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Thread: Great Pyrenees Dog

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    USA
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    Great Pyrenees Dog

    Does anyone here have/use to have a great pyrenees? We just got a puppy and we use to have one about 3 years ago, but I was wondering if anyone here had one! ??

    Genny
    *Some people come into your life and quickly go, but some leave footprints on your heart and you are never the same*
    *We only fall so we can learn to pick ourselves back up*
    *Life is not measured by the amount of breaths we take but by those that take our breath away*
    *Life is made of millions of moments, but we live only one of these at a time. As we begin to change this moment we begin to change our lives*

  2. #2
    Oh I knew someone that did years ago. They had a male and female and just loved them. But the downside is they eat like horses and poop like them too. You need a lot of room, but inside and out.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Shhh it's a secret;)
    Posts
    3,467
    I know a ton of people with Pyrs. I belong to a big dog forum. I also had one at the HS while I worked there, he was totally awesome! The biggest sweetheart I ever met.
    "To all the dogs I've loved before...Who traveled in & out my door...I'm glad you came along...I dedicate this song to all the dogs I've loved before"

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Connecticut
    Posts
    324

    Great Pyr

    I know a guy who used to have one named Harley; he rescued the dog and that dog knew it! He was the most gentle, loving dog ever. Which is a good thing for a 150 lb dog to be!
    Barbara

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    USA
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    AWW! Those stories you guys just told me are so sweet and neat too! I am looking forward to having so much fun with Sadie She's a sweet heart right now and I love her already so much!! If any of you guys have anymore stories about them please feel free to share them, I'd love to hear some!
    *Some people come into your life and quickly go, but some leave footprints on your heart and you are never the same*
    *We only fall so we can learn to pick ourselves back up*
    *Life is not measured by the amount of breaths we take but by those that take our breath away*
    *Life is made of millions of moments, but we live only one of these at a time. As we begin to change this moment we begin to change our lives*

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Bexhill, UK
    Posts
    8,815
    Would love to see some piccies
    Give £1 for a poundie www.songfordogs.co.uk

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    USA
    Posts
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    ok, I'll try to send some soon
    *Some people come into your life and quickly go, but some leave footprints on your heart and you are never the same*
    *We only fall so we can learn to pick ourselves back up*
    *Life is not measured by the amount of breaths we take but by those that take our breath away*
    *Life is made of millions of moments, but we live only one of these at a time. As we begin to change this moment we begin to change our lives*

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    BC Canada
    Posts
    8,019
    When did you get your Great Pyrenese pup? How old is she?? I want pics
    Rainbowbridge- Tikeya 'forever loved'
    Owned By Luna, Prudence, and Raven

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    USA
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    HI Tikeyas_mom!

    Sadie is aabout 11-12 weeks old now! I got her at around 7 weeks!

    She's doing great, so I'll try my best and get some pictures sent of her tomorrow or the next day!!
    *Some people come into your life and quickly go, but some leave footprints on your heart and you are never the same*
    *We only fall so we can learn to pick ourselves back up*
    *Life is not measured by the amount of breaths we take but by those that take our breath away*
    *Life is made of millions of moments, but we live only one of these at a time. As we begin to change this moment we begin to change our lives*

  10. #10
    whoa those are some massive dogs! There are two of them at the place I work and they are really neat looking. I'd love to see pics of them as puppies.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    5,717
    I was owned by a beautiful Great Pyrenees from 1984-1996. Her name was Avalanche. She was a wonderful dog. I miss her.

