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Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: October 23rd, 2017, 12:01 pm
by BigBear
"The day we brought him home picture" - oohhh, how precious. What a face.

At nine months, so how much furniture has he chewed up. Been buying new hiking boots each month, or do have a solid closet door that prevents canine entry? I could be wrong, but he has that "what trouble can I get into next" swagger.

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: October 23rd, 2017, 2:37 pm
by RobFromRedland
BigBear wrote:"The day we brought him home picture" - oohhh, how precious. What a face.

At nine months, so how much furniture has he chewed up. Been buying new hiking boots each month, or do have a solid closet door that prevents canine entry? I could be wrong, but he has that "what trouble can I get into next" swagger.
He is actually a pretty good dog. He chewed up one pair of slippers, and has gnawed on a few pairs of shoes (but no real damage) - other than that, no real damage to the house or clothes or anything. He is just about a year old now and coming into his own. My wife and I were commenting we think his head is bigger now than his whole body was when we got him. Amazing how tiny he was....

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: April 28th, 2018, 3:13 am
by lia0x5
I have a small beagle sized Hinze 57 that is also the shape of a tube. I use a collar at night and leash him up to a runner under my hammock. He has enough leash to get up into my hammock with me if I want but not so much that he gets into the tie-outs for the tarp. It does take some time training them to the collar if they are not used to it.

And I also want to ask, if you don't mind

I tried to play every roulette casino but ended up losing because of the maximum bet all the roulette casinos had.

Do you know any roulette casinos without a maximum bet limit? For example, I found this casino recently - zodiac casino, it has a huge selection of options and games
Thank you

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: May 2nd, 2018, 12:12 pm
by Waffle Stomper
lia0x5 wrote:
April 28th, 2018, 3:13 am
It does take some time training them to the collar if they are not use to it.
Consider a RuffWear harness. It has two straps that go under the chest and belly area. The leash attaches on top and it has the added bonus of a handle.

https://ruffwear.com/collections/harnes ... er-harness

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: June 24th, 2019, 6:32 am
by DougF
452CA828-E28C-4B54-9EFD-2C0391CE0679.jpeg

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: June 24th, 2019, 6:48 am
by Waffle Stomper
What a beautiful girl.

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: August 9th, 2019, 5:47 pm
by boquillas
This is Willie. He came home from the Oregon Humane society on Wednesday. They think he is a Springer-Pointer mix. I can confirm that he is a very good boy. I am going to pick up some kind of puppy carrying harness or backpack so he can come with me mushroom hunting. I tried popping him in a basket, but that proved to be his favorite chew toy yet. I hope to train him to hunt for truffles. While I've only heard of folks training dogs for truffles, I don't see why he couldn't learn to find chanterelles as well...

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: August 9th, 2019, 6:14 pm
by Limey
Welcome Willie, you sure are cute.

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: August 9th, 2019, 8:50 pm
by retired jerry
keeping watchful eye out? hopefully he'll get more relaxed with time?

Re: The Dogs of Oregon Hikers

Posted: August 10th, 2019, 6:41 am
by boquillas
retired jerry wrote:
August 9th, 2019, 8:50 pm
keeping watchful eye out? hopefully he'll get more relaxed with time?
After a couple days of playing and feeding he has become much more comfortable..