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by susie on 28 December 2012 - 22:12
While thinking about the males and females I raised and trained, I tend to say
Most males think black and white, for them there is only "yes" or "no", "good" or "bad", a strong male might be more difficult to handle cause of weight and strength.
Most females think in both directons, for them there often exists a "maybe", and a female might be easier to handle.
For me it´s a male...
Most males think black and white, for them there is only "yes" or "no", "good" or "bad", a strong male might be more difficult to handle cause of weight and strength.
Most females think in both directons, for them there often exists a "maybe", and a female might be easier to handle.
For me it´s a male...
by destiny4u on 31 December 2012 - 21:12
I got a quck question why is it cross gender usually work well? and why is owning a stronger dog usually important? LIke a woman owning a strong male dog for example?

by Kalibeck on 01 January 2013 - 02:01
My heart-dog was a female, but her attributes were uniquely hers, & not due to her gender. She was an awesome protector, & extremely territorial. She was known to lift her leg on occasion. Her predecessor was also an awesome dog, & female. The 2 girls I have now are best described as ditz-bombs; both different, both ditzy in their own goofy ways. My male, who was a goofy pup, has (finally) matured into a very nice, impressive male. He's a thinker, too. Not a bolt of lightening, like Kali, but he thinks about stuff, & when he decides to do what he was thinking about, he does it right! And he protects! He is utterly devoted to us. I like females, I like males! As others have said, it's the dog, not its gender. jackie harris
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