Slice of life of a Newfoundland farmer
Newfoundland
I am a borough of Newfoundland, a great passionate dogs since my very young age, this unconditional love, this connection, this link that unites us is so wonderful. All they give us without ever asking anything is so great and unconditional …
I had dogs all my life, different size, different color, different breeds, short hairs, long hairs. After having known several breeds, years of experience in the canine field and a lot of research, my favorite and my love in summer for the Newfoundland, a fabulous dog with the magnificent qualities, sweet, calm, passive, a being The most extraordinary who by his qualities brings me back to a serenity and incredible inner peace.
My breeding is a small breeding, thoroughly chosen, it has 1 breed, which is the black Newfoundland and Landseer (black and white). It all started 6 years ago, with a female Newfoundland Landseer named Kyra with whom I developed a complicity and great respect. At the first reach of Kyra, I kept one of his puppies, another Newfoundland female that I named Elektra. Elektra and I have a pretty intense relationship, I gave it birth, pierce his bag, cut off the cord, rocked, etc. This has created a fairly powerful link between us. Here is a very promising start of my breeding that goes without saying to continue to grow quietly.
Successful exams:
Parents and the last 6 generations have passed and successfully their exams for dysplasia hip and elbow, heart, thyroid gland, cystinuria and deer, the purpose of these exams is to provide customers with healthless health puppies. genetic who should live a long life. Of course health remains unpredictable and despite our good will, medical examinations, and our steps it is not infallible, there are also environmental factors, for example, dysplasia is not only hereditary, but also environmental.
My dogs are part of the family and live in the house with us, children, cats, and other dogs (canine daycare), etc. They come to work with me in the office (or they have direct contact with the different clientele, and see and hear the machinery enough diversify), they are groomed every 2 months from the eight weeks old, they participate in canine living rooms, travel by recreational vehicle … .. finally they are an integral part of the family And are treated in this way.
Puppies, they are obviously born in the family home and are constantly manipulated and stimulate. My training and my experience in canine behavior make me aware that it is necessary to provide balanced puppies, so they are socialized (it is the learning of means of communication in a social group) and sociability (it is the Research of social contact, the presence of others; Humans, dogs, other animals …) From their very young age. They never leave the house before 8 weeks, the 5 to 8 weeks period is crucial for the mother and the puppy, the ideal age adoption is 8 weeks. Puppies are registered, micropucled, vaccinated and vermifuge. They are also guaranteed for 2 years.
Newfoundland is a water dog
Formerly used on ships, coming from the island of Newfoundland, but imported into Britain. The first documents identifying this dog appear in Britain around 1775.
Newfoundland reflects goodness and sweetness
It’s a dignified dog, happy, kind, intelligent, benevolent and enterprising. It is known for its docility and imperturbable calm. He is an ideal and devoted companion.
There are 3 colors of Newfoundland, the best-known color is black, there is also the black and white we say Landseer, name given by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer, a great animal painter who made the model of These most famous paintings, and the brown which is the least known. It is important not to confuse the Newfoundland Landseer (Landseer being used here, as a color, which means black and white) with the Landseer race a very distant cousin of Newfoundland in Europe.
The Newfoundland fascinates me and impresses me by all he is and represents, and he made me excessively pleasure to share my love for this kind giant.
I finish with this:
Near this place are deposited the rest of a creature who had beauty without vanity, of force without insolence, of the courage without ferocity and all the virtues of man without his vices.
This eulogy that would be a foolish flattery, if it was written on human ash, is only a fair tribute paid to the memory of Boatswain, dog born in Newfoundland in May 1803 and death in Newstead on November 18, 1808 , by Lord Byron.
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