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#21 |
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Sprinting up hills is always good, easy on me too. I stand at the top & throw the stick down for 20 minutes as a warm up then we hit the river for 40 minutes, swimming & climbing. Then it's golf ball for dessert. ![]() ![]() |
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#22 |
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#23 |
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Hmmn I never really paid attention to how long it takes eagle to pant... next time we go bike riding ill check it out... speaking of bike riding yay or nay to 2 dogs on a walky dog?
---------- Post added at 02:29 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:28 AM ---------- I wish I had room out here but PHX is so over crowded right now, I cant let my dog off lead unless we are at the fenced in park.. |
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#24 |
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Hmmn I never really paid attention to how long it takes eagle to pant... next time we go bike riding ill check it out... speaking of bike riding yay or nay to 2 dogs on a walky dog? |
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#25 |
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I used to run my dog next to me on the bike she was really good at it and I would just stick the handle bar in he hand hole on the leash.
I found this cool "dog park" but there is never anyone there and thats where we take Bear for a good romp, going to start teaching him recalls there. There arent any distractions its in hole next to train tracks. Or he comes with us everywhere and he just got to go to my brothers and play with their GSD/pit/lab pup and a Am.Bulldog/pit in the garage and yard. He enjoys that alot and is crashed on the couch right now ![]() |
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#26 |
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#27 |
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#29 |
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#30 |
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Panting has nothing to do with a dogs wind or stamina. Panting is a dogs version of sweating as they have no sweat glands in their bodies except for in their feet, and almost all cooling is done via the mouth through the bloodstream internally. The way a dog cools his body is by panting. On a hot day a dog with great stamina will pant just from the heat.
Men sweat more than women, I read that this is because men have more muscle mass and typically require more sweating which is the body's way of cooling itself. The better a body cools itself the better it can perform in high stress, high energy, and high heat activities. It only goes to reason the more readily a dog pants the more efficiently it can cool itself. The panting has no relation to a dogs stamina, the sooner he pants the sooner he begins cooling his body, the longer he pants after an activity has a lot to do with the temperature and the time it takes his body to cool down. As his panting slows his body temperature is returning to normal levels. The minute a dog begins to exert himself his breathing and panting increase to counteract the heat generated as his body and muscles warm. The bottom line is panting is really not related to a dogs ability to perform physically other that how it relates to dissipating heat. Your dog is not breathing hard as does a human when his cardio vascular and pulmonary system is being stressed. He is cooling himself. A marathon runner will sweat profusely while barely breathing hard, where a dog will breath hard or pant just from temperature with no exertion what so ever. Judging your dogs conditioning by how he pants is not a good idea. If you're riding a bike don't judge by the panting judge by the distance he goes without slowing or stopping. |
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#31 |
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After reading all the replies and itching to respond, athiest said it all....
When people refer to good wind though, I believe they are often times referring to how long it takes a dog to hit the "heat wall". This is the point where they are just too hot and need to cool down and their performance suffers because of the need to cool off. The best way I can imagine to measure true wind of a dog would be to put it in a nice cold climate and have it sprint as long as it possibly can. |
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#32 |
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After reading all the replies and itching to respond, athiest said it all.... On another note, coming on here telling people to put your dog in the box is simply fucking retarded. ![]() |
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#33 |
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Panting has nothing to do with a dogs wind or stamina. Panting is a dogs version of sweating as they have no sweat glands in their bodies except for in their feet, and almost all cooling is done via the mouth through the bloodstream internally. The way a dog cools his body is by panting. On a hot day a dog with great stamina will pant just from the heat. |
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#34 |
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I can't wait to move 20min. down the road to NC so I can have like.. no neighbors. ---------- Post added at 04:46 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:45 PM ---------- Close ![]() |
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#35 |
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my farm is 367 acers hehe..wish u guys could come down and run ur dogs they would have a blast!!! |
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#36 |
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thank you, i took that pic in November, ill post new pics, every thing is getting green.. its very pretty in the spring!!
---------- Post added at 05:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:02 PM ---------- all of its mine, as far as u can see to the tops of the mountain.. the pic is just half the farm theirs way more! |
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#37 |
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How soon a dog begins panting is more a function of the temperature combined with the level of exertion and really has nothing to do with a dogs conditioning. Many athletes purposely break a sweat before competition begins just to ensure they are ready and cooling efficiently, when your dog gets warm he begins to pant, how long that takes has nothing to do with his level of conditioning and many fitness experts claim the faster a body begins cooling the better it is for performance. I have seen many a thorough bred horse race and I certainly would not place my bet on a cold dry horse with no signs of pre-race sweating. Yes horses sweat, dogs don't. Also dogs sometimes pant with excitement or eagerness. Maybe a panting dog before a run is a sign the dog is eager to run, which I would take as a good one
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#38 |
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No actually he/she didn't. A dog that runs hot sooner rather than later is NOT conditioned properly. So while I would never gauge wind solely on how quick a dog pants, it is relative to the conversation and definitely a factor. I agree...When I first started working Nikki she would pant and foam at the mouth within 15 min or so, I kept notes on this and the activities we were doing after three months of working and we are talking summer so the further along we got the hotter it was getting, she could go longer periods. She loves to work be it flirt, spring or mill she will work til she lays down and still tries to get up. When we are done I literally have to hose her down and then walk her a good 25 mins to get her cooled down.
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#39 |
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#40 |
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imo measuring a dogs heart rate is an excellent way to figure if a dog has "wind" or not. get that heart rate up there, then see how long it takes a dog to fatigue. |
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