    Presently, my parents are owned by Smiley, a Pyr. They have been owned by a few Pyrs in the past...Blizzard, Bear, and Bandit.
    Save a life, ADOPT!!
    Sue

    Rainbow Bridge Angels: Thor, Shiloh and Killian, Avalanche and Wolf
    (RB Gaylord and Bandit, fosters who have touched my heart)

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    I am from Florida
    Posts
    2
    I have 5 Pyrs, and a sheltie. I absolutely love them (I use one of them as my Service Dog). There are some things that are negative about them though, and a lot of people don't investigate the breed before getting them and then they end up in rescue. They DIG and I mean DIG. I havent been able to use a riding mower for a few years now, gave up on ever dreaming of having a flower bed within my fence line. They are escape artists, and if given the opprotunity they will expand what they consider their territory to be up to a few miles radius of their home if let wander.

    I will post here a article that the GPCA (Great Pyrenees Club of America) uses in their educational information.


    EVERYTHING YOU'RE ALWAYS ASKED ABOUT A PYR
    And Never Want to Answer


    HOW BIG, REALLY, IS A GREAT PYRENEES?
    Your dining room table is 27" from the floor, kitchen counters 36". The average female Pyr can walk under your dining room table only if she ducks her head; the average male need to either scrunch himself smaller or lift your table a few inches higher. In either case, the front of the counter is not the place to store meat thawing for dinner. The top of the refrigerator is out of the reach of most Pyrs
    .



    HOW MUCH DO THEY WEIGH?
    On the scale at the feed store, 80 to 120 pounds. While trying to give one a pill or cut its nails: as much as a Moray eel. On the first day of obedience class: as much as a young elephant. The day you teach the "down" exercise in obedience class: as much as a Sumo wrestler. When walking through a litter of pups, kittens, chicks or lambs: about as much as two feathers.


    HOW MUCH DO THEY EAT?
    As much as they want - never mind what the back of the dog-food bag says. The average Great Pyrenees can survive quite nicely and maintain weight and normal activity on as much dog food as will fit into a two-pound coffee can. Most, however, have convinced their owners that plain dog food is completely unpalatable and will starve unless supplemented with ground round, chicken breast, sirloin tips or cheese omelets. If he discovers you have a weakness for cookies you may find your leg battered black and blue by Pyr-paw-pats, repeated until you share the cookies - Oreos are much preferred to Milk Bones.


    DO THEY SHED MUCH?
    At the annual ritual known as "coat blowing" you can comb enough fur out of your dog to have spun into enough yarn to make yourself a cap, a scarf and a pair of mittens. Why you would want to is beyond me, since everything else you own is already lavishly decorated with Pyr Hair. Since shedding, in some degree, takes place 365 days a year, you will have ample decoration on your rug, couch, bed, etc. Since Pyr hair has a particular affinity for dark clothing, the Pyr-owning business person wears a lot of light grey and tan. Firefighters, police officers and military personnel owned by Pyrs learn to leave their uniforms in sealed lockers at work and change there.


    WHAT ABOUT BARKING?
    What about it? If begun early, you can train yourself to come every time your Pyr barks and give it some attention. Give him enough attention for barking, and your neighbors will also begin to give you some attention. Mutual reinforcement always works. What do Pyrs bark at? Only things they can see and hear - that includes low flying satellites and butterflies. Most Pyrenees eavesdrop on a family argument four houses away, yet become selectively deaf upon hearing words like "stop that", "come here" and "be quiet". Pyr owners exchange information on stopping barking the way our grandmothers exchanges recipes for pickles - no two were ever alike.


    I'VE HEARD THEY LIKE TO DIG
    How do you think the Pyrenees mountains were really constructed? One Pyr, out of consideration for her owner's failing eyesight, enlarged the cup of his putting green to bunker-sized. Landscape companies report their greatest repeat business comes from Pyr owners. Some Pyr owners, however, simply resign themselves to living with a yard that looks like a gunnery range.


    HOW DO PYRS AND CHILDREN GET ALONG?
    If you train your children early enough not to tease the dog - not to pull his tail, wake him by jumping on top of him, pinch his ears or steal his food - your Pyr will be safe from the kids. Children are not as easy to train as a Pyr because it is not legal to put a choke-chain and leash on a child.

