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TN, Tri Cities Area. Want to adopt Puppy/Young Male GS.

2K views 23 replies 9 participants last post by  WIBackpacker 
#1 ·
I am looking to for a male GS puppy to adopt. I would prefer a puppy, but am fine with a young male if temperament and other factors are known. I don't really care if he is purebred or not. I am not looking for a working dog, just a companion. Coat color doesn't really matter either, though I would prefer coloring that is normal to a GS. The only thing besides age and gender that I truly desire is erect ears. Though, I will not let ears stop me from adopting the right dog. All that being said, I do prefer a dog that is still in tact.

I have been looking for months on Petfinder, Adoptapet, craiglist, etc etc for the right dog for me, but so far no such luck. Many backyard breeders, but that is all I am really finding. I don't mind going through a professional breeder, but I feel there are far too many dogs in need of a home.

I am well experienced in large dog breeds, and have always taken the best care of my dogs. Again, I am not looking for a working dog for sport, just a pet/companion.

I do not mind travelling if enough info and the like is exchanged.

So, if you are looking for a good home, I am the right person. Any info or leads are welcome as well.
 
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#3 ·
I figured you could post looking for a dog as well on here. I have seen more than a few post asking the same. And I have looked at rescues, but they all get the dog fixed. And for health reason, I find fixing a dog before the age of 2 is wrong. Most do even before the age of 1.
 
#4 ·
They aren't supposed to be posting in this section either advertising for a dog.

All rescues and shelters require the dog to be spayed and neutered. Your post looking for an intact dog raises a red flag, regardless of your reason stated, so I would hope anyone on there would also require a background check, home visit and that the dog be fixed. If you want control over this, then you should buy from a good breeder.
 
#21 ·
I ran a rescue for years. I wanted ALL info. If I am placing a dog with someone I want to know who that person is, and talk is cheap. I know a man who bought numerous dogs from reputable breeders over years and his pattern was get it, raise it, show/compete, title, sell. Because he just liked the challenge. That's hard on dogs. I know another who bought two beautiful bitches from great breeders and turned them into puppy factories.
No dogs left my care intact regardless of age and none left without reference checks, home visits and at least two sessions face to face with me. Because it's not about your ego, it's about the dog.
 
#6 ·
But it IS their business. I've been on that end of rescue. It absolutely is their business. When I pull a dog from certain death, vet that dog, spend time to figure out that dog's personality to find them just the right home....whether or not you are a nut looking for a dog to throw in a fighting pit or a good home is absolutely 100% my business. I've done home checks, I've done reference checks. There is nothing about them that is invasive. I've met wonderful people, had great chats over coffee, and they easily got their dog from the rescue.

If you can't see how signing up on a forum, and your first post is for an intact, young, dog is potential red flag that deserves to be questioned, that in itself is an issue as well. This is all about keeping the dogs safe and in good homes.

If you don't want to share that info, have references checked, then you should buy from a breeder. I think most people have enough information in this thread to make their own decisions.
 
#8 · (Edited)
What a load of nonsense. An issue because I want a male dog that is intact? Male dogs who are fixed before 2 years of age don't tend to grow as they should, not mention it doesn't seem the best for them bone wise.

I assume you think I am looking for a male dog to breed or whatever. Guess you failed to see where I said I couldn't care less about if it is purebred, its coat color, or other things. Simply looking for a dog. End of. You seem invested in this in an emotional way to which I don't understand.

"If you can't see how signing up on a forum, and your first post is for an intact, young, dog is potential red flag that deserves to be questioned, that in itself is an issue as well. "

Take your implied accusations elsewhere.
 
#9 ·
If you have good intentions for a rescue dog, you are just going to have to share personal information with the rescue people. That's just how it works, it's not personal, it's just essential standard practice. Do you have issues that might prevent them from wanting to adopt a dog to you? Do you live in a stable home, with a yard that is fenced or what are your circumstances? You should try to look at it from the perspective from the rescue people, they have taken in a dog with the promise that they will do their best to never let it come to harm again and / or with the intention of finding it a suitable forever home, so they need to be able to verify who is adopting and what their circumstances are.

I agree that rescues can seem restrictive initially, but, if you are earnest and work with them (rather than refusing to share important information), and even if your circumstances aren't the best, you might be able to work something out!

Also, you might have to give up the idea of having an intact dog, it's not everything, it's just standard procedure with rescues so I wouldn't try and fight it. The longest lived German Shepherd I ever knew was a large intact male (neutered as a very young puppy). Neutered males still need a good home, if you really care about that.
 
