Greyhounds

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Discussion

The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
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Have you considered getting a dog?
I'm guessing many of you have.
For a great pet forget the usual. Get a greyhound.
Just adopted our 2nd one. Yes they are a bit boring if you like walking.
Just look up the figures, shocking. So many are raced for a year or 2 then dumped. (Google garrity joli our latest).
Think of them as a classic car, they don't do big miles but the short walks they do will make you smile.
Just adopted our 2nd one. Lazy, useless dags. But so loving. They just need a home.
So you work, so what? They are used to being caged most their lives. New one we adopted, undernourished and anorexic but she is lovely, just wants cuddles and to climb on the sofa. Don't ignore them. They need very little and the whole racing scene is wrong. 3 years old and dumped. Google retired greys, if the stuff you read doesn't make you cry there is something wrong with you. Abused and dumped, just like taking a sledge hammer to a year old super car.

The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
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No responses so far.
I'm not a man to beg but please help.
For a pet they are virtually zero maintenance, give a dog home!

Dave Dax builder

662 posts

274 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
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Would love one, but our Great Dane will try to eat it.

bexVN

14,690 posts

226 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
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I'm with you on this. You'll probably get more responses tomorrow, be patient smile

The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
quotequote all
bexVN said:
I'm with you on this. You'll probably get more responses tomorrow, be patient smile
Yep maybe. Folk dismiss greys assuming they need a lot of exercise. They are the most lazy dogs. Both ours would sooner go for a drive than walk, especially if they can get a pint. (New adoption is the only dog i've ever had that drinks wine).

bexVN

14,690 posts

226 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
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It can never hurt to push there plight. They are the perfect dogs for people who want a companion but don't necessarily want to walk miles every day.

We see a lot of ex racers at work, word is getting around but sadly I think there are more greys than there are available homes.

However the good thing is that more racing owners are handing over there dogs to rescue groups rather than dumping them or killing them. Just wish they didn't breed so many in the first place.

The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Thursday 14th July 2011
quotequote all
bexVN said:
It can never hurt to push there plight. They are the perfect dogs for people who want a companion but don't necessarily want to walk miles every day.

We see a lot of ex racers at work, word is getting around but sadly I think there are more greys than there are available homes.

However the good thing is that more racing owners are handing over there dogs to rescue groups rather than dumping them or killing them. Just wish they didn't breed so many in the first place.
Bex, we must keep pushing. They are fantastic pets, so low maintainance. They are happy being left all day alone. Most other dogs would do the mental.

Come on guys and girls. What more could you want?

A bit biased to the greys. Go to Woodgreen and see how many are dumped. (Google there tats to find the history).
Look at what happens to them, 3 years on the field than dumped / shot / murdered.

They are beutiful creatures. Please help. Especially great for your old parents.

The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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bexVN said:
It can never hurt to push there plight. They are the perfect dogs for people who want a companion but don't necessarily want to walk miles every day.

We see a lot of ex racers at work, word is getting around but sadly I think there are more greys than there are available homes.

However the good thing is that more racing owners are handing over there dogs to rescue groups rather than dumping them or killing them. Just wish they didn't breed so many in the first place.
Got 2 now, happy to take on 2 more. Fantastic dogs. PM me if you need to rehome some more.

What happens to the unwanted is sick. Just thrown on the street. If i was rich i'd buy a farm and have acres full of them. Treated like comodities, They are fantastic animals. PM me. I'll pick up two more.

Monkey boy 1

2,064 posts

246 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Got to agree with you Burg. We have a 4 year old female Greyhound called LouLou, she's a 40mph couch potato. One of the easiest dogs to look after, very lazy, but you do need to give up a settee for her in the evenings.
Very loving dog, great on and off the lead and she even cuddles up with our two cats.
We've also just aquired a 9 week old Hungarian Vizla called Pip, totally mad and will need a lot more looking after than any greyhound. Mind you, Lou has started playing with Pip, a greyhound expending energy is something that very rarely happens.

The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Good stuff monekey.

Greys are so dumped. No natural weakness. £100 are destroyed. Beutiful animals.]The lucky ones are murdered.
So you made a few ££. Come on FFS let these lovelly creatures live.




