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#1 |
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I hear so much always supervise your dogs or they may fight and I wonder about the homes I pass and the dogs are in the backyard constantly.
How do those dogs get through their problems? Do they fight and eventually get tired and just go lie down? Of course i'm talking about dogs of similar size. |
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#2 |
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In a nutshell, yes. Unless you have a lot of money to spare for vet bills. Some dogs are well behaved within their packs, some people are irresponsible enough to leave their dogs unsupervised (or have non DA dogs but I'd still worry). There are ways to introduce two dogs to each other, there are dogs who will never fight and some who may never have 'done that before!'. All it takes is one mistake...
Yes some will fight and then go lie down, sometimes forever... |
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#3 |
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it depends....male and female pairs are easier to accomplish......same sex pairing should be out of the question with this breed....from what ive seen tho dogs who live in a fence together already have decided who the pack leader is and when they have problems they bite to assert dominance not to kill per say but err dog is different
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#4 |
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It depends on the dogs.
With game breeds, its n ot a good idea, because they aren't fighting for dominance many times, they are fighting because they are game, and could possibly keep it up until one or both are severely injured or dead. I used to have a lab and a medium sized yellow mutt, and I would let them take care of their own squabbles, because they were always just a flash in the pan. A bit of snarling, a little fur flying, and then they would go off to sulk. My apbt and bandogs drag each other around by their faces for fun... a fight would end badly. |
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#5 |
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#6 |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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I was at the vet clinic when two male pit bulls came in. Their owners (friends) decided to let them work it out. One was dead, the other was torn apart.
Best way to have multiple pit bulls? Never let a fight happen. Watch them like hawks, crate and rotate when you're distracted, crate when you're not around. If two don't get along, keep them apart. Two pit bulls will not work it out in a way that keeps both alive. These aren't labs. |
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#9 |
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In a nutshell, yes. Unless you have a lot of money to spare for vet bills. Some dogs are well behaved within their packs, some people are irresponsible enough to leave their dogs unsupervised (or have non DA dogs but I'd still worry). There are ways to introduce two dogs to each other, there are dogs who will never fight and some who may never have 'done that before!'. All it takes is one mistake... It depends on the dogs. ---------- Post added at 12:58 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:52 PM ---------- I was at the vet clinic when two male pit bulls came in. Their owners (friends) decided to let them work it out. One was dead, the other was torn apart. ![]() |
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#10 |
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#11 |
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Is it harmful to just let the dogs fight it out? I think it is.
What if one dog is more dominate then then other dogs and does fatal damage? What if that one fight turns your sweet dog into a DA disaster? What if your dog thinks that it should fight every dog after that? Neither of mine were DA until their first fight. Now theyre both DA to a certain degree. |
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#12 |
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My aunt has always had 3 dogs at a time until recently and alway all female. She has had mostly mutts and now has a Dalmation and a Pit mix... it seems like no matter what her dogs have gotten into fights... even before the pit mix. They fought to kill, and it was always bad. She always had to keep them seperated. I think it depends on the dog as well as the breed. I personally wouldn't let any dog just fight it out if I could prevent it.
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#13 |
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#14 |
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I would suggest against letting them work it out. The houses you see with multiple dogs in the backyard not separated from each other without supervision are irresponsible. Plain and simple.
Correct me if I'm wrong but... Isn't it in this breed's history not to recognize when another dog submits? So if another dog "eventually get tired and just go lie down" the aggressor dog will continue. |
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#15 |
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It depends on the dogs. |
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#16 |
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Jrm, sometimes it also depends on the owner. dogs will often try to establish pack structure when a human hasn't taken the alpha role. ---------- Post added at 03:15 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:14 PM ---------- All that are left now is Ella who is going to be passing away soon ![]() |
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#17 |
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#18 |
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#19 |
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#20 |
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first of all my mother lives way out in the country closes neighbor maybe a mile now she has 5 yard dogs im pretty sure they all have a lil pit in them i know a couple of them do for a fact and one inside dog rat terr. the rat dog is the top on pecking order for some reason but in 6 or 7 years ican say ive never even seen a scabble out of any of them except the rat dog no breeding just pound dogs or drop offs and they have become her faimly and great watch dogs...no chains, no fence..thats a couple.
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