New Puppy

Those who have never owned an 8 week old puppy seriously underestimate how much work goes into it. Between training (which by the way, NEVER stops), cleaning up after accidents, constant supervising for chewing, feeding, socializing, and much much more, you really don’t know what your getting yourself into. However, a few months of challenging work, and it all pays off. The work starts before the puppy ever pass home. Your home is about to switch, and that can be on your terms or your puppy’s.

Primary thing people don’t take into account before the puppy comes home is how many of your precious possessions that pup can reach. Get down on your hands and knees and perceive what you can grab while keeping one hand on the ground. If you have a medium sized breed on its way, over the next few months, these things will be destroyed. Especially cords, shoes, and anything you truly care about. Take account not only what you don’t want unmaked, but what can hurt your puppy. Each room needs to be puppy proofed.

Before you bring a 4 legged friend into your home, you need to make a stumble to the pet store. Expect to drop a bit of money there. You must to buy: food for puppies, leash for dog, brush for dog and collar for dogs.  The most important part of this list will be pet food direct, because it is like nothing else will give affect to the health of the puppy and his life. In the store you have to give preference to those  brands as: “Kirkland dog food“,”Evo dog food“, “Orijen dog food“,”Grain free dog food“,”Purina dog food“, “Innova dog food” and “Happy dog“. You need a in case  Some size crate you think you need, get 2 sizes bigger. Your puppy is going to spring up so much over the next few months, you’d be back at the pet store in a few weeks buying a bigger crate, and again a few weeks after that. Your puppy should be able to get up and walk around with ease in its crate. If it cannot stand without bowing, or cant easily make a circle inside it, the crate is too small.

.I6dg_tENck8

Leave a comment