Posted on 03/14/2017 1:40:16 PM PDT by Forgotten Amendments
” It took us heavy duty training for two years to help him get over his fear of small children.”
I thought dingos *ate* small human children. Fear might have been a good thing...
“We raised at least 20 litters of her pups...”
Twenty litters? What were you running, a dog-house of ill-repute?
Better yet, demand it on all dogs in the region.
“in the true wilderness wolves live in families just like humans - mates with their offspring.”
Wolf packs are basically family units. They reproduce pretty quickly when food is available (12 wolves reintroduced into Yellowstone has grown to over 1,500), so there is a bunch of slop as the young move out, mate up and start new packs.
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No, they just loved to do the ‘thing.’ Often twice a year.
Well, as long as it’s between consenting canines... :)
This is about the only rational post I have seen from the FReepers on this. kudos
I understand what you're seeing, however I see some other indicators that could have been what flagged the animal control folks to the hybrid concern. The winter coat is bushed up such as what you see with the fine, thick undercoat of wolves, Siberian husky and malamute - An inspection of the coat would give a yes/no on this in about 10 seconds after the dog arrived to the pound. In addition, the inside of the ears are heavily furred and hard to be sure but I think there is also heavy fur between the foot pads. These are also traits of wolves and their closest domestic dog cousins husky and malamute.
I was living in a South side Denver metro suburb when the dangerous dog local and state level laws were radically beefed up in about 2000 or so. These were enacted after a number of attacks on humans with pit bulls being the worst.
One incident was a few hundred yards from my house. A woman walking the greenbelt trail was surrounded by three pit bulls that were very aggressive. Lucky for her, several teenage boys walking home from hockey practice in their pads and with sticks were on the trail and ran to her. They kept the dogs backed off but the dogs didn't run away. I was outside the house when a constable with lights flashing turned up the greenbelt trail and throwing a rooster tail climbing the top of the hill. Two more constables quickly followed. Next there were a bunch of gunshots and that was the end of the pit bulls. How would you like that in your neighborhood? The second attack by pit bulls had a fatal end to a woman in a rural area southeast of metro Denver. The woman went outside her front door and was attacked by several pit bulls that had broke out of their yard that was some distance away. She was ripped apart. A short time later, a neighbor happened to come for a visit. The pit bulls were still there and went at him. The guy was able to jump in his pickup bed and the pits could not jump that high. The guy in the pickup called 911 on a cell phone and the first responders were the volunteer fireman. The pits kept them corralled in their engine. Sheriff deputies finally put them down once they arrived.
Anyway, it was incidents like this that led to the very strict dangerous animal laws. IIRC, the owner of a dangerous dog that causes a fatal attack on a human faces a felony charge along the line of manslaughter. It's no joke.
Long winded, but the comments about wolf DNA in your sheltie or whatever are really off the mark. If for example, a wolf hybrid is a 50:50 mix this distribution of DNA will be approximately 50% of the sire's and dams breed respectively. Yes, that cute sheltie has some wolf DNA present but is like 0.00000000000000000000000001% of the sheltie breed DNA makeup.
A little German Shepherd with winter weather coat?
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