Quote:
I ran into an older lady who brought her wolf to farmers' market in St. Augustine, Florida, two years ago; we stay there for January, February, March. I fell in love with that wolf and wanted to take him home with me, knowing he'd be a pain in the butt to care for because of special fencing and other details. He was like no dog that I'd ever met, super-friendly, smart, big, beautiful ... the list could just go on and on.
EDIT: BTW, at first I was afraid to get close to the wolf and wondered where she found the gall to bring a WOLF, of all things, to a public place. Wellllllllllll, I just wish all dogs were as loveable and obviously intelligent and gentle as a puppy as what that wolf was once I raked up the nerve to pet him. DANG, once more I'm wanting to get a wolf...
me too. Wolves aren't dogs in any way but they are the most amazing dog family member. I could talk forever on them. You have to be the right person, with the right set up, the time for DAILY grooming, and able to afford their feed (chicken imagine that!) and it's a 15 year commitment to an animal that is basicly not relocatable. But what you gain from them is something you will never duplicate.
I ran into an older lady who brought her wolf to farmers' market in St. Augustine, Florida, two years ago; we stay there for January, February, March. I fell in love with that wolf and wanted to take him home with me, knowing he'd be a pain in the butt to care for because of special fencing and other details. He was like no dog that I'd ever met, super-friendly, smart, big, beautiful ... the list could just go on and on.
EDIT: BTW, at first I was afraid to get close to the wolf and wondered where she found the gall to bring a WOLF, of all things, to a public place. Wellllllllllll, I just wish all dogs were as loveable and obviously intelligent and gentle as a puppy as what that wolf was once I raked up the nerve to pet him. DANG, once more I'm wanting to get a wolf...
me too. Wolves aren't dogs in any way but they are the most amazing dog family member. I could talk forever on them. You have to be the right person, with the right set up, the time for DAILY grooming, and able to afford their feed (chicken imagine that!) and it's a 15 year commitment to an animal that is basicly not relocatable. But what you gain from them is something you will never duplicate.