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Hello there
Right before you all scream in horror at me please hear me out.
So me and my fella are young professionals. I am a self-confessed animal nut; always have been always will. Naturally, I have been doing a hell of a lot of research on the ideal pet to have in our situation. We would like a pet but the only one we are both really keen on is a dog. I personally have been called 'a dog person without a dog' by several friends, due to my love for them but alas the more I research dogs the more I get disheartened. You see being young professionals working 9-5 brings up the controversial should a dog be left home alone for more than 3-5hrs discussion that is commonly talked about on the Internet. But this post isn't about that. Asides from working full-time, we actually like the lifestyle of living in an apartment (it's cheaper to heat, it's more convenient for shopping and for getting to work and it's argues oh a greener lifestyle). Of course, this inevitably rules out most (if not all) dogs that are bigger than a dinner plate. But the reason why has got me stumped.
Now, with all due respect, I don't want people to get the wrong impression here and say "get a cat". I have not started this thread asking whether I can get a dog in my situation and what dog I should get. I have done so many hours of research on this subject that, although it pains me to say it, the answer to that question is probably "no. Dogs will not suit your lifestyle" but I just wondered why In my research for dogs suited to apartment life only small dogs seem to be suitable.
In my experience, small dogs tend to be louder but need less exercise and large dogs are quieter but need more exercise (very boardly speaking). In this sense, no dog is suited to flats. The only reason I can think of that dog breeds choices are cut down so dramatically is the lack of a garden. But that got me thinking: why it is recommended that dogs need a back garden, really? I assume it is because of exercise but all the dogs I've known do very little exercise in their garden spaces. Most use it for toileting and maybe a bit of a sniff but what is the difference between that and a dog that lives in a flat but has a good daily romp in the park? Surely they would get more exercise that way? Is it just the fact that we have grown accustomed to dogs toileting outside and therefore must have a garden and going outside to toilet while living in a second floor flat is a big ask? If that is the case why is it ok for a cat to go inside in a litter tray and not ok for a dog to do the same? Or is it just that flats *supposedly* have less space for a big dog to move around and therefore would knock everything over with their tails etc? Again, I have sat in a 3bed house where the dog wasn't allowed upstairs and had a living room with less space than my current flat so this seems a bit of a sweeping assumption that isn't quite watertight either.
Just food for thought? I was just interested on the opinions of people more experienced than me. Maybe there is something I missed in dogs' needs that is blindingly obvious to dogs owners that I can't see. I was just interested whether the reason why dogs need a back garden is tradition or whether there is a real reason that I've just missed.
Anyway. Hope this will spark an interesting discussion. Happy trails!
~Scribbled.
Right before you all scream in horror at me please hear me out.
So me and my fella are young professionals. I am a self-confessed animal nut; always have been always will. Naturally, I have been doing a hell of a lot of research on the ideal pet to have in our situation. We would like a pet but the only one we are both really keen on is a dog. I personally have been called 'a dog person without a dog' by several friends, due to my love for them but alas the more I research dogs the more I get disheartened. You see being young professionals working 9-5 brings up the controversial should a dog be left home alone for more than 3-5hrs discussion that is commonly talked about on the Internet. But this post isn't about that. Asides from working full-time, we actually like the lifestyle of living in an apartment (it's cheaper to heat, it's more convenient for shopping and for getting to work and it's argues oh a greener lifestyle). Of course, this inevitably rules out most (if not all) dogs that are bigger than a dinner plate. But the reason why has got me stumped.
Now, with all due respect, I don't want people to get the wrong impression here and say "get a cat". I have not started this thread asking whether I can get a dog in my situation and what dog I should get. I have done so many hours of research on this subject that, although it pains me to say it, the answer to that question is probably "no. Dogs will not suit your lifestyle" but I just wondered why In my research for dogs suited to apartment life only small dogs seem to be suitable.
In my experience, small dogs tend to be louder but need less exercise and large dogs are quieter but need more exercise (very boardly speaking). In this sense, no dog is suited to flats. The only reason I can think of that dog breeds choices are cut down so dramatically is the lack of a garden. But that got me thinking: why it is recommended that dogs need a back garden, really? I assume it is because of exercise but all the dogs I've known do very little exercise in their garden spaces. Most use it for toileting and maybe a bit of a sniff but what is the difference between that and a dog that lives in a flat but has a good daily romp in the park? Surely they would get more exercise that way? Is it just the fact that we have grown accustomed to dogs toileting outside and therefore must have a garden and going outside to toilet while living in a second floor flat is a big ask? If that is the case why is it ok for a cat to go inside in a litter tray and not ok for a dog to do the same? Or is it just that flats *supposedly* have less space for a big dog to move around and therefore would knock everything over with their tails etc? Again, I have sat in a 3bed house where the dog wasn't allowed upstairs and had a living room with less space than my current flat so this seems a bit of a sweeping assumption that isn't quite watertight either.
Just food for thought? I was just interested on the opinions of people more experienced than me. Maybe there is something I missed in dogs' needs that is blindingly obvious to dogs owners that I can't see. I was just interested whether the reason why dogs need a back garden is tradition or whether there is a real reason that I've just missed.
Anyway. Hope this will spark an interesting discussion. Happy trails!
~Scribbled.
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