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by MyCheckShepherd on 11 August 2011 - 10:08

by melba on 11 August 2011 - 12:08
with their handlers for one year. Their drives were unaffected, though one developed reoccurring
hot spots after the spay. I'm working with her handler to pinpoint any environmental cause, but
none found yet. Other then that, they have not become fat and lazy and are, in fact, still the crazy
bitches they were before the spay.
Would I spay my own? Not a chance.. I'm not messing with mother nature but I understand the
difficulties of having an intact bitch as part of a K9 unit populated by other male dogs.
Melissa

by von sprengkraft on 11 August 2011 - 15:08

by Jenni78 on 11 August 2011 - 17:08

by von sprengkraft on 12 August 2011 - 00:08
I have whole dogs for their entire lives....unless neutering is absolutely necessary.

by Jenni78 on 12 August 2011 - 00:08

by DenWolf on 12 August 2011 - 04:08
It ALTERS or changes the dog's physiology...permanently.
"spay", "neuter", "fix", "geld".. Happy words for the humans...
My very first dog was a shepherd mix.. I trained her forjust about everything... then one day got tricked into "getting her fixed".
She was never the same.. I SO regretted it...
The best way I can describe what happened to her.. was... she got DULL.
Some dogs deal with it better than others.. and work in spite of the surgery.. not because of it.
I understand why they push all the "altering" off on the pet people.. but I still think its treating the symptom and not the cause.
It's done for the convenience of people.. not for the benefit of animals.

by troublelinx on 12 August 2011 - 04:08

by troublelinx on 12 August 2011 - 04:08

by MyCheckShepherd on 12 August 2011 - 04:08
So.....
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