helsonwheels
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #16
I feel your pain ! I had to get rid of my English Bulldog because of the fight to be alpha. How's the wolf dog getting on with the bunch ? I read somewhere that a wolf-dog hybrid can't be officially legally considered to be vaccinated against rabies since there's no official rabies vaccines for them. So if they bite someone they have to be euthanized so their brain can be tested for rabies.
Tia minds her own business. Sheās somewhere around like 10yrs old if not more. From what I know she never bitten a dog or human. Sheās very friendly. In the morning she greets you with the āhowling of a wolfā. When she wants to eat or go outside she comes up to you, stares at you n she starts howling. Only one thing if sheās sleeping and a dog goes up to her face to smell her, she does a little 2 second growl at them as a warning to leave her alone cause sheās sleeping. Nyala n Duke doesnāt even bother her, they just walk around her as they know she wonāt play.
From what I understand we tend to say āhalf wolfā. But according to research, 70% of these āwolfdogsā have no wolf in them whatsoever. Seems no one can tell. And for the ones that really do have wolf in them, you cannot treat them like an ordinary dog as they have more of wilderness in them. Yes youāre right about the vaccines. There is none for a real wolf or wolfdog. What ppl do is simply tell the vets their dogās a malamute. Itās just another breed on itās own. Something I wouldnāt bother buying or toy around with Mother Nature.