Traveling with Your Dog
Dogs are a part of the family, and they go everywhere with us. Whether it just a short trip for an errand, to the park, to a training class, or to a competitive event, you have to plan ahead to travel safely with your dog.

This is a placeholder text
Group text

| Thread | Latest post | Forum |
|---|---|---|
| On August 16, 7 puppies were born! | 13.6 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Belcando/Bewi Dog food now in the UK | 16.1 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Hello from Poland | 16.2 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Merry Christmas | 16.3 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| International Champion, Thailand Champion, Russia Champion, RKF Grand Champion. | 16.1 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Fixes to the website | 18.2 years ago | Bullmastiff |
Pictures of Ama
Dogs are a part of the family, and they go everywhere with us. Whether it just a short trip for an errand, to the park, to a training class, or to a competitive event, you have to plan ahead to travel safely with your dog.
If you ever owned a dog when you were a child, you can probably recall the joy and exhilaration you felt every day, playing with your best buddy. Once you grew up and (assuming you) started a family, you probably wanted your kid(s) to experience the same things that you did. A loving, loyal, fun-loving animal companion is one of the best things in the world.
When one thinks of the bulldog, the image that first comes to mind is probably that of the English Bulldog, with its squat build, round head and distinctive “face that only a mother could love.” But there is another kind of beloved breed of bulldog: bigger and more athletic, and ruggedly handsome where the English Bulldog is charmingly ugly. This is the American Bulldog, a breed that almost literally came back from the dead to become widely popular as both a working dog and a family pet.