I weighed billy today and he's about 70lbs give or take an ounce or 2. I was just wondering how heavy your GSD was or is at 6 months???
She will keep growing, she is just a puppy. GSD's fill out around 2 - 2 1/2 years old.My female Remi just went to the vet at four months old and is 27 lbs. the vet said because she is proportional that she thinks she'll only gain a few more pounds but I'm confused because she is only four months old??? I also saw her parents and they were quite sizeable. Is if possible for her to be pretty much done gaining weight and growing at around four months???
75 lbs at 6 months is way too much weight for a GSD pup to carry. This is the dog that wound up weighing over 130lbs, right?Draco was 75 lbs at 6 months
and your point is? He was a slender puppy.75 lbs at 6 months is way too much weight for a GSD pup to carry. This is the dog that wound up weighing over 130lbs, right?
Just a general statement for the novices and puppy owners on the forum: GSD's are medium sized dogs as a breed. Heavy, overweight puppies are not a good thing. One should strive to keep their puppy lean and in shape. Not fat and overweight. You should be able to easily feel each rib when you run your fingers down your pups side, like little "speed bumps." If you can not easily fell each rib, your dog is overweight. You should see a waist line when you look down at your dog from above.
German Shepherds are not measured by weight as a sign of quality. Bigger is not necessarily better and heavy, fat, overweight puppies turn into fat dogs and pay the price for their obesity. It is taxing on hips and joints and certainly takes it's toll on the dog. Too many well intentioned owners slowly kill their dogs with kindness.
I'm sorry, but this is a pet peeve of mine. It is a weird thing with many GSD owners to brag about the size of their dog, as if the 120 lb GSD is something to be proud of? It is similar to bragging about your 6 year old child weighing 200 lbs. People may agree that the kid is big, but is he healthy? Is he fit, healthy, in shape or just obese? Even worse are breeders that focus on the size of their dogs, and brag about how big the sire or dam is. A huge red flag IMO, and it means run away, run away really fast.
My point is that IMHE, a 75lb 6 month old GSD is probably not "slender." Sorry, I realize that my response may be taken the wrong way. It's not my intention to offend you. However, I feel the need to be on the blunt side when it comes to recommending what a GSD dog or puppy should weigh to novices.and your point is? He was a slender puppy.
I answered the question honestly, he was a slender puppy and that's my experience having owned a few GSDs. Yes he is longer than a GSD should be, which means more volume, which means more weight. He also grew fast which is a very common issue in larger breeds (I consider 66-88 a large breed). Again, I answered a question honestly, and I did not say that everyone else' dog should be heavier or anything like that. He had a number of health issues which caused weight gain between 1-3 years old, and since last year he has lost nearly 30 lbs. Not that it is any of your business, anyway. I do not believe in dieting puppies, but he was 26 inches at 6 months and considering I could see ribs I considered him healthy. If you want to make a thread about dog obesity, go for it, but you don't know my dog or his proportions and I never said that he was the IDEAL. This thread is about what your dog weighed, not what other's dogs should weigh.My point is that IMHE, a 75lb 6 month old GSD is probably not "slender." Sorry, I realize that my response may be taken the wrong way. It's not my intention to offend you. However, I feel the need to be on the blunt side when it comes to recommending what a GSD dog or puppy should weigh to novices.
I also realize that many people do not know what a fit in shape GSD should look like. Many well meaning folks see their chubby GSD as at a "good weight" or just right or needs to gain 5 lbs. It is clear to me that they lack they experience to know what a fit dog looks like, this goes for many vets as well. Either vets are so used to looking at fat, obese pets and rarely see a fine specimen of a dog or GSD or they simply do not want to offend their clients by saying "Hey, take 10, 15 or 20 lbs off your dog. Your dog is fat!". I suppose it would be bad for business to tell the truth as the truth can hurt at times; and I realize how sensitive folks are about their dogs weight.
Well, I suspected that you took my post personally, that was not my intention. I apologize if I offended you. I also answered honestly, as I always do on dog forums. Occasionally, that does insult people as we all love our dogs and some folks take information very personally.I answered the question honestly, he was a slender puppy and that's my experience having owned a few GSDs. Yes he is longer than a GSD should be, which means more volume, which means more weight. He also grew fast which is a very common issue in larger breeds (I consider 66-88 a large breed). Again, I answered a question honestly, and I did not say that everyone else' dog should be heavier or anything like that. He had a number of health issues which caused weight gain between 1-3 years old, and since last year he has lost nearly 30 lbs. Not that it is any of your business, anyway. I do not believe in dieting puppies, but he was 26 inches at 6 months and considering I could see ribs I considered him healthy. If you want to make a thread about dog obesity, go for it, but you don't know my dog or his proportions and I never said that he was the IDEAL. This thread is about what your dog weighed, not what other's dogs should weigh.
Except I am not advocating larger GSDs, so why is this relevant to me?Well, I suspected that you took my post personally, that was not my intention. I apologize if I offended you. I also answered honestly, as I always do on dog forums. Occasionally, that does insult people as we all love our dogs and some folks take information very personally.
Here is the thing, many folks are new to owning GSD's and some think that GSD's are "large breed" dogs, which they really are not supposed to be. As I have mentioned they are not really a large breed dog. Males should be in the 70-85 lb range full grown, females 55 - 70lbs give or take. Naturally, there will be bigger GSD's out there, especially American bred dogs. But, over 100 lbs is the exception and not the rule and not desirable when it comes to GSD's. As you know dogs bred like that are likely to have a myriad of health problems, from hips, elbows, spine issues and then you wind up with all the other problems that come form breeders who think size is everything.
The thread is about "how heavy is your GSD." My response to the folks reading this thread, heavier is not better. Learn what a GSD should look like, weigh and be healthy. Because someone has a 70 or 80 lb GSD puppy at 6 months; does not make it healthy or even a good representative of the breed as a whole. It makes the people that have dogs at the correct weight think they are doing something wrong or their dog needs to gain weight, "to keep up."
I have little idea what my dog weighed at 6 months, he was about 74 at a year and 84 at 3. That was his top weight. He weighs around 70 lbs at 11 years old. I can tell you that he could run at 32 mph, easily clear 4' fences and jump on and over cars. He can still jump over 4' fences, climb ladders, run, do bite work, excels at narcotics detection and is almost ready to retire. I only weigh him because the vet asked for his weight on Monday. I check his physical condition daily, checking how his ribs feel, his waist line looks and how he acts and behaves. Weight is not a factor, never was and only needed once a year for his vet chart. The dog has no health issues and is still going strong at 11. I doubt it would be that way if I let him get and stay at a heavy weight.