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! | 13.3 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Belcando/Bewi Dog food now in the UK | 15.7 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Hello from Poland | 15.9 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Merry Christmas | 15.9 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| International Champion, Thailand Champion, Russia Champion, RKF Grand Champion. | 15.7 years ago | Bullmastiff |
| Fixes to the website | 17.9 years ago | Bullmastiff |
Green Dragon Jigen, better known as COFFEE at shows
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.
You may have felt that choosing a breed was the biggest decision you had to make before getting a dog. But now that you have made that choice, you are now faced with a more basic decision: do you want a male dog, or a female?
A well trained SAR dog is a sight to behold. The dog can evenly maneuver the most difficult of terrain with the grace of a mountain goat all the while looking for a trapped or hidden human being. This type of work is often done on the fly, at the drop of the hat, with little advanced warning. It requires a talented dog and a special handler willing to invest the time and effort.