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Boy, it's fun having dog conversations with folks that know dogs! As a teen all the other girls were into clothes and makeup and boys, but I was all about dogs, gardening, and science. I bet I had a lot more fun and a lot less heartache! Thanks so much for everyone's input. Keep it coming! I'm trying to get ideas for myself and educate my husband. Give the boy lots to read!Have you considered:
standard poodle-- a light wt dog and not like the toys at all. A real working dog class. I grew up with a black standard poodle named Charlie. He lived to be 17, and he was like my big brother. On the social ladder, there was no doubt he outranked me!
Bernese mountain dog--very pretty, med-large in size; becoming more popular. Our family admired those dogs! We'd have gotten one, but they wouldn't fit through the doggie door. :0) Saw LOTS of them in the obedience ring.
Not akc approved yet is the maremma-- a smaller version of the big white sheep guard dogs; this is an Italien dog and much smaller; Heavy coat but doesn't need a lot of care. Maremmas are a working dog.
Spaniels--some are better than others, but fall into the retreiver family just a smaller package. So they are family friendly. We had a champion English Cocker and one of her puppies. They were a hoot! By far the smartest dog we ever owned. Not an obedient bone in her body, but very smart! Never a dull moment with Merrie around.
I looked at each catagory of dogs to determine their job and if that groups would work for me; I eliminated the toys, the terriers, the hounds. The working dogs are bred to work with people and take orders; they are usually easy to train.
What you need to also consider is temperament testing. When I bought my first Rottie the puppy had been temperment tested by a rottie judge. I got a dog that was both brave and not fearful. A dog that is vey concerned for its well being is likely to be a fear biting, which I consider a dangerous dog only for a pro to manage. THis is why I do suggest a lab, either black or yellow; a breeder told me most chocolates have temperament problems. Off the 50 dogs on her property only 3 adults were chocolates. She was very picky. THe dog I bought from her was exactly as she described. A gem with my kids. My second sheltie I bought from a lady who would not breed a dog that didn't have at least a CDX in the obedience ring. If I could clone that dog I would in a heartbeat! Awesome temperament, very people oriented, and absolutely lived to please.
Have you considered going to an AKC sanctioned show and look at he dogs; you can see a lot at once. And talk to handlers and breeders, if they have time. As a teen I did a lot of showing in the obedience and junior handling rings. That's where I fell in love with herding breeds, labs, and goldens. They did their jobs with joy. A dog show is a fun place to gather information...It also gives you some clue as to what's required as far as grooming.
I purebred dogs so I know what I am getting. I predicatability. Can this dog do the job I need done?
I took 6 months looking at breeds, talking to vets, etc. I found a breeder highly recommended by a reliable source ( my brother had bough one of her dogs) and I bought a lab. But he was too friendly and didn't protect my house. I bought a rottie puppy who was guarding the car at 15 weeks old. Well the lab just needed a little more time to grow up and the protection mode did develop. I let my kids play with the Lab, but not the ROtties. As my kids learned on the lab, and got taller than the dogs I trained them how to handle the rotties. THey now have a good handle on managing the rotties. ( Very hard to win the respect of a rottie.) Labs are very easy dogs. With kids around, easy is probably best, but I've met a lot of really sweet rotties. Not for our family right now, but great dogs that get a bad rap.
--Nikki