my walkers will hike for 100 hrs straight if you let them. apt name.
P1060634b.jpgP1060638b.jpg
my walkers will hike for 100 hrs straight if you let them. apt name.
P1060634b.jpgP1060638b.jpg
Great Dane? Couldn't be a worse choice. Their hearts are not meant to take that kind of work out. And I have 2 of them.
Standard Poodle. Wonderful companion on and off trail.
You never know just what you can do until you realize you absolutely have to do it.
--Salaun
Aussies are great hiking dogs if trained well.
I have a rescued boxer/pitbull mix. She can go and go and go. Love taking her out and she obviously loves it too. Before she was fixed the first 10 miles she literally would be running in circles around me, I had never seen so much energy, lol.
I was thinking about getting a Husky and German Sheppard mix? If you kept it shaved in the summer does anyone know how they would do on a long hike?
Try to avoid dogs with long hair... or buy two.....three vacuum's & anti shed vitamins
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
black hair dogs are also at risk in hot and humid areas.
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
Speaking generally, I wouldn't recommend either of those breeds to inexperienced dog owners, or someone looking for an average dog as a pet.
Huskies are extremely primitive, hard to train, have a very high prey drive, have an instinctual need to wander and will often escape the yard, need heavy daily mental and physical exercise and often begin to destroy furniture or display other negative habits when kept inside and not exercised, etc. To the right person they're a wonderful dog, but they're not for the average family.
German shepherd dogs are absolutely awesome animals, but are simply too much dog for most people. They are obedient and highly protective, but I wouldn't want to be responsible for one on the trail. As a protective dog, putting them in a situation they are uncomfortable with, such as hiking and constantly meeting unfamiliar people can setup a risky situation where they are more likely to bite. Unless you are an experienced owner who has the time and knowledge to invest in a GSD, I would recommend looking for a less demanding dog.
Also, just a warning, I know that my homeowners insurance company didn't allow ownership of most protective breeds and would drop my policy if I got a GSD or any other schutzhund breed, my local shelter is full of protective breed dogs that had to be given up by their owners because of landlord or homeowner insurance problems.
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
Ive had plenty of labs, spanials, shepherds and mutts over the years. My current dog is a female husky. She has an endless reserve of energy and a very alert presence in the woods.
If I were getting a dog specifically for long distance hiking I'd probably get a Rhodesian Ridgeback, extreme endurance, good guard dog, if they can hunt lions and stay alive a bear would be a whiz.
I'd probably pick a heeler for a trail dog as well. I had a heeler/australian shepherd mix who I could walk among ducks and geese without a leash. he would leave them alone until I told him he could get 'em. He was about 40 lbs, so he would have been light on food, but was extremely tough.
Time is but the stream I go afishin' in.
Thoreau
Ridgebacks were used to hunt lions, but rarely all stated alive. They used a dozen or more ridgebacks at a time that would corner a lion and keep it at bag until the human hunters caught up to make the kill, unfortunately it was normal for a dog or two to be killed in the process, which is why this hunting method wasn't actually that common.
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
I have a blue heeler and a red heeler, and they are terrific trail-hounds. Did an overnighter at Red River Gorge last month, and it was uncomfortably hot.