Onyx
Ridin' The Range
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2015
- Messages
- 65
- Reaction score
- 43
- Points
- 53
So, I ordered two Maremma puppies from a working ranch and a guy who had been raising them for decades. Figuring that he was the expert I asked him to choose two pups that would best suit my needs.
One of the pups seems to me to have good potential as a LGD, but her sister is extremely small, extremely timid and is very very narrow through the chest and ribs... so narrow through the chest that when she is standing up her front legs touch all the way down. The pups are four and a half months old and the bigger one is twice the size of her sister.
I cannot imagine putting this dog anywhere near packs of stray dogs or coywolves... I feel she would be killed very quickly. So for now, I plan to keep her up around the house as a pet. She really doesn't not seem suitable to me for anything else.
I wonder if anyone with lots of experience with LGDs can tell he how likely it is that she may "blossom" in time and become large enough and confident enough to do her job? When I bred dogs many many years ago, "runty" pups generally had caught up and sometimes even surpassed their siblings by 4 months of age. Then again I always made sure they had enough to eat. This girl has been out on the range with her dominant siblings who would chase her off the food, and is very thin, nearly skin and bones. I am feeding her up, but don't have much confidence that it's going to change her basic structure.
One of the pups seems to me to have good potential as a LGD, but her sister is extremely small, extremely timid and is very very narrow through the chest and ribs... so narrow through the chest that when she is standing up her front legs touch all the way down. The pups are four and a half months old and the bigger one is twice the size of her sister.
I cannot imagine putting this dog anywhere near packs of stray dogs or coywolves... I feel she would be killed very quickly. So for now, I plan to keep her up around the house as a pet. She really doesn't not seem suitable to me for anything else.
I wonder if anyone with lots of experience with LGDs can tell he how likely it is that she may "blossom" in time and become large enough and confident enough to do her job? When I bred dogs many many years ago, "runty" pups generally had caught up and sometimes even surpassed their siblings by 4 months of age. Then again I always made sure they had enough to eat. This girl has been out on the range with her dominant siblings who would chase her off the food, and is very thin, nearly skin and bones. I am feeding her up, but don't have much confidence that it's going to change her basic structure.