The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Friday 15th July 2011
quotequote all
Monkey boy 1 said:
Got to agree with you Burg. We have a 4 year old female Greyhound called LouLou, she's a 40mph couch potato. One of the easiest dogs to look after, very lazy, but you do need to give up a settee for her in the evenings.
Very loving dog, great on and off the lead and she even cuddles up with our two cats.
We've also just aquired a 9 week old Hungarian Vizla called Pip, totally mad and will need a lot more looking after than any greyhound. Mind you, Lou has started playing with Pip, a greyhound expending energy is something that very rarely happens.
Great dog for a pensoiner. Soft as muck. Our latest addition is currently looking at me on the guest sofa.


samuelellis

1,927 posts

216 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Ive alwasy wanted one and promised myself a greyhound at some point

BUT at the moment we have house bunnys so dogs are off the radar for now

dmulally

6,315 posts

195 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Have had a couple of foster Greyhounds and the OP isnt blowing smoke up anyones ass.

They truely are the laziest dog ever to bother rolling off a couch if they could be arsed. If they raise a head to say hello you are doing well. It's not that they love you any less, it's just that you're aaaaaaall the way over there... wink




230TE

2,506 posts

201 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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I agree 100% that greyhounds make fabulous pets for all the reasons listed above (we are now on our fourth), but I'm not so keen on some of the propaganda that seems to accompany them. This probably isn't the right place for a massive argument on the rights and wrongs of greyhound racing, but I would ask people to be aware that the largest and most vocal of the anti racing groups are, by their own admission, pursuing an animal rights agenda. Meaning that if no greyhound was killed, injured or even felt slightly uncomfortable as a result of racing, these people would still want it banned anyway, because it involves the use of animals for human benefit.

In other words they are all a bit bonkers and that seems to have affected their judgement, especially when it comes to truthfulness and factual accuracy. Not everything in the greyhound racing world is rosy and there are some trainers who should not be allowed to keep a goldfish. But I know several trainers very well and they are all decent, humane people who look after their dogs very well and make sure they are rehomed when they finish racing. 100% rehomed, every dog, no exceptions. That is not the story you will hear from the likes of Greyhound Action.

Here's the late Eddie (a very successful racing greyhound and wonderful pet) with Badger the terrier:


rscott

16,473 posts

206 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Have to agree with 230TE's comments about breeders/trainers - some are awful, but some (like our local one) are excellent.
As well as their racing greys they have 10 kennel spaces just for dogs awaiting rehoming. They've also started offering holiday accommodation for greys when their owners want a holiday :-)
Only problem we had with this was that ours didn't want to come home!

We rehomed 2 greys just over 4 years ago - best decision we ever made. They're amazingly affectionate and don't require too much exercise. Just a couple of half hour walks a day with the occasional long walk at weekends keeps them happy. The odd mad dash round and round and round the garden also seems to be necessary as well.

We sadly lost one only a week ago. I have a feeling the one we still have won't be on her own for long.... I'm now trying to convince the other half that we only have room for 2 , not 3 (or 4 or 5 ..)


shoebag

1,137 posts

267 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Dave Dax builder said:
Would love one, but our Great Dane will try to eat it.

Monkey boy 1

2,064 posts

246 months

Friday 15th July 2011
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Here's our girl, Lou, she's an English Greyhound (tattoo in one ear only) but with Irish parents. Her racing name was Luca lucia, or something like that, hence her name LouLou, but she never actually raced.
She eas born in Dereham, Norfolk. (info from the Greyhound Stud book in Newmarket.)



and doing what she does best


The_Burg

Original Poster:

4,853 posts

229 months

Saturday 16th July 2011
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Have a look on here: http://www.greyhound-data.com

Can find a dog by tatts or racing name.

scdan4

1,299 posts

175 months

Saturday 16th July 2011
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How are they with scardy, scuttling cats?

Does not all the training for chase the fast moving fluffy thing kick in?

Monkey boy 1

2,064 posts

246 months

Saturday 16th July 2011
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mine is great with cats,