The two you picked both have quite a lot of fur, so if you keep it inside a lot prepare for hairpocalypse.
also:
also:
Gatata03 wrote:
FuZ wrote:
a cat
Gatata03 wrote:
FuZ wrote:
a cat
get a new one if he dies2015071 wrote:
For all of you guys suggesting a cat, I live on the 17th floor with 3 balconies that cats could jump out and fucking die. So no cats.
did you just assume its gender?Railey2 wrote:
also, cats have an amazing sense of balance. She'll be fiiiiine
weebRunielVermell wrote:
Shiba Inu is better tbh
My friend's dad's dog's maid is Japanese, therefore, I'm half Japanese. Get my race right, you misrace scumAomi wrote:
weebRunielVermell wrote:
Shiba Inu is better tbh
what a tryhard lmaoRunielVermell wrote:
My friend's dad's dog's maid is Japanese, therefore, I'm half Japanese. Get my race right, you misrace scum
yeah pretty muchFrozenMilkshake wrote:
get a puppy so that its easy to pick up and throw in its cage if it's misbehaving
FrozenMilkshake wrote:
get a puppy so that its easy to pick up and throw in its cage if it's misbehaving
2015071 wrote:
FrozenMilkshake wrote:
get a puppy so that its easy to pick up and throw in its cage if it's misbehaving
Nobody would cage this adorable cute peppy
FuZ wrote:
a cat
your avatar fit with this treadhKRNK wrote:
One vote for samoyed. These guys look adorable.
Dog 101 is a pretty nice site if you're looking for video introductions of breeds btw.
... well, if you're still thinking about cats, then ragdoll is a decent breed. They probably won't jump out of the window because they are kinda large and lazy if you will
Depends on how the dog is raised and what environment it is raised in, really. A family friend has a Keeshond and he's so lovely, the only issue is the amount of hair it has ahaha.RoseusJaeger wrote:
Samoyeds are usually gentle giants, I love them. I've known a lot of them used as therapy dogs for kids and would recommend one since Keeshounds are known for having aggression issues in the breed.
I agree with you 100%.RoseusJaeger wrote:
it does mostly matter how the dog is raised but some breeds have genetic dispositions that cause aggression.