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Am i going too soft


Country_est
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This doenst apply to NTTF, as its quite cold, and I have been away for xmas with the dogs, they were sleeping in the same bedroom as me. Now that I have just got back home and it is -4 I have decieded to let them sleep int hte house till it warms up a bit.

 

Am I being too soft or doing the right thing. They are 2 labs, one is 9 years and the other is 9 months. They have been kenneled outside most of the time when we are at home, but are just as happy indoors given the chance.

 

PS whilst on holiday in Durham they were swimming and wading in the river most days even if they did have icilces forming on them before I could get them home to dry.

 

Trev

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IMO if they have not been house dogs they will be fine.

 

My springer sleeps in an unheated kennel box on shredded paper, she's inside for a few hours each evening to socialise but otherwise she's out but I feed her an extra meal before I go to bed on cold night (which has been most of them for the last few weeks).

 

If they're kennelled together, even better.

 

So my reply is "Yes, you are going too soft".... but then that never put anyone in jail did it :yes:

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When did a dog ever go soft?

Let the poor little ******* in and you spend half an hour in their kennel. I’ll lay money on where you’d rather be.

If there is any heat going those dogs will soon be near it. They give you everything they’ve got so why deprive them of a bit of comfort.

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When did a dog ever go soft?

Let the poor little ******* in and you spend half an hour in their kennel. I’ll lay money on where you’d rather be.

If there is any heat going those dogs will soon be near it. They give you everything they’ve got so why deprive them of a bit of comfort.

 

i cant comment for Country_est but my kennel for the dogs are heated and insulated just as warm in there as it is in the house, but is the heating was to fail the dogs would be inside in a heartbeat

Edited by rustybucket
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This doenst apply to NTTF, as its quite cold, and I have been away for xmas with the dogs, they were sleeping in the same bedroom as me. Now that I have just got back home and it is -4 I have decieded to let them sleep int hte house till it warms up a bit.

 

Am I being too soft or doing the right thing. They are 2 labs, one is 9 years and the other is 9 months. They have been kenneled outside most of the time when we are at home, but are just as happy indoors given the chance.

 

PS whilst on holiday in Durham they were swimming and wading in the river most days even if they did have icilces forming on them before I could get them home to dry.

 

Trev

 

Mine are in, am going to get some type of heating put in to the kennels for them but till then they stay in. They deserve it.

 

Cheers :yes:

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This doenst apply to NTTF, as its quite cold, and I have been away for xmas with the dogs, they were sleeping in the same bedroom as me. Now that I have just got back home and it is -4 I have decieded to let them sleep int hte house till it warms up a bit.

 

Am I being too soft or doing the right thing. They are 2 labs, one is 9 years and the other is 9 months. They have been kenneled outside most of the time when we are at home, but are just as happy indoors given the chance.

 

PS whilst on holiday in Durham they were swimming and wading in the river most days even if they did have icilces forming on them before I could get them home to dry.

 

Trev

 

Without going too deeply into various kenneling arrangements my view is that if the dogs are outside they should stay outside, just because you think its cold on a particular night what was so different about the previous couple of nights when they were left out, to bring them in on odd nights imo, just unsettles them, they grow thicker coats left out and provided they have decent bedding and a little exta grub are more than able to cope.

 

Re the dogs with ice forming forming on their coats before they were taken home to dry them,imo they should have been towel dried as soon as they left the water, remember a dogs working life is short enough without encouraging premature rhumatism etc.

 

My tenpence worth.

 

Rgds D2D

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Ok I was SAS, (Soft as S*!t.)

 

As they are in the kennels all day while I am at work ant the temps were still below 0 during the day I had them in the hosue with me on a night.

 

They always come into the house when we are in, only kenneled when we are out or on a night. Whilst we were away at xmas they slept in the same room as us any way, and usually do sleep in the same room when we go any where in the UK on hols. Always sleep on the floor on on the bed.

 

Kennel is rasied off the floor, built in inside a 6x4 shed, but there is a "dog flap" in the door to allow access to the run at all times.

Shed is lined with MDF and loft insulation between the shed walls and MDF.

 

As for the freezing coats, where we were on hols (in Weardale) there is water every where, and whilst not encouraging the dogs in to the river, it was nigh on impossible to keep 2 labs dry. Walks were only about 1/2 - hour long so not too long till dreid and infront of the fire for them.

 

Trev

Edited by Country_est
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Kennel is rasied off the floor, built in inside a 6x4 shed, but there is a "dog flap" in the door to allow access to the run at all times.

Shed is lined with MDF and loft insulation between the shed walls and MDF.

 

Sounds like you were SAS long before the dogs came in :good:

 

Nice one mate, do you what YOU want - they're your dogs :no:

 

WGD

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Don't worry too much about having them outside, Labs especially have thick coats and normally are a lil chubby, its keeps em warm in the water, they should be fine in a kennel :rolleyes: Espec with 2 together they can snuggle up for extra warmth.

 

It wouldn't hurt to throw some old blankets on for them though, nice to know there comfortable :blink: :innocent:

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guess I'm too soft. Roxy keep me warm at night in bed. Sometimes when it is extra cold in the house I'll open the bedroom door about an hour before I want to go to bed so that she pops upstairs and warms it up for me. Nothing like a toasty bed to crawl into.

 

Yes, she's spoiled rotten. But having grown up with dogs outside (chained and/or in kennels) and now having raised my own inside, I couldn't have a dog outside. If that means she isn't a perfect gundog, I'm okay with that. She's only a gundog a handful of days a year. The rest of the time she's a pet.

 

Thanks,

rick

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Dogs do not think as we do. They are a lot harder than us. Gun dog especially have been bred for their hardiness. I agree with a lot of the comments here.

A kennelled dog will grow a good strong coat and not feel the cold. A lab has a double coat Top coat has the coarse guard hairs then there is the undercoat that is very thick and fine. Next time your dog goes for a swim, when it come out I gurantee that when you part the coat its actuall skin will not be wet.

Ask yourself, could you swim a river in the middle of winter, cross to the other side, pick up a duck and then swim back and wait eagerly to do it again. a lab will.

Give the dog credit, don't treat it like a child. It is a Dog

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