Alaskan Malamute

Pedigree Database

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Alaskan Malamute

Alaskan Malamute
  Click ancestor to traverse. Double-click to view pedigree page
Thread Latest post Forum
Registry9 months agoAlaskan Malamute
Alaskan Malamute reg. nbrs.5.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
False or True Pedigree6.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Missing Topic9.1 years agoAlaskan Malamute
requesting alaskan matted9.1 years agoAlaskan Malamute
group for fans of red Malamutes on Facebook12.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
PEDIGREE13 years agoAlaskan Malamute
help me find my mals sisters/brothers13.2 years agoAlaskan Malamute
please consider signing this petition13.6 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Se Venden dos Cachorros de Alaskan Malamute 14 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Alaskan Malamute Gifts, Merchandise and Collectibles14.5 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Pics Schlittenhunde-WM 201015.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Belcando/Bewi Dog food now in the UK15.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Great Mal true story16.4 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Malamute play?17.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Fixes to the website17.5 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Opinions on some Malamute breeders...Good or Bad?17.3 years agoAlaskan Malamute
Malmute coats in hot weather17.8 years agoAlaskan Malamute

Articles

Choosing a Male or a Female Dog: What is the Difference

Choosing a Male or a Female Dog: What is the Difference

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?

  • Training Your Dog

    For the health and wellbeing of your dog, training should really not ever be considered an option when owning a dog.  Well trained dogs are more likely to be behaved and listen, be void of behavioral issues, be good in public, and are less likely to bite.  Owners also have a much closer connection with the dog when the time is taken to form a relationship through training.

  • An Introduction to Competitive Obedience

    Everyone is familiar with sit, down, and come and other similar commands that are standard fare in the general obedience training class.  The novice handler might not be familiar with what competitive obedience looks like or realize that it’s really just a continuation of those basic skills.



 


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