#11 ·
If you have good intentions for a rescue dog, you are just going to have to share personal information with the rescue people. That's just how it works, it's not personal, it's just essential standard practice. Do you have issues that might prevent them from wanting to adopt a dog to you? Do you live in a stable home, with a yard that is fenced or what are your circumstances? You should try to look at it from the perspective from the rescue people, they have taken in a dog with the promise that they will do their best to never let it come to harm again and / or with the intention of finding it a suitable forever home, so they need to be able to verify who is adopting and what their circumstances are.

I agree that rescues can seem restrictive initially, but, if you are earnest and work with them (rather than refusing to share important information), and even if your circumstances aren't the best, you might be able to work something out!

Also, you might have to give up the idea of having an intact dog, it's not everything, it's just standard procedure with rescues so I wouldn't try and fight it. The longest lived German Shepherd I ever knew was a large intact male (neutered as a very young puppy). Neutered males still need a good home, if you really care about that.
I just don't trust the few rescues I have seen around here. They seem to just go from shelter to shelter and get their hands on any GS or GS mix, and then ask $400 to $500 for their efforts. My circumstances are ideal for a dog.
 
#15 ·
Except the latest one (Rachel) whom I happened upon at a local shelter, ALL of my dogs as an adult have come from responsible, ethical breeders. For decades. Until I became a known quantity to them (via participation on a listserv, going to shows, specialties, etc), every.single.breeder I contacted (whether I ended up buying a puppy from them or not) engaged in virtually the same screening process that reputable rescues do (e.g., in-person/phone interview and/or questionnaire [which was followed up by a separate phone call], home visits, reference checks, etc).

I never found the process (or the questions) troublesome or insulting. Why? Because it was manifestly apparent that the breeders valued the lives that they'd created and wanted to ensure that those pups would enjoy a good quality of life with me. Reputable rescue groups feel the same way. After all, there's not much joy in seeing an adopted dog/puppy returned to the group (multiple times in some cases) because it was a "poor fit," developed/showed "behavioral issues" or whatever the truth might actually be. Because I share those values, I've never objected to the process.

I think anyone approaching a breeder or rescue group for a puppy/adult, should FIRST spend some time answering some hard questions: Why do I want a puppy/adult? What do I plan to do with it, show, sport, various activities? Why do I want this breed in particular and how well will this breed fit in with my plans? How much do I know about raising/training this breed or any breed of dog for that matter? How well would said puppy/adult fit my current lifestyle? If it doesn't fit well, how much am I willing to change? If I am willing, do I have the resources (financial and otherwise) to adapt to what the puppy/dog needs? There are clmany more questions that I think one should ask oneself before approaching a breeder/rescue group, but these are some to get started with.

A final point. I've never succeeded in obtaining something I wanted from someone if I lapsed into bullying and/or evasive behavior. YMMV.
 
#22 ·
I am a breeder, I also stand behind my dogs. I recently picked up a 26 month old black male - gorgeous dog - whose owner died in November...he is neutered, I have all his paperwork....I am looking to find him a forever home...I am not "giving" him away, I am just as picky for this dog, if not more, than for any puppy I have available. I need the same info, the same rapport with the next home as I did with this owner....his family never even thought to look through his desk to find my info when he passed...so it took awhile...but I had that dog back within a week of when I was made aware of the owner passing.

Lee
 
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#23 ·
I see where the OP is coming from in terms of not wanting a dog neutered before the age of two due to the health benefits, BUT I also completely agree with what Jax is saying. Refusing a dog just because he's neutered is a huge red flag. Demanding an intact dog immediately makes people jump to the conclusion that you want to breed, regardless of what reasons you give. Do you know how often people lie? Do you know how often rescues and breeders are completely screwed over because someone put on a good front but was lying?

Example:
I worked at the humane society in my city. I personally did the adoption paperwork for a solid black German shepherd male we had. This dog had behavioral issues as he was over a year old and was simply stuck out in the backyard on a chain before he came to us. We did extensive evals on him, and our training team worked with him for weeks before he was ready for adoption. It was decided that he was a dog that absolutely could not go to a home with other dogs. When we did the initial interview with the prospective adopter, he claimed he had zero other pets and zero children. This was before we told him Anubis could not go to a home with other pets. He simply lied because he felt like it. Turns out, the guy had another male, intact dog, and he and Anubis (the GSD) got into a fight. The other dog was killed, Anubis was returned to us, and the guy threatened to sue us because we allowed a dangerous dog to go out into the community. We were screwed over and a dog died all because the guy lied.

Would you be willing to take a dog that's neutered if he's over 2? If the only reason you want an intact dog is so that he isn't neutered early, what if the dog was neutered after 2? I vote you simply go to a breeder to avoid receiving an already altered animal.
 
#24 ·
This thread was reported and is being closed, this subforum is only for listing non-urgent purebred GSDs for placement in a new home.


OP, if you would like to open a new discussion, please take a look at the General Rescue section - there are some pretty good conversations from over the years (from both sides of the fence).
 
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