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Yes, agree, limited exposure here.. 1st hand with Rhodies and Himalayans.Maybe stick to Rhodies, huh?
I have to confess, we have a Himalayan girl too.
See, I am not against neutering. There are certainly situations where neutering makes sense.
I am just against blind, poorly informed neutering, looking to quickly simplify some (mostly social) aspects of dog ownership, without understanding the impact on the dog, or just not caring about the impact, and not willing to invest time into training and management.
My only advice and plea to those who consider neutering is - read, research, understand what it does and does not, weigh risks and benefits, then decide.
This research is hard - too many opinions out there on the internet, many of them "old school". From the same old school which taught housetraining by sticking puppy's face into his poop when he had an accident in the house.
Everything is hard - reading and figuring what's trustworthy and what's a pile of horse pucky is hard.
Walking at 5 am is hard.
Carrying puppy outside several times during a cold night when housetraining is hard. Sticking his face into his poop seems much easier and quicker - but please, good people, let's read and think before adopting this method. And let's read and think before scheduling the surgery too. That's all I am really advocating for, when it comes to neutering. We didn't commit to doing things the easy way when we picked up a puppy, we committed to doing them the right way.
To end on a light note - here is our little cute Himalayan. And, by the way - she is spayed! The breeder did not offer to spay her. We made a decision to do this, when she was a year old or so.
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