Tuesday, December 15, 2009

3 Most Common Mistakes: Getting a Family Pet




What are the 3 Most Common Mistakes parents make when getting a new pet for their kids?


Expert: Jennifer Andrew, Humane Educator at the Best Friends Society, mother of one, and proud pet-owner of a dog and a cat.

1.  Getting a Puppy - Or a Little Dog

"I recommend getting an older dog who has been around people and has a good history with kids. If you adopt at a shelter, they'll know if a dog has already lived with kids. Puppies are great, if you have a lot of time to devote to training a dog. You have to be honest with yourself and ask, 'Am I really going to have the time to devote to training this dog?' If the answer is no, it may be better to get an older dog who is already trained and who loves kids. Also: some people will want a little dog, like a Jack Russell or a Dodson, because they have small kids. That worries me, because small dog breeds tend to be more nervous in general and will often be more unpredictable around toddlers and young children. Whereas, if you have a black lab and the child grabs at it, he won't be as frightened as a little tiny dog would be."


2. Letting Kids Be Grabby

"When you're teaching young children to interact with their pet, you have to be really consistent. Whenever the cat or dog is around, show your child the right way to pet the animal. We teach the pre-schoolers we work with to use two fingers to pet an animal. This lessens the chance of them grabbing the fur and pulling or irritating the animal. My daughter is eleven-and-a-half months now and she's learning to pet the kitty-cat, so we'll sit with the cat and take her hand and say, "Gentle." Occasionally she grabs the cat's fur and we say, "No, gentle," but we're right there the whole time. That's important too. When you're getting a child and a pet used to each other, you should be in the room with them. It's also important, especially when you have toddlers and they're moving all over, to have a place where your pets can go that the kids can't get to, because an animal can get stressed out and be more likely to react to the child negatively when it can't escape unwanted attention."

Read more on Babble.

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From the Community…

Comments 41-50 of 55
  • Cursed Romantic's Avatar
    Posted by Cursed Romantic Sun Jun 7, 2009 6:49pm PDT

    I have to say its a pretty bad mistake to force animals on small kids period. My older cousin does this with her 6 year old daughter, and that girl does not like any animals at all unlike her mom that freaking has a zoo. I think its best to recognize when your child is capable or uncapable of being around animals period. And even if they do love them ask yourself how far you can get the child involved with the animal other than playing with it. Because if you don't get the kid used to the fact that the animal is part of their responsibilities now too, they will totally ignore the dog and forget about taking care of it. Another point about small dogs is not only are they fragile, but some of them have some nasty tempers that aren't alwasy resolved because some of the older owners just think they are too cute to be trained. Definitely have to get that idea out of your mentality. And by far I think the biggest mistake most people make when getting pets when they have young kids and all that is to sometimes ignore the fact that kids and even animals share in similar ailments that might end up being pretty costly. So before getting any animals freaking take a look at how much money is going out for timmy's asthma meds, and then think how much it would cost to support both Timmy and MaryBelle the cat's zoloft or insulin.

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  • kw's Avatar
    Posted by kw Sun Jun 7, 2009 7:47pm PDT

    We adopted our dog from a shelter.

    She is 1 year old and housebroken, but still a puppy.

    We love our new girl.

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  • SOUTHERNMAN1958's Avatar
    Posted by SOUTHERNMAN1958 Mon Jun 8, 2009 1:02am PDT

    there are too many babies anyway.between the Washington's down the block and the Garcia's across the street people need to keep their legs closed and adopt life forms that are already on this planet

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  • Callie's Avatar
    Posted by Callie Tue Jun 9, 2009 8:58am PDT

    to Bery:

    Dachshund is the correct German - Dotson is how some people pronounce it - the German pronunciation is more like DOX-soond. The "standard" variety get to be around 35 pounds, and while they are very friendly dogs, unless well-trained, can knock a small child over accidentally.

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  • Shanna's Avatar
    Posted by Shanna Thu Jun 11, 2009 1:09pm PDT

    I had an older dog (german sheppard) that was not very happy when my daughter started being able to walk arround. Our dog was like our first child and she was very jelous. Because of this we kept her and the kids away from eachother. On the other hand we also had an older lab and he was fine with the kids.

    When the kids were 3 & 5 we got a boxer. This is absultly the best dog I have ever seen around any kids. She has a lot of energy but she will not even jump on the kids when they are trying to get her to. She has never snapped at them even when they used to carry her around like a stuffed animal.

    I think with kids and dogs they have to grow together. I would never get a dog at the pound because in most cases you dont know the history.

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  • Ramona's Avatar
    Posted by Ramona Thu Jun 11, 2009 1:40pm PDT

    I'ved lived w/ animals all my life and work with them. My best advice is that you find a a dog that you like and parents should be responsible to train their children how to handle the dog, the same goes with the dog. If you don't take the time to teach each other, its just a waste of time and money.

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  • Brad & Angela's Avatar
    Posted by Brad & Angela Thu Jun 11, 2009 5:04pm PDT

    "Dodson"? What the heck is a Dodson???

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  • Kathryn's Avatar
    Posted by Kathryn Thu Jun 11, 2009 5:06pm PDT

    I have two siberian huskies just under a year and I couldn't imagine a better breed. BUT , You really have to do your research on breeds before you go there, huskies are pretty, but they chew, run, and can be waaaayyy too hyper for small children. I think the best you can do is take the time to train the dog and expose it to as many children as possible(our neighbors children are the best!), so that they know how to behave. It's usually not the dog, its the owner

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