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Thread: Which gender is best together?

  1. #1
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    Which gender is best together?

    Of course there's exceptions and every dog is different...but in general...considering two dogs, both altered...which would most likely get along best?

    Male/male
    Male/female
    Female/female

    Not that I'm allowed to, but I'd really love to get another siberian husky. I was thinking that Nebo would do best with a female. I've never had a female dog, so I don't really know, but of the dogs he's met, he seems to get along better with females generally.

    From what I've heard male/male is usually easier than female/female. Reggie and Smokey were not neutered until they were older, so we had two unneutered males in my house for years with no problems. Like I said though, I've never had a female dog, so no experience to go on..
    Last edited by wolf_Q; 01-04-2004 at 11:40 PM.

  2. #2
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    I couldn't imagine another male here. I'm making sure my next dog is a female. One of our trainers said that female/female are generally better than male/male. She mentioned that two female dogs can bond and become the best of friends while two male dogs might only co-exist in the same house and not care for one another. I don't know if that has any truth to it but my boys seemed to have bonded quite nicely (after LOTS of fights over alpha position).

    Kai [Sheltie], Kaedyn [Sheltie], Keeva [Malinois], Kwik [Malinois]

  3. #3
    Well most any dog book you read will tell you that opposite sex pairs are more likely to get along than same sex.
    I also read in a lot of books, and on a lot of websites (with people's personal accounts) that female/female fights are usually much worse than male/male. Of course there are always exceptions.
    I haven't had any problem with my two female/male, but I wouldn't expect any problems with either of them if I brought another dog into the house, no matter what sex.
    What matters most is the temperment of the dogs in question.

  4. #4
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    I think it depends on the individual dogs.

    My sister's female Sibes want to KILL each other, and I mean that literally.

    One of my friends has two male dogs, and they are GOING to kill each other someday, no doubt.

    I have five female dogs now, and they all get along well with each other. However, in the past, I have had two females that HATED each other.

    I also have five male dogs. They get along well, but my alpha male certainly keeps the other four in line.

    In my experience, males do a lot of posturing, strutting, growling, bumping, humping and bluffing. But when it comes right down to it, there is rarely a knock down, drag out fight. And if there is, it is over fairly quickly, when one dog shows submission.

    Females, on the other hand, are more likely to quietly co-exist without all the theatrics of pack order ... but when they decide to fight, they FIGHT.

    Personally, I prefer one male and one female ... both altered, of course. No same-sex competition and pack-order issues.
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  5. #5
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    Originally posted by binka_nugget
    She mentioned that two female dogs can bond and become the best of friends while two male dogs might only co-exist in the same house and not care for one another. I don't know if that has any truth to it but my boys seemed to have bonded quite nicely (after LOTS of fights over alpha position).
    That seems to describe Max & Jake quite accurately - they tolerate eachother, at best.

    My stepdaughter (not the one with the kids) got a new puppy last week and brought him over. He's already neutered, but still I didn't know if he'd make it home in one piece - honestly. I had to lock Max in his crate until they left. I think a third male in our house would put both of my boys right over the edge.


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  6. #6
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    I heard/read different things differnt places. In terriers, they say two males aremore difficult. Others say two spay females have the least cahnace of getting along. I think the bottom line safest is male/female. Of courseit will always depend onthe dogs...mymom has two male terriers, and I knw many, many people with multiple spayed females. Unfortunatly no rule is absolute.

  7. #7
    Moose and Barrett are both neutured males and they get along great together...especially considering that they normally only live with eachother when I am home visiting my parents or over summer/winter/spring/fall break. However since I've been unable to have Moose with me in my house at school, he has been living at my parents house with Barrett for a few months now and they get along wonderfully.

    As others have said, I think it depends on the dog...some are gennerally more submissive than others, and some are more relaxed about the whole thing.

  8. #8
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    I've had two of the combinations you mention (female/female and male/female) both with success. I have never had two males at the same time so I can't comment.

  9. #9
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    I have three males all living in the same house and have never had a fight. Belive it or not all of my boys play together share all of there toys eat out of the same bowl drink out of the same bowl (sometimes all three at once) I have astablished the Alfa role during training and all three have gotten there GCC award.


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  10. #10
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    I'm sure it varies from dog to dog.