    The Dis-a-Pyr
    or
    What Do You Call a Pyr Off Leash? – Gone!
    Catherine de la Cruz

    One of the most unpleasant surprises a new owner of a Great Pyrenees encounters comes the first time he takes his adolescent or adult Pyr for an off-leash walk. The puppy who had clung to his owner’s side suddenly moves out of reach, becomes deaf to all commands and entreaties, and decides to wander away, far faster than an ordinary human can move. For some, the surprise comes when the front door is left open – the result is the same. One “gone” dog.

    The explanations for this behavior vary – the dog isn’t obedience trained, it is examining its territory, it needs more exercise – and the “solutions” range from yelling and running after the dog, to long sessions in obedience class, to never taking the dog out of the yard. The truth is, the only real explanation is “it’s a Pyr’s nature” and the only real solution is NEVER let the dog off leash outside its own yard.

    A top obedience competitor, who trained her Pyr to its Utility Degree and Draft Dog title, said that her dog would take advantage of her smallest degree of inattention to wander off and no amount of obedience training would make him “come” when he “went walkabout”.

    Pyrs used as Livestock Guardian Dogs on large farms or open range are reported to stay near the sheep - or not, as their understanding of the job takes them; some can be found sleeping with the sheep, some on a hill overlooking them, some making the rounds of their perceived “territory”, marking it against predators. Dogs used on small fenced pastures are more often reported to be found somewhere they shouldn’t be, often trying to expand their defensible perimeter. One long-time Pyr owner reported, “The Pyr that has five acres wants fifty; the one that has fifty wants five hundred.” One LGD Pyr who cared for her sheep on five hundred acres also periodically could be found on the neighboring 300 acres, checking out their sheep.

    Perhaps this tendency to wander could be bred out; but might not doing so also remove the independence, the ability to think for itself, the ability to handle new situations, that makes this breed what it is? Perhaps those who want a dog to go with them off lead should get a breed that doesn’t wonder what’s behind the next bush, beyond the next hill, that doesn’t want to clear its new-found territory of all other canines. But for those who can’t imagine living without a Great Pyrenees – get a leash and use it.

    __________________________________________________ _______________

    If anyone has any questions about the breed feel free to ask away, I have about 500 links to Pyr related sites, and am on numerous Pyr Owner lists and message boards.

    Jennifer

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    5,717
    Jennifer, loved your post!!!!
    It brought back memories of my dearly beloved Avalanche. Though not everything described her, many things did. She loved all children, however, not ALL teen boys or adults. She loved FREEZING cold weather. She barked at the thought of any possible danger (real or imagined)! The family was fully protected.
    She was a treasure.......I really miss her.
    Save a life, ADOPT!!
    Sue

    Rainbow Bridge Angels: Thor, Shiloh and Killian, Avalanche and Wolf
    (RB Gaylord and Bandit, fosters who have touched my heart)

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    USA
    Posts
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    Thanks for posting all that great info. GreatPryDUser,

    I know what you mean about Pyrs 'digging a lot' Sadie does it too We have holes everywhere now. but it's ok I don't mind, the only bad thing about it is if I'm walking around the yard at night I've accidentally stepped in a few and fell

    Do any of your Pyrs guard any kind of animal?
    *Some people come into your life and quickly go, but some leave footprints on your heart and you are never the same*
    *We only fall so we can learn to pick ourselves back up*
    *Life is not measured by the amount of breaths we take but by those that take our breath away*
    *Life is made of millions of moments, but we live only one of these at a time. As we begin to change this moment we begin to change our lives*

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    I am from Florida
    Posts
    2
    My male Zeke worked guarding chickens and goats for a year (I leased him out to someone who was loosing their livestock to coyotes, I didnt have a pup, so I offered Zeke till I got a pup to her) and then he came back here to me after Ihad a litter and she bought a pup. Other ten that no my guys are not working dogs (except JeZibel who is a 18 moth old Pyr wor works as my Service Dog.

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