of the other things I'm taking from this is that a bit like with people, recommended daily intake isn't actually all that useful and that I need to get her to be ok with being picked up so I can weigh her (she hates being lifted or carried and will jump from a height because she's an idiot.) bag recommendations are based around "how much will the majority of dogs eat without being malnourished" so they tend to be really high because they're including super active dogs, dogs with high metabolisms, etc. The best way to keep your dog at a healthy weight is just to keep an eye on her and check her body condition regularly until you figure out what healthy looks like on your dog because it does vary a lot depending on breed, sex, and intact status. I have three GSDs and each one of them looks wildly different when they are fit. An easy way to check your dogs weight: run your fingers over the back of your open hand just below the knuckles. You should be able to feel the bones quite easily - this is what your dog's ribs should feel like. Now rub your fingers across the palm of your hand below the knuckle. If your dogs ribs feel like this, it's overweight. If your dog's ribs feel like the palm of your hand below your thumb, it's probably obese. Also like people, dogs tend to carry fat in typical places - the chest, back of the neck between the shoulders, and above the tail. Feel these areas. Overweight dogs tend to have jiggly fat deposits here. If a dog is at an appropriate weight you will be able to feel the sternum, shoulder blades, and hip bones quite easily. These are actually the spots on your girl that made me think she was overweight. Aside from these couple of areas though dog fat doesn't tend to be super jiggly like people fat, it has a more tight, solid feel over the ribs so it's easy to assume your dogs just a tank. And just a heads up, it tends to be much more difficult to keep spayed females at a healthy weight. A lot of them will balloon up if you overfeed them even a tiny bit. If Kas and Heidi get even a little too much of their cup filled, they both turn into the staypuft man and it's really frustrating.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 16:36 |
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I noticed the German Shepherd Dog™ issues when I realized I have an Australian Cattle Dog™, although grammatically one could be pedantic about such things.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 16:46 |
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FogHelmut posted:I noticed the German Shepherd Dog™ issues when I realized I have an Australian Cattle Dog™, although grammatically one could be pedantic about such things. dont mind me, being a reasonable human being itt took all my willpower and i dont have anyone around with a vegan dog, figured you could handle me being pedantic for a microsecond about something utterly stupid.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 16:52 |
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they're called "german shepherd dogs" because that's the direct translation from german (deutscher schäferhund). a german shepherd is a german dude who herds sheep
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 16:54 |
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Ausrotten posted:they're called "german shepherd dogs" because that's the direct translation from german (deutscher schäferhund). a german shepherd is a german dude who herds sheep Keine fattie Hunde.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 16:56 |
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SneakyFrog posted:Keine dicker Hunde. ftfy Ausrotten fucked around with this message at 17:06 on Jun 14, 2016 |
# ? Jun 14, 2016 16:59 |
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Ausrotten posted:they're called "german shepherd dogs" because that's the direct translation from german (deutscher schäferhund). a german shepherd is a german dude who herds sheep So its kind of like people who own German cars? "No way brah, this isn't a 1995 328, it's an E36."
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 17:00 |
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Kluliss posted:Ok, yes, I get it, I was too defensive as has been pointed out by a fuckload of people before you got round to telling me how stupid I am so can we move on now? For some reason I thought this was a comedy forum rather than an arsehole one.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 17:21 |
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Ausrotten posted:ftfy I was about to say dont call me a dicker dicker.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 17:23 |
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Ausrotten posted:Dog fat.txt This is super informative and i appreciate you taking the time to help me understand that my dog is too fat. I have her a prod and yeah, she's going to hate me until she gets used to her new food level given that she does cupboard love rather well...she is not a cuddly dog unless she thinks you might feed her :-/
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 18:36 |
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Just like with people, aim for 1-2% of total body mass lost each week. I know you said weighing her isn't easy, but if you have a vet nearby they may be happy to help.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 19:20 |
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How do I keep my pooch from plateauing in his gains?
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 19:48 |
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Warbird posted:
take the choke chain off and teach it to hunt babies with a weighted vest like a proper murderdog
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 19:49 |
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a life less posted:Just like with people, aim for 1-2% of total body mass lost each week. I know you said weighing her isn't easy, but if you have a vet nearby they may be happy to help. Fwiw Kluliss vets4pets is generally great for this. Every time I pass my local one with the dogs I pop in, weigh them, give them a few biscuits and pop back out
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 21:41 |
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pookel posted:Some people think it's hilarious to be assholes, that's all. Some people also post about their problem dogs then wildly backtrack and insist that there is no problem
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 21:42 |
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Fraction posted:Some people also post about their problem dogs then wildly backtrack and insist that there is no problem doesn't change the fact that some posters, while very knowledgeable about dogs try their very best to troll people asking legit questions.
