Teddy is really stigmatized too much

Teddy is really stigmatized too much

Teddy is really stigmatized too much

Teddy (toy poodle) is really stigmatized too much. Now, whenever Teddy is mentioned on the Internet, it is all cursed. In fact, the root cause is not Teddy itself.

Why do people like to raise Teddy? Because it is really easy to raise among dogs. My family has raised one for 12 years. It is really a very well-behaved, very cute and beautiful puppy.

Lying in my mother’s

arms, Teddy has many advantages: no hair loss (this is rare among cats and dogs. Now I have a puppy that loves to shed hair and I know how troublesome it is), very smart, gentle, friendly to people, light body odor, not active, and now the price is low.

If it is well trained and the dog is walked enough, Teddy will not destroy the house, and the personality is relatively cheerful, and it can socialize well with people and dogs.

But Teddy’s shortcomings are also obvious. Small dogs generally lack a sense of security. Teddy is very clingy and often has separation anxiety. When alone at home, he will be very anxious and can’t stay at home independently.

So why do so many people hate Teddy? This is also true.

Because there are a large number of people who keep Teddy dogs, and the middle-aged and elderly people like to keep this small dog the most (it is clingy, easy to keep, and does not require much exercise), the price of Teddy dogs has been low in recent years, and the market is large, so it has become their favorite. The middle-aged and elderly generally have backward ideas about keeping dogs. They don’t like to pull the leash, are too lazy to pick up the feces

, and let the dogs bark… They don’t know how to educate and train dogs, so many little Teddy dogs have developed arrogant and lawless personalities. Because they don’t have the awareness of sterilizing them, and don’t intentionally train them to stop riding, they are also given the title of “Teddy Day”. In fact, the performance of a normal pet dog depends on whether the owner can teach it. Many professional dog trainers have emphasized this. You can observe those annoying dogs in the community and see if the owners usually don’t care about it.

There is a Border Collie downstairs in the apartment where I live. The owner rarely walks the dog. When he hears the dog barking when he comes home at night, he beats the dog. It is extremely lacking in companionship and exercise. It barks from morning till night at home alone. When it occasionally encounters my dog ​​when it goes out, it rushes up and wants to fight. I also find it annoying, but can I blame the dog? There

is an Alaskan dog next door to my house. The owner really never walks the dog, and because he is afraid of destroying the house, he is tied to the stairs alone at home every day, wailing from time to time on the opposite side, and the sound is very loud. The only time I met him when I went out last year, I wanted to play with him and he bit my hand. I was also helpless. But can I blame the dog for this… I heard from my mother that he is only seven or eight years old and his eyes are completely blind due to cataracts. Moreover, due to long-term lack of exercise and poor health, the owner does not intend to treat him and still ties him up at home every day.

Also, when I took my dog ​​to the hospital for sterilization two days ago, I met a little gray Teddy who was urgently sent for rescue. The owner walked the dog in the underground parking lot without a leash. It was run over by the wheels when he was not paying attention. It was the driver who brought it. The family cried and scolded the driver at the door of the clinic. But why didn’t he leash it? It’s really pitiful for the puppy. Can the driver and the dog be blamed for this?

My little Teddy had a lot of rules set up since childhood, with clear rewards and punishments. He was raised and accompanied seriously, so he was always very obedient and sensible. Everyone liked him very much. There were always children coming to my house to play with him. When they met me, they would say he was “Tangtang’s sister” hhh. When my parents were on business trips, they fostered him at a friend’s house, and everyone who had raised him liked him very much.

I have also answered before that Border Collies are really not that smart, Huskies are not that stupid, and Teddy is not that annoying and hungry. A large number of videos on the Internet are dubbed and edited. Many times, people have set up “dog settings” for them, which is convenient for marketing, convenient for posting videos to attract attention, and convenient for everyone to scold them happily.

Border Collies can turn the house into a garbage dump without education, and can also burst into a burst when walking the dog and pull people two meters away. Some Border Collies that are not well educated are very aggressive towards dogs. Of course, there are also Huskies and Teddys who are very obedient and well-behaved. All of the above are examples around me.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *