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View Full Version : What dogs can live outside in hot weather?


Thesexyjessica
Jul 6, 2009, 03:03 PM
Hi, Recently I've been looking for a new dog and it has to be an outside dog because my mom has allergies and the whole shedding... I need to know what dogs can live outside in the hot weather. The dog is going to have to be outside year round and most of the time its really hot out here and it has to be a dog that can protect itself... So if you could tell me some dogs that can survive the heat then I'd be reeally happy:)

J_9
Jul 6, 2009, 03:04 PM
What about a poodle. They actually have hair instead of fur and are good for people with allergies to dogs. They can live inside with the allergic person.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 6, 2009, 03:08 PM
What about a poodle. They actually have hair instead of fur and are good for people with allergies to dogs. They can live inside with the allergic person.

Yeah poodles are good but my mom won't let anyyy dogs live inside no matter what. I need an outside dog but thanks anyway...

kreeperkemp
Jul 6, 2009, 03:17 PM
There are a multi-tude of quote-un-quote hypo-allergenic dogs. (in all reality the is no such thing all dogs have dander no matter what people tell you all dogs do have dander) and as far as outdoor dog if your in a constantly warm/hot climate with no snowy winters your going to want a short hair. But if you have snowy winter then a short hair will not do well it may freeze to death. But if you have hot summer that stay above 100 then getting a dog with dual layer coat is bad the dog may die of a heat stroke.
Don't know if this helped or made it worse.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 6, 2009, 03:22 PM
there are a multi-tude of quote-un-quote hypo-allergenic dogs. (in all reality the is no such thing all dogs have dander no matter what people tell you all dogs do have dander) and as far as outdoor dog if your in a constantly warm/hot climate with no snowy winters your gonna want a short hair. but if you have snowy winter then a short hair will not do well it may freeze to death. but if you have hot summer that stay above 100 then getting a dog with dual layer coat is bad the dog may die of a heat stroke.
dunno if this helped or made it worse.

This helped thank you.. I need names of breeds of short haired dogs if you know any... we have 100 degree summers and our winters never snow

kreeperkemp
Jul 6, 2009, 03:26 PM
To contiue a thought I didn't finish. The so called hypo-allergenic dogs have hair instead of fur. So the dander is cut down quit a bit, to the point where people with allergies actully have them as pets. The only problem with dogs that have hair instead of fur is that their hair grows like peoples (always). Which means you will need to groom them once a month-every other month.

kreeperkemp
Jul 6, 2009, 03:32 PM
Google medium short hair dogs. I say medium cause if you search for large you will get dogs like the rodeschian ridgeback, great dane, doberman pincher, and so on and so forth. So its better for someone with allergies and predisposition to not wanting dogs to start with a medium so that the dog does not overwhelm them and end up being turned into the pound.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 6, 2009, 03:36 PM
go ahead and google medium short hair dogs. i say medium cause if you search for large you will get dogs like the rodeschian ridgeback, great dane, doberman pincher, and so on and so forth. so its better for someone with allergies and predisposition to not wanting dogs to start with a medium so that the dog does not overwhelm them and end up being turned into the pound.

Thank you so much.. I couldn't figure out what I should Google to figure out and that was perfect thanks:D

J_9
Jul 6, 2009, 03:38 PM
Labs are great outdoor pets for any weather actually.

kreeperkemp
Jul 6, 2009, 03:58 PM
Labs are great outdoor pets for any weather actually.

Yes labs do make great outdoor pets. But I have found without semi-constant human contact they become indepentent and rambucious and to a begging trainer the lab may not be a great choice. But every dog is different. And they might find the one for them.

Alty
Jul 6, 2009, 05:16 PM
If you have an outdoor only dog then you'll have a very unhappy, very understimulated, emotional basket case.

A dog needs interaction. Outdoor dogs are too easily forgotten.

A dog that only sees the backyard will become destructive, aggressive and depressed.

Why do you feel the need to get a dog? Why not get an animal that your mother will allow and accept into the family?

You sound young. Will you spend at least 6 hours a day with this dog, outdoors? Will you walk the dog every day, at least 2 one hour walks? Will you supply a shelter, activities, entertainment, and space to run?

A dog is not for you. Not now.

That's my opinion.

friend4u178
Jul 7, 2009, 07:21 PM
If you are getting a Dog as a Pet they become part of the family , therefore should be allowed inside.

It sounds to me like the conditions this Dog is going to face aren't very comfortable.

Maybe let your Mother stay outside (just kidding) :)

twinkiedooter
Jul 7, 2009, 07:42 PM
Animals kept outside such as dogs will as Alty put it be extremely upset and unhappy. Please do not relegate a dog to a miserable life of being chained outside. That is not a pet. It is more like an object. Maybe Mom can let you have a bird instead of a dog. Why not ask her WHAT kind of pet she would approve of? If she says no pets period, then you will have to wait until you leave home to have a pet.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 13, 2009, 10:00 PM
If you have an outdoor only dog then you'll have a very unhappy, very understimulated, emotional basket case.

A dog needs interaction. Outdoor dogs are too easily forgotten.

A dog that only sees the backyard will become destructive, aggressive and depressed.

Why do you feel the need to get a dog? Why not get an animal that your mother will allow and accept into the family?

You sound young. Will you spend at least 6 hours a day with this dog, outdoors? Will you walk the dog every day, at least 2 one hour walks? Will you supply a shelter, activities, entertainment, and space to run?

A dog is not for you. Not now.

That's my opinion.

Well first of all I already have 2 dogs and they are perfectly happy.. not depressed, destructive and aggressive. My dogs have never even bit someone...
To correct you its not a backyard its 100 acres thank you very much. Oh and as for as the accepting animals. I live on a farm with a couple hundred of animals. It's a country dog.
And how is an outside dog much more depressed than an inside dog? Mr. insider is in a tight little space stuck inside alll day? As while mr. outsider can roam freely?
So yes what shall you say now?:cool:

Thesexyjessica
Jul 13, 2009, 10:00 PM
If you have an outdoor only dog then you'll have a very unhappy, very understimulated, emotional basket case.

A dog needs interaction. Outdoor dogs are too easily forgotten.

A dog that only sees the backyard will become destructive, aggressive and depressed.

Why do you feel the need to get a dog? Why not get an animal that your mother will allow and accept into the family?

You sound young. Will you spend at least 6 hours a day with this dog, outdoors? Will you walk the dog every day, at least 2 one hour walks? Will you supply a shelter, activities, entertainment, and space to run?

A dog is not for you. Not now.

That's my opinion.

Well first of all I already have 2 dogs and they are perfectly happy.. not depressed, destructive and aggressive. My dogs have never even bit someone...
To correct you its not a backyard its 100 acres thank you very much. Oh and as for as the accepting animals. I live on a farm with a couple hundred of animals. It's a country dog.
And how is an outside dog much more depressed than an inside dog? Mr. insider is in a tight little space stuck inside alll day? As while mr. outsider can roam freely?
So yes what shall you say now?

Thesexyjessica
Jul 13, 2009, 10:06 PM
Animals kept outside such as dogs will as Alty put it be extremely upset and unhappy. Please do not relegate a dog to a miserable life of being chained outside. That is not a pet. It is more like an object. Maybe Mom can let you have a bird instead of a dog. Why not ask her WHAT kind of pet she would approve of? If she says no pets period, then you will have to wait until you leave home to have a pet.

Who said anything about a chain?

Alty
Jul 13, 2009, 10:07 PM
well first of all I already have 2 dogs and they are perfectly happy.. not depressed, destructive and aggressive. My dogs have never even bit someone...
To correct you its not a backyard its 100 acres thank you very much. Oh and as for as the accepting animals. I live on a farm with a couple hundred of animals. It's a country dog.
And how is an outside dog much more depressed than an inside dog? Mr. insider is in a tight little space stuck inside alll day? As while mr. outsider can roam freely?
So yes what shall you say now?

None of this info was in your original post.

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Hi, Recently I've been looking for a new dog and it has to be an outside dog because my mom has allergies and the whole shedding... I need to know what dogs can live outside in the hot weather. The dog is going to have to be outside year round and most of the time its really hot out here and it has to be a dog that can protect itself... So if you could tell me some dogs that can survive the heat then I'd be reeally happy

How were we supposed to know any of this? Guess?

You already have two outdoor dogs, so why not get the same breed, they obviously don't mind the heat and the outdoor living.

It's funny how most posters come back with all this favorable info after someone disagrees. Why is that I wonder?

Thesexyjessica
Jul 13, 2009, 10:27 PM
None of this info was in your original post.

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How were we supposed to know any of this? Guess?

You already have two outdoor dogs, so why not get the same breed, they obviously don't mind the heat and the outdoor living.

It's funny how most posters come back with all this favorable info after someone disagrees. Why is that I wonder?

Well I don't know. I have no idea what kind of breeds my dogs are because one of them was dumped and we took it in. and the other was adopted and was a mix of mixes of mixes. So can't do that

Sariss
Jul 14, 2009, 04:51 AM
Before thinking about getting a THIRD dog...

Since they are farm dogs. Let's say all three of them get poisoned. Or they all attack a porcupine (pack mentality!)

Can you afford to put a couple thousand bucks up front for vet care?

shazamataz
Jul 14, 2009, 07:04 AM
Why do you need another dog?

You just said you already have 2 dogs.

Show both of them some more attention.

I have 2 dogs here and they are hard enough to care for and show plenty of attention too.
Sariss has a very good point, outside dogs that are unsuperived as yours are are much more likely to be baited or attack another animal.
One vet bill is manageble but 3 vet bills can be scary.

If you read a lot of posts on this site there are so many people that can not afford vet care. I don't know about your finincial situation but it is something to think about.


And why is it better to have an indoor dog?
Well...
I am my dogs "pack leader" they want to be with me.
I can play with them almost all day and keep them company.

They can get out of the heat and sit in nice airconditioned comfort.

Mine love lazing around on the couch.

The back door is always open so they can go play in the yard if they want to... they only ever go outside to potty, they want to be inside with their family.


If you are a farmer then great, you would be spending about 14 hours a day out with your cattle and your dogs would be with you.
If you just live on a property and don't use these dogs as herding/working dogs and don't spend hours every day with them then they are better off inside.

The "I have 2 dogs they keep each other company" is just not right. They will end up teaching wach other bad habits as you are not there to stop them.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 18, 2009, 11:23 PM
Why do you need another dog?

You just said you already have 2 dogs.

Show both of them some more attention.

I have 2 dogs here and they are hard enough to care for and show plenty of attention too.
Sariss has a very good point, outside dogs that are unsuperived as yours are are much more likely to be baited or attack another animal.
One vet bill is managable but 3 vet bills can be scary.

If you read a lot of posts on this site there are so many people that can not afford vet care. I don't know about your finincial situation but it is something to think about.


And why is it better to have an indoor dog?
Well...
I am my dogs "pack leader" they want to be with me.
I can play with them almost all day and keep them company.

They can get out of the heat and sit in nice airconditioned comfort.

Mine love lazing around on the couch.

The back door is always open so they can go play in the yard if they want to... they only ever go outside to potty, they want to be inside with their family.


If you are a farmer then great, you would be spending about 14 hours a day out with your cattle and your dogs would be with you.
If you just live on a property and don't use these dogs as herding/working dogs and don't spend hours every day with them then they are better off inside.

The "I have 2 dogs they keep each other company" is just not right. They will end up teaching wach other bad habits as you are not there to stop them.

Well technically one of the dogs is my brothers and he takes care of it and the other is all of my familys. She is old and dying and won't be around for long. I spend about 4 hours a day with my dogs. And this post is pretty much not needed since I got another dog a week ago. Who is fine living outside.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 18, 2009, 11:26 PM
Before thinking about getting a THIRD dog...

Since they are farm dogs. Let's say all three of them get poisoned. Or they all attack a porcupine (pack mentality!)

Can you afford to put a couple thousand bucks up front for vet care?

well that would be totally random and weird cause we don't have porcupines? And my dogs are smart enough to not go by something poisonous

Alty
Jul 18, 2009, 11:29 PM
well technically one of the dogs is my brothers and he takes care of it and the other is all of my familys. she is old and dying and wont be around for long. I spend about 4 hours a day with my dogs. and this post is pretty much not needed since i got another dog a week ago. who is fine living outside.

4 hours? That's it?

I spend all day with my dogs. They follow me around the house, we go for walks, play, run around. They are content because they are a part of the family.

The concern is not whether a dog can live outside, it's whether it should.

Dogs are very affectionate animals, they need contact, they need love. Having a dog is a lot like having a child. You wouldn't spend only 4 hours a day with a child, would you?

You've made your decision, but I can't help but feel sorry for the dog and for you, you're both missing out on what having a dog really entails.

Good luck. :)

shazamataz
Jul 19, 2009, 01:07 AM
well that would be totally random and weird cause we don't have porcupines? and my dogs are smart enough to not go by something poisonous

So are you saying that if someone put poison inside a piece of chicken and threw it onto your property your dogs would be smart enough not to eat it?

Or if they saw a snake in the grass they would stay away from it.

We almost lost a Great Dane a few years back to snake bite. And we are 99% sure one of our dogs was poisoned by a relative (family fued).

You can never be too careful.

That poor dog, yet another poor pack animal that will be living alone. :(

Alty
Jul 19, 2009, 02:29 AM
My mother used to do some sewing for this lady that lived on an acreage outside of town.

She had over 400 acres, she was very wealthy. Her husband had passed on and she decided to get to english sheepdogs. They lived in the house as puppies but as they got bigger she decided that she couldn't handle having them live indoors anymore.

