That one chewing the bone. What a confident and steady dog. He was never intimidated by his sibling and did not feel the need to guard his bone unnecessarily. He gave his sibling a look once and the sibling backed off. That is beautiful energy.
Yes there is that's the standard for these dogs. When its done(tails docked) right the pups really don't feel very much at all BUT its needs to be done right vet or a breeder with training because you don't want to cause any unnecessary pain for the new born puppy. Any yes these dogs are beautiful...
Where are you located and are you still selling these (the breed not those specific dogs in the video) I won't be able to purchase one for about 5 months to a year
+Georgia Wingett We live in Hungary. We had a litter at November and we plan one to end of this year as well from an other bitch. Find me on facebook, and there you can fine new infos from us.
Are you sure they are 8 weeks old?? they are so massive at this age. I have a boerboel he is 3 months old and is not as big as this.. What kind of dog food do you give them please??
+Kwaku Kyei Yes, they were 8 weeks old. They got goat milk and after that milk with puppy dry food (Profine). www.qpf.hu/ I think this looking is from parents genetics as well ;)
Abra posibilidades deqe pueda conseguir un borboel aquí en tijuana baj.isi las ai enqe parte los venden y cual es el costo.$ le agradeseria sime pudiera responder.grasias
Daniel ZYZZ +Zeus Tab It was a big questions before they were born. Cut or not? There are a lot of things pro and con. Our adults have long tails and they bump everwhere when they really happy.
From my experience with my dog I'd say I would have rather have his tail docked, every once in a while it happens like twice a year he gets like a muscle cramp where he can't really wag his tail for a day or two I'd would have docked it if I knew it would happen.
Lot's of misconceptions around docking. In certain dog breeds the tails become easily injured and can become infected/cangrenous. It is also very difficult to treat an injured tail sine it is practically impossible to keep the K9 stationary and prevent it from hurting its tail further. The only option then often becomes to perform an amputation. But, seeing as bone marrow starts to extend into the tail with maturation, it becomes extremely risky to then amputate the injured/infected/cangrenous tail in adulthood. Docking by a vet during infancy is quick and relatively painless and could save the dog a lot of pain in future.
One day while on holiday in Namibia, I saw a man in his 50's trying to castrate a puppy using pliers, crashing the testicles. And the puppy was in pain and screaming. It took 5 men to get me off him.