Pet Care Pet Care

Dog Owner Responsibility

The obligations of dog owning are few, but you must fulfill them. All that the dog requires of you is food, water, comfort, exercise, health,affection, and protection. If you can't supply these simple needs, it would be better for you not to have a dog, for it will only be a burden.

For example, veterinarians will often see a Poodle whose coat is solidly matted and thick with fleas. No one could possibly comb it. The owner laments, "Oh, why didn't somebody tell me what he would be like when he grew up!" A dog allowed to get in such a condition poses medical problem and a nuisance to the owner as well. When the dog has been clipped all over, deflead, and the owner made to understand that Irons then on he must spend some time on the dog's grooming,he's likely to say, "But that's so expensive!" The owner should have known before he bought the poodle that a dog with a shorter coat is cheaper to keep.

Too often the prospective dog owner overlooks his or her own desire sand tendencies when selecting a pet. The sedentary man of studious disposition not infrequently makes the mistake of selecting a dog that requires much more exercise than he is willing to give it. Let's say he has a Foxhound. Every day he takes it for a walk around the block thereby satisfying his own conscience but providing practically no exercise for the dog. All the owner has done is to give the dog a chance to relieve itself. He should know that sometimes a foxhound will run Mona trail for as long as forty-eight hours. At so miles ass hour, it will have traveled 48o miles in that time. The hungry wild dog may run so°miles to get a single meal. In the face of such facts, the owner's walk around the block to exercise the dog becomes ludicrous. What the dog really enjoys is a so- or so-mile hike once a week an outing that would probably do the owner as much good as it does the dog.

Beyond the few simple obligations that pet owners assume, there area few things they learn to avoid. They soon find that it doesn't pay toilet their pets roam anymore than they can help. It costs less to feed a dog on neighbor's garbage but not for long. Sooner or later the dog eats some "tainted swill," sickens, and perhaps dies. Animals that roam are in constant danger of being injured in accidents or hurt in fights. They may even join others and ravage the neighborhood. A pair of German Shepherds in our community killed nineteen little pigs ionone farm, seven sheep on another, three calves on another, and fifty-four rabbits on still another all in one night. One of the dogs was shot and the other poisoned by the irate farmer who had lost the calves. Thousands of sheep are killed every year by dogs, and the dogs are in turn destroyed by the authorities. And in northern locations where snow is deep, dozens of roaming dogs are shot every year by wardens to prevent their killing the deer that can't escape from them .A final word on the danger of letting a dog run loose. Sooner or later it will be picked up by the dog warden and put in a truck with other strays. It will be lodged in the dog pound, and if there is any disease among the other dogs there, your dog is sure to be exposed. It is true that the dog can be recovered from the warden, but it may well die or go through a long, expensive illness because of an infection it contracted in the pound.

Still another obligation of the dog owner is to help prevent the canine population explosion by the judicious use of a leash which is the cheapest contraceptive available. Of course, this does not mean the tethering on a leash of a female in heat where males are around. There are contraceptive additives to food as well as pills and injections to prevent heat, but these preparations are usually given to prevent no more than two heat periods. Unless you must use your pet for reproduction, it is wise to have it spayed or castrated as the case may be. Many states have or are in the process of legislating higher license fees frustrated and un castrated canines in the hope that the numbers of unwanted dog will be reduced.

Dog Care

All Natural High Protein Dog Food
Ask the Dog Doctor Veterinarian
Caffeine Dogs
debark a Dog
Death of a Dog
Dog Bathing
Dog Bedding
Dog Birth
Dog Boarding Kennel
Dog Body
Dog Body Structure
Dog Bone
Dog Care
Dog Diet
Dog Digestion
Dog Digestive System
Dog Discharge
Dog Diuretics
Dog Drugs and the Reproductive System
Dog Drugs Applied to Skin
Dog Drugs to Kill External Parasites
Dog Drugs to Kill Internal Parasites
Economic Impact of Dog Ownership
Dog Emergency
Dog Euthanasia
Dog Eye Problems
Dog Eyes
Dog Faqs
Dog Feeding
Dog First Aid
Dog Grooming
Dog Grooming Stripping or Plucking
Dog Growths
Dog Mouth
Dog Nail Care
Dog Owner Responsibility
Dog Personality Guide
Dog Physical Exams
Dog Tail
Enlarge Heart in Dog False Dog Pregnancy
Feeding Dog
Female Dog Reproductive System
Fluke Dog
Dog Pregnancy
Dog Spaying
Dog Surgery
Dog Teeth
Dog Tongue
Dog Training Tips
Dog Vitamin
Dog Whelping
Dog Water
Foreign Object in Dog Foster Dog
High Fat Dog Food
How Long Does a Dog Live
How Much to Feed a Dog
How to Accustom Your Dog to a Diet
How to Choose a Dog
How to Choose Vet
How to Get Your Dog to Swallow Medicine
How to Restrain a Dog
ow to Tell If Your Dog Is Sick
How to Untrain yourDog
ow to Wean Dog
other Dog Health
Old Dog
Puppy Feeding
Respiratory Infection Dog Treatment
Tetanus in Dogs
Tonsilitis in Dogs
Types of Dog Food
Variety in Dog Diets
What Cause a Dog to have Intussusception
What type of Dog Food Should I Feed My Dogs
What You Can Catch From Your Dog
hat You Should Know AboutDog Feeding
When is a Female Dog Ready to be Breed
Why Breed Dog
Dog Health

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