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 22:45 |
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Fraction posted:Some people also post about their problem dogs then wildly backtrack and insist that there is no problem
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 23:02 |
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y'know if the advice people give you bothers you so much, maybe you should figure out how to solve your own problems instead of wasting everyone's time by posting about the same problem over and over and over again and then incessantly whining that people aren't telling you what you want to hear
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 23:31 |
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pookel posted:Some people think it's hilarious to be assholes, that's all. this isn't the yospos cat thread or the gip dog thread duder, if you want hand holding try elsewhere
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 23:46 |
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i stg if some of yall spend half as much time working with your dogs as you do whining about how mean pi is, you'd have solved their behavioral problems by now
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 23:53 |
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*says pointlessly mean things about dog* "well wow man don't get defensive about people saying mean things about your dog take some criticism"
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# ? Jun 14, 2016 23:58 |
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FogHelmut posted:We went to the park with my neighbor and his year old husky/GSD mix. His dog is about a year old and pretty good size, while my dog is only about 30 lbs at this point. She's not 6 months old, but I'm guessing she doesn't have a whole lot more to go as she's a ACD/Border collie mix. Maybe 40 lbs being generous? Obviously depends on your individual dog but generally 40 lbs is good pet weight, 35 lbs is good sport/active weight for that size/breed of dog. Go by look and feel first though, if she's trim with a tuck and a waist without a thick layer of fat I wouldn't worry about the number on the scale.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 00:02 |
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Ausrotten posted:i stg if some of yall spend half as much time working with your dogs as you do whining about how mean pi is, you'd have solved their behavioral problems by now yeah and if this pointless internet tough guy act was dropped by a select few users, this thread would be a whole lot more useful.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 00:05 |
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Not beating around the bush in PI is ~mean~ but tell someone to eat a bowl of dicks and die in so many words in any other subforum and it's daisies and in good fun.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 00:11 |
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I don't particularly care about hand holding, but it's really loving weird how PI likes to latch onto a couple of random pieces of info and then start "answering" questions the poster never even asked while ignoring the questions they actually do ask.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 00:56 |
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Aquatic Giraffe posted:Obviously depends on your individual dog but generally 40 lbs is good pet weight, 35 lbs is good sport/active weight for that size/breed of dog. She's not fat, and I don't care if she is until she's done growing. I'm just wondering how big she will end up if she's 30 lbs now at 6 months. The internet says they stop growing at 12-16 months. But then I'm seeing ranges of weight on female border collies at 30-40 lbs. I dont see consistent info on the ACD - I'm seeing anywhere from 30-60 lbs. Her mother was the ACD, and she is built more like that, but with the border collie coloring.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 01:13 |
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pookel posted:I don't particularly care about hand holding, but it's really loving weird how PI likes to latch onto a couple of random pieces of info and then start "answering" questions the poster never even asked while ignoring the questions they actually do ask. there's this concept of context that tends to be pretty valuable.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 01:55 |
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FogHelmut posted:She's not fat, and I don't care if she is until she's done growing. I'm just wondering how big she will end up if she's 30 lbs now at 6 months. The internet says they stop growing at 12-16 months. But then I'm seeing ranges of weight on female border collies at 30-40 lbs. I dont see consistent info on the ACD - I'm seeing anywhere from 30-60 lbs. Her mother was the ACD, and she is built more like that, but with the border collie coloring. There's a fairly large range in ACD body types, I think that's why the ideal range is so wide. One thing I've noticed is that ACDs in the south, Texas in particular, are huge and tank-like (not fat, just solid), but ACDs from up north are smaller and quicker. Mine's 42 pounds and he was considered small in Texas, then I bring him up to the midwest and he's a huge tank dog compared to the little cattledogs up here. BCs are a little more consistent I think. My 4 year old ACD/Aussie mix is 37 lbs fwiw. His vet ideally wants him down to 35 lbs while he's active in sports.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 02:57 |
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Have you considered an exercise routine? Maybe free weights?
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 03:00 |
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# ? May 29, 2024 20:19 |
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Aquatic Giraffe posted:There's a fairly large range in ACD body types, I think that's why the ideal range is so wide. One thing I've noticed is that ACDs in the south, Texas in particular, are huge and tank-like (not fat, just solid), but ACDs from up north are smaller and quicker. Mine's 42 pounds and he was considered small in Texas, then I bring him up to the midwest and he's a huge tank dog compared to the little cattledogs up here. BCs are a little more consistent I think. I see, great info. Fwiw she was shipped here to the shelter in California from Arkansas. I don't know why or if it's true. The woman running the shelter said someone else who originally started the shelter had moved there and would send over dogs from time to time. I don't know how that's reasonable, but whatever. I didn't pay for the plane ticket.
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# ? Jun 15, 2016 05:01 |