    Kia's obedience trainer told me that she'd do better with a male dog of similar age if I ever thought about getting another dog. She can be very headstrong with females.
    ~Kimmy, Zam, Logan, Raptor, Nimrod, Mei, Jasper, Esme, & Lucy Inara
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  11. #11
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    For us, male/female or female/female works best. Chester doesn’t tolerate males at all. He gets along wonderfully with Millie, but barely tolerates Aneko. Millie and Aneko sleep next to each other and have never had “words”. So I think it really depends much more on the dogs, rather than the sexes involved.

    My SIL’s female has picked fights with both Chester and Aneko. Millie basically gets along with everyone, lol.

  12. #12
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    I really think it varies from dog to dog and also breed to breed. A golden retriever and collie both tend to be less territorial breeds so more likely that they will easily co-exist with either sex and do good. I think shepherds tend to be more territorial and so often do best with male/female. These are generalizations of course and there is never sure-all way it will go. My two male collies lived in perfect harmony. Tasha and Tommy do as well but Tasha is more aggressive and Tommy extremely laid back and perfectly happy to accept his place in the pack.

    I'm not really sure how huskies tend to be, but I think I've read in a few places of female/female being problematic sometimes. I'd guess male/female would do best but I'd research more on the breed before making an actual informed recommendation.

    One of the better dog breed books I've looked at that gauge each breed's (mainly AKC breeds) tendencies is called 'The Right Dog for You' by Daniel Tortora. It gives a scales for each breed on their territoriality, obedience trainability, good with kids, good with strangers, if they are good guard or watch dogs, etc. It even gives a different rating for puppymill types of the breed. I've found it to be pretty accurate.

    Here are the scales it gives for Siberian Husky (again these are generalized and individuals can differ of course )

    Indoor activity: very high
    Outdoor activity: very high
    Vigor: medium
    Behavioral constancy: high
    Dominance to strange dogs: medium
    Dominance to familiar people: medium to low
    Territoriality: low
    Emotional stability: high
    Sociability within family: very high
    Sociability with children: very high
    Sociability with strangers: very high
    Learning rate: high
    Learning obedience: low
    Learning problem solving: very high
    Watchdog ability: medium
    Guard dog ability: low

    Btw if anyone is interested in what it lists for other breeds I'd be happy to share
    Mom to Raven and Rudy the greyhound

    Missing always: Tasha & Tommy, at the Rainbow Bridge

  13. #13
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    My experience is better to keep female/female, not male/male, but I think male/female is very good too

    Liga(me),Carreras(gordon setter),Simba(the cat),Felix(bun),Aisha & Nila(ratties),Ellie(guinea piggy)

  14. #14
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    I have no luck with female-female matches. Our first three dogs were males--two altered, one not. Never had a problem. The fourth was a female--again no problems. The fifth another female and all h@ll broke loose. Massive girl fights, huge vet bills, Kayleigh almost killed Sleet on one occasion. (all my girls are altered)

    My males fight occasionally, but they fight different than the girls. The males stop when the other dog submits or they get whatever it was they wanted (toy, food ect) They rarely do any serious damage, usually nicked ears are the most serious injury. They posture lots, tons of noise and talking, but very little real fighting.

    The girls fight to the death--even the submissive ones. I rarely intervene if the boys are having a tiff. I always break up a girl fight. They will not stop until the other dog is completely incapacitated. I keep all my females in seperate pens, where they each live peacefully and happily with several males. I will never again have this many females. (i have five right now)
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  15. #15
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    in my experience, i feel male/female is best.

    growing up my parents had a female shepherd and a female carin terrier. these two grew up together and were never apart. they were like bonnie and clyde (truly bonnie and sarah)

    one day, however, something just snapped and they went at it. close to being fatal they had to be separated forever. so they were locked to separate perimeters of the house. accidentally, they were let out at the same time and bam. it was like they totally remembered. they just attacked each other. unfortunately the carin terrier didn't survive. lungs were punctured and we had to put her down.

    i have a 6 mos old female sheperd myself now and a 10 mos male retriever. they've been together since babies and i haven't had one problem. they are soooo great together!

    my mom now has another 4 mos old female shepherd. when putting the 2 female shepherds together, there was slight gression shown. so now we watch them carefully.

    i think it mostly depends on the breed of the dog and their background. i've heard of instances where people have 2 males/ 2 females and all is well. i tend to feel safer with the male/female combo however.
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