- Joined
- Jan 30, 2019
Thank you for this thread, I didn't know I'd ever see anyone flexing about jerking off dogs, or so many pictures of dog semen gathered in one place. This was an experience.
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I wonder if veterinarian or professional breeder would be a dream occupation for some zoophiles: they get to jerk off male animals and fist female animals, and nobody minds because it is part of the job. Although, I suppose it would be too mechanical for them to enjoy.Thread poll: Would you jerk off animals daily for $10,000 a month?
Auto-ban any user who clicks "yes".
I mean, based on some of the examples in the OP, these people abuse emojis and their own terminology like CEO of their kennel (compare it to "boss babe") and other stuff just as much if not more than some of these MLM huns do so if that isn't an indication that they are a pyramid scheme before these people admitted it that I don't know what is. They are essentially hood rat MLM huns. At least MLM huns will deny it is a pyramid scheme.
Nah. Adopt don't shop doesn't work anymore. Shelters are completely full of fucking pit bulls and pit mixes that "need to have their family all to themselves" and will lie abput bite history and health to get dogs out of there. Rescues pull the rest and sell them for hundreds. The odds of getting a good dog right now for cheap are very slim unless you have connections.Farmers, always stay vigilant to the line - adopt, don't shop.
Veterinarian, probably not. Repro is a very small part of the field though you can get qualications in AI because you service race horses or dairies. You aren't needed year round for such positions either. There just isn't enough work to be a veterinary AI expert alone. You'd have to deal with all the bullshit of the field otherwise.I wonder if veterinarian or professional breeder would be a dream occupation for some zoophiles: they get to jerk off male animals and fist female animals, and nobody minds because it is part of the job. Although, I suppose it would be too mechanical for them to enjoy.
Well unless you're my parents where people see a ranch and apparently see it as a "dump dog here" sign. I just yesterday had to take a beautiful Shepherd someone had dumped on the property to the local shelter because he was after the chickens and earlier this year someone dumped a greyhound cross there and my parents kept her and they can't do two young, hyperactive dogs at once.Nah. Adopt don't shop doesn't work anymore. Shelters are completely full of fucking pit bulls and pit mixes that "need to have their family all to themselves" and will lie abput bite history and health to get dogs out of there. Rescues pull the rest and sell them for hundreds. The odds of getting a good dog right now for cheap are very slim unless you have connections.
If you want a predictable, stable companion dog first figure out and research breeds that fit your lifestyle and then start looking for breeders. There are breeders that really really care and put in the work and money to make sure their puppies are going to be healthy and of good temperament. Finding them is the hard part, because most don't advertise on the web but you can contact them through breed club listings by email or phone. Dog shows are a good way to talk to people and find good breeders too, of course. And by dog shows I don't mean the one in the OP.
The dog breeding world is now a more or less closed off place because of the vilification of breeders. But if there are no breeders, there are no dogs. All dogs come from humans in one form or another, you just need to find the trustworthy people who make that happen. There are actually some breeders who will adopt out their retired show dogs to people if you don't want a puppy, too. You as a buyer or adoptee need to put in the work and communicate with people, you can't just expect a dog to fall in your lap.
Sorry for the autism, I just feel like most people don't understand how it is with dogs these days. It used to be easier before pit bull breeders and owners ruined everything.
Farmers, always stay vigilant to the line - adopt, don't shop.
I'll just say one word- pugs.
Every time I see a pug my heart aches- the look like their whole life is a constant agony.
Although the breeds that make sense are the working dogs for the specific tasks.
There is a wolf looking down from heaven right now laughing his ass off because he knew this would happen. Should have listened, you omega clowns.Jesus, those poor dogs! This shit and the Beagle-torture... The wolves should never have trusted us
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Wolves became domesticated dogs much earlier than thought
Finnish researchers have discovered that wolves were domesticated by European hunter-gatherers between 19,000 and 32,000 years ago. The analysis cannot, however, be used to determine the origin of the dog, argues Danish DNA scientist.sciencenordic.com
I think it really depends on the bloodline and how inbred the line is as I've got a (rescued) pure bred Labrador and he is like 16/17 years old now and has never had a health issue (And we've had him since he was 9 months old), while my aunts two mix breed Dogs have had health issues since from a young age.I don't understand why "mutt" is an insult and people boast about getting a "pure breed".
Literally the best and healthiest dogs you can get are mutts you find in rescue shelters. People I've known who had pure breeds whether it be pit bulls or beagles even, always had some issue with them at an early age, for example the pit bull had to have its teeth pulled at age 1, and the beagle back gave up at 4.
I will never understand these breed chasers and buyers. Just go to an animal shelter and adopt a dog that needs a home, you're adopting a family member after all, not a toy.
I wouldn't be surprised if Jim Sterling already has one of those dogs."crazy looking" indeed. They all look like BoglinsView attachment 2666183View attachment 2666182
A good sign you're dealing with a responsible breeder is that they'll ask about you even more than you ask about the dog. When I got my GWP I showed up with cash in an envelope but instead of taking it she gave us a bunch of info on the breed and asked us to go home and sleep on it for a couple days to and make sure we really want/are ready for one.There are breeders that really really care and put in the work and money to make sure their puppies are going to be healthy and of good temperament. Finding them is the hard part, because most don't advertise on the web but you can contact them through breed club listings by email or phone.
Checks out, I found the breeder by word of mouth.Finding them is the hard part, because most don't advertise on the web but you can contact them through breed club listings by email or phone.
The dog breeding world is now a more or less closed off place because of the vilification of breeders. But if there are no breeders, there are no dogs.