Would love to have one but I don't have a few thousand to spend on a dog, There are too many pups in rescue that need a good home. I will stay with that.Mini French Bulldogs
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Would love to have one but I don't have a few thousand to spend on a dog, There are too many pups in rescue that need a good home. I will stay with that.Mini French Bulldogs
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Works better than the one I take
My dog, the male, is the one lying down with the pups...the female was AFAIK a tri, but she wasn't registered. Her owner was/is a carpenter/builder....the dogs had previously met, and when he was doing some work on our street, (she used to ride with him in the van), she leaped out of the vehicle and raced down to our place......true love.Nemo: Is the Dad a tri colour BC? My first border collie (Sierra) was a tri-colour - many thought she was a mix. Sierra was languishing at the kennel as she did not look like a "real border collie". She's been gone for 5 years and I think of her daily.
So I wonder what your male border weighs. My female McNab is 36 lbs and her dad was 45 lbs. First herder I’ve had that was part border. Smart, affectionate, agile and super trainable but also a bit domineering. She is becoming reliable around bikes and runners but bouncy, hollering kids will be rounded up unless I’m vigilant. Is that behavior typical for borders as well? She is 1.5 years and socialization was stunted by the pandemic.My Border Collie again......bred him with his soul mate up the hill......she was feeding the pups when we visited, and oftentimes apparently a female with pups will run the male off. Not this couple.....she recognized our car, jumped up and ran out to see him.
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