Why would house size matter to a dog?

Why would house size matter to a dog?

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Discussion

Kermit power

Original Poster:

28,641 posts

213 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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Evening all,

We're thinking of getting a dog. Not having had one before, I've been looking on the Kennel Club website, and specifically their tool for recommending breeds to consider.

This is useful, but I'm a bit perplexed by the questions it asks, or indeed doesn't ask.

I can understand, for example, why it would be good to know if we've got anyone in the family with allergies, how much we can exercise it, or even the size of any garden we have (although I'm not sure how relevant this is if we can exercise it enough?), but why on earth is house size relevant?

Ok, I get that it would be unreasonable to keep a Saint Bernard in a studio flat, but is a small or large house going to make much difference? I'm especially bemused as I live in a medium house, which isn't given as an option!

I'm also somewhat surprised that it didn't ask if we have kids, as is understood some breeds to be much more child friendly than others.

I've got a well rated "how to choose the right puppy" book on order from Amazon, but is welcome any other suggestions on resources to help with the decision?

Starfighter

4,924 posts

178 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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The KC are a very odd bunch. They have some breed standards that effectively promote long term health problems. I’m not sure I would trust them as the definitive source of good practice.

Dogs Trust offer advice to new owners even if you are buying new rather than used as it were.


sc0tt

18,037 posts

201 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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I think its pretty obvious and you answered the question yourself. Your dog will spend the majority of its time indoors so ensuring it has suitable room is obvious.

Kermit power

Original Poster:

28,641 posts

213 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
Starfighter said:
The KC are a very odd bunch. They have some breed standards that effectively promote long term health problems. I’m not sure I would trust them as the definitive source of good practice.

Dogs Trust offer advice to new owners even if you are buying new rather than used as it were.
Thanks, I'll take a look. smile

One of the reasons I ordered the book I did was a review from a dog trainer praising it for flagging up the problems health problems caused by breeding features into various breeds.

Jader1973

3,981 posts

200 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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Pedigree Australia have an online “choose your dog” tool. I’m sure it has questions about children.

renmure

4,236 posts

224 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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Unless the thinking is big house = big garden = good for owning a dog, I can't see it mattering much.

I live in a huge old farmhouse with 5 acres of garden and have always had Great Danes and German Shepherds. But, the the indoor bit the dogs live in, and the outdoor run they have access to via a hatch, would be in keeping with a fairly standard sized 2/3 bedroom modern house. My dogs don't know there's more house than the bits they see and I'm sure they don't care.






anonymous-user

54 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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I had 3 dogs (2 collies and a lab) in a small house without a garden. What matters is excerise. Min of 2x 1 hour walks a day kept them happy.

It also did help we lived on a farm track with a field at the top, so just walked them up the lane when they need a wee etc..

Before that was 2 dogs in a 1st floor maisonete. Bigger than that house above but not on a farm track. It did have playing fields and rivers within a 5min walk.


Anyway rambling... The amount of exercise counts not the size of a house.
Edit to add, within reason.. Burmese in a bedsit might not work


Edited by anonymous-user on Sunday 21st January 21:46

Kermit power

Original Poster:

28,641 posts

213 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
renmure said:
Unless the thinking is big house = big garden = good for owning a dog, I can't see it mattering much.

I live in a huge old farmhouse with 5 acres of garden and have always had Great Danes and German Shepherds. But, the the indoor bit the dogs live in, and the outdoor run they have access to via a hatch, would be in keeping with a fairly standard sized 2/3 bedroom modern house. My dogs don't know there's more house than the bits they see and I'm sure they don't care.
You'd think so, wouldn't you, but size of garden and size of house are two separate questions!

We've got an extended three bed semi with an 80' garden, so I couldn't really see the relevance either, beyond not being a small flat with no outside access.

HappyMidget

6,788 posts

115 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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Most dogs are ok in any size house, but a real large dog in a small flat is gonna be a real pita.

Pesty

42,655 posts

256 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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sc0tt said:
I think its pretty obvious and you answered the question yourself. Your dog will spend the majority of its time indoors so ensuring it has suitable room is obvious.
Is it ?some dogs stay in kennels in the garden. I know one god that stay in the conservatory. The house is large but it’s never been in it.

renmure

4,236 posts

224 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
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Pesty said:
I know one god that stay in the conservatory.
That's not Orthodox


Kermit power

Original Poster:

28,641 posts

213 months

Sunday 21st January 2018
quotequote all
sc0tt said:
I think its pretty obvious and you answered the question yourself. Your dog will spend the majority of its time indoors so ensuring it has suitable room is obvious.
But is that something that's really governed by the size of the house? confused

Unless by "large house" they mean that Fido has the run of everything from the ballroom in the East wing through to the Orangerie in the North-West annex, I don't really see that there's that much difference between a three-bed semi and a five-bed detached from a doggie perspective? It's not as though they're going to be running laps, is it?