She had state of the art dog houses built, had someone build a pump that would automatically fill up the water dishes, hired someone to walk them and feed them. She would spend a lot of time outside, so she did see them, interact with them, but she couldn't understand why, even after years of living outside, they still scratched at the door, still wanted in. One of them eventually ended up killing the other. They fought, the smaller one lost and paid with his life. She was devastated. After that incident the one that survived became violent. She had to hire a professional dog trainer. He spent 3 months with that dog and finally told the lady she'd have to put the dog down, that there was nothing he could do to fix it. He blamed the fact that the dog had no social interaction.

Dogs are social animals, they need interaction. Will your dog become aggressive? It could happen, I've seen it happen before. Will your dog be lonely, unfulfilled, sad? Yes, without a doubt.

You obviously don't want to hear this advice, it's very evident in the way you've responded, but all I see is someone that let what they want overrule what's best for the animal.

He may live a long, content life, but he won't be happy. Four hours a day really is nothing, not even close to the amount of attention a dog needs.

I really feel for him.

Catsmine
Jul 19, 2009, 06:00 AM
Let's let this one dry up, now. The venting and rants, while cleansing, won't change the OP's mind. I hope the new dog makes friends before she goes back to school.

Sariss
Jul 19, 2009, 04:00 PM
well that would be totally random and weird cause we don't have porcupines? and my dogs are smart enough to not go by something poisonous

It was a generalization.

You didn't answer the question, so I'll assume the answer is no.

This is another pets are a privilege not a right type case..

Edit: Should have read the last post.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 19, 2009, 09:46 PM
4 hours? That's it?

I spend all day with my dogs. They follow me around the house, we go for walks, play, run around. They are content because they are a part of the family.

The concern is not whether a dog can live outside, it's whether it should.

Dogs are very affectionate animals, they need contact, they need love. Having a dog is alot like having a child. You wouldn't spend only 4 hours a day with a child, would you?

You've made your decision, but I can't help but feel sorry for the dog and for you, you're both missing out on what having a dog really entails.

Good luck. :)

Uhh I have a life I go places. Places where dogs are not allowed. I spend any chance I get with my dog. Anytime I'm at home. It would get the same amount of attention as if it were an inside.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 19, 2009, 09:55 PM
So are you saying that if someone put poison inside a piece of chicken and threw it onto your property your dogs would be smart enough not to eat it?

Or if they saw a snake in the grass they would stay away from it.

We almost lost a Great Dane a few years back to snake bite. And we are 99% sure one of our dogs was poisoned by a relative (family fued).

You can never be too careful.

That poor dog, yet another poor pack animal that will be living alone. :(


Well I don't have family feuds. And nobody would throw a poisoned piece of chicken onto our land because we have no neighbors and u have to travel a mile down a road to even get to our house, most people can't even find our house. I live in a town where everyone knows and likes everyone.

And yes they are smart enough to stay away from snakes because they have been around snakes and they are smart and know not to go mess with a snake because that's already happened and she learned from her mistake.

Thesexyjessica
Jul 19, 2009, 09:58 PM
Just whatever. Forget it.

handyamby
Aug 10, 2009, 09:23 PM
Hey, what kind of dog did you get? How is it doing? I was admittedly upset when I first read your post. But I watch animal cops sometimes and there are people who get dogs and keep them chained in their tiny city backyards and never pay any attention to them. After reading all your posts it seems this dog will be well loved and have a great farm to live on. How is it going?

LadyDeibert
Apr 21, 2010, 12:24 PM
Don't pay attention to these people. They only think they know what's best for dogs. I have raised and owned more dogs than most people since I was raised by a hunter. I've had inside pets and outside pets, so I can give you a more honest unbiased opinion. Most dogs are fine outdoors full time if you provide them the appropriate shelter, and other basic needs. I currently have a Rat Terrier who lives in the house, and during the day I often have to make him come inside and spend time with the family. Guess what he would rather be doing? He would rather be outside hunting or socializing with the other dogs. My animals are well socialized, and I spend all the time I can outdoors. Having outside dogs gets my kids away from the t.v. I have neighbors who keep their dogs in the house part time, and their dogs are more aggressive than any of the dogs I've personally owned, so that blows that lie! Dogs do need attention, but what the inside-only crowd fails to recognize is that they also have more energy than just a few walks a day or your home can allow for them to expel. They need the opportunity to run, explore, and just be dogs. That's when they are the happiest, and the love and praise they receive from us is the cherry on top for them!

Lucky098
Apr 21, 2010, 02:46 PM
You couldn't be more wrong. Dogs are pack animals and require to be around other animals or people.

Yes dogs can live outside. Some people take good care of out door dogs, but the dogs are still a chore, not an enjoyment.

Fr_Chuck
Apr 21, 2010, 04:21 PM
Closed