Where to get a puppy?

@mimico_polak I've only read the first and last page of this thread, where all I've seen are positive posts. Hopefully others have already mentioned some of this things I'm about to, because you really need to go into this with your eyes open. Dogs are like children that never grow up. They will never become any more self-sufficient than the day you get them, and if you're a germaholic/clean freak like I was, get ready for a meltdown. If this will be your and your wife's first dog, you'll want to try dog-sitting for a friend on vacation for at least a week or more to really understand how it might uproot your lifestyle.

While I love our Pekingese Maltese, thank god I was originally dead set against her and made my wife agree that if she insisted on bringing her home, I would have zero responsibility for anything to do with her. That includes:
- waking up 2 hours earlier than normal to feed, walk, wash, and dry her every morning, which can also be in the freezing cold dead of winter trudging through a foot of snow before the streets have been plowed, or while hoping your umbrella doesn't collape or get blown away but the torrential rain and wind
- always having to come home straight after work to prevent or deal with separation anxiety and to walk, wash, and dry her again, as well as possibly to clean up after an occasional accident (usually just pee, but sometimes worse)
- never being able to stay out late at parties because you need to get home to walk, wash, and dry her again
- waking up in the middle of the night to walk, wash, and dry her when her stomach acts up from something she probably ate on he last walk when you weren't paying attention and she wants to go outside and eat grass
- having to beg and plead for someone to watch her whenever we need to go anywhere overnight
- budgeting for shots and regular checkups at the vet or worse when there's a problem (luckily we only had one scare that thankfully cost just $2000 for an x-ray and overnight stay at the pet hospital)
- budgeting for regular grooming
- budgeting for dog food
- budgeting for dog (and owner) training

And that's all assuming the dog is well-mannered. As our first, we didn't know what we were doing and ours developed separation anxiety as well as aggressiveness. She barks at pretty much everyone and lunges at people and cars passing by on her walks and actually bit one person while my daughter was walking her - luckily they didn't sue us. We tried training her, but I was the only person taking it seriously. If every single person in the household doesn't understand how to act in front of the dog, no amount of training will be successful. A friend of mine insists I should make her wear a shock collar, but I think that's cruel.

As I said, I do love our dog, but my wife agrees that she'll probably be our last. Mostly because at 15 years old she's at the max of her life expectancy for either breed. Hopefullt the cross breeding helps, but we've already started to see signs of her aging like diminished hearing and sight. Sometimes we get sad just looking at her and wondering if she's still breathing, and dread the day she leaves us. And out of everything she's put us though so far, that's the one thing we don't think we'd be able to handle a second time.
 
After our first pair of dogs passed away, we decided our next ones had to be small enough for my wife to easily lift, as our 80 lb dog's hip issues were tough on her with the many stairs in our house. We searched locally for a not-too-big-not-too-small dog for quite a while with no luck (lots of Chihuahuas and Shepherds/Staffies, though!), so eventually found and adopted two mutts from a rescue in Korea. They have opposite personalities, one is brash and the other is anxious, but they're perfect for each other.

A few notes from our experience...

Pet Insurance: A mixed bag. Probably the smartest option is putting what you'd pay in premiums into a dedicated fund instead. You build a pool for emergencies and get to keep what you don't use. We've seen both sides: insurance basically broke even on one dog's $7,000 surgery, but for our other dog, we paid for years and got almost nothing back due to the deductible. All that said, we have insurance on both our young pups simply because we never want to be forced to decide on coverage based on cost.

Walks: Don't underestimate the time commitment. We walk ours several times a day, which has been a huge positive. It gets us more exercise, we're a lot more social with our neighbors, and my wife and I get quality time together without screens. Having a park or varied routes nearby helps keep it from getting boring, which we're lucky enough to have. Living in the country was surprisingly crap for dog walking, really only two options, and neither was a loop unless you really wanted to make an expedition out of it.

Cover for being away: Having people you trust to watch the dogs helps a lot for travel. We're in Italy for a few weeks at the moment, and it wouldn't be possible without my sister helping out. Boarding is expensive and isn't a good fit for every dog, especially anxious ones.

We love having our dogs, but it's not for everyone. It's sad to see dogs that only get let into the backyard. They need to get out and sniff to get mental stimulation, as they literally see the world through their noses. Getting one that's a good fit for your lifestyle can make it a lot less of a burden, especially with kids and other demands. Don't get a Border Collie unless you can give it a job to do nearly constantly, don't get a bulldog if you want to go on jogs or long walks, and don't get a dachshund if you want a dog to wrestle with the kids.

Good luck with it. We wouldn't trade ours for anything, and they bring so much joy into the home. Losing them is absolutely brutal, worse than losing people in many cases because of how intertwined your lives get, but it is all worth it.
 
I would suggest being very careful with Rez dogs or any of the current crop of Caribbean rescues being brought to Ontario . My daughter has two Rez dogs from the NWT . One took three yrs to develop any trust issues beyond her and the other eight yrs in is nuts . They have no guests in and walk her alone at five am and eleven when they are very unlikely to encounter another dog . While there are a lot of success stories , friend a “travel nurse” brought a large Shepard mix home from Hudson Bay , it’s at a six week boot camp as it has developed aggression and bit three people . My daughter worked as a vet tech for a few yrs in Ft Mac . She has literally worked with sled dog packs , security guard dogs , the police canine unit and fluffy the Maltese that thought he was a cat .
Dogs need to fit the owner , @FullMotoJacket , I met your dog at spokes , Matt was my go to for skiis for years . Nice dog , the socialization and training showed . I could be dog less going forward , wife would struggle without a friend . I suspect another yellow lab is in my future .


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The three loves of my life , one costs me a fortune and is a little hard to reason with . The other two are a dog and a cat .
Gaby is a boxer / Carolina dingo cross , came from Georgia as a refugee the first time Trump was elected . Ralph the voodoo cat is twenty one pounds and most dogs are a bit scared of him.at one point we had two dogs, two cats and a huge acreage . Only get one dog and the huge acreage .


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