Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,187
Absolutely I would. Not over routine things like barking or housebreaking or chewing, but if there's a safety issue involved (for either my children or for the pet itself) I would find a new home myself or return it to the rescue to be placed in a more suitable home.
Over 15 years of having pets, we've had two that we've had to let go. One was a cat I had prior to having children who acted agressively towards my daughter when she was an infant. The cat never much liked my son (oldest child) but just avoided him; for some reason with my daughter she was downright agressive to the point of climbing into the crib and scratching/biting while she slept. We had a neighbor with older kids who just loved Shadow, so we let them take her and she's still very happily their cat. She's fine with school-aged kids, but still skittish and defensive around babies and toddlers.
The other was a beautiful black lab-malamute mix that just couldn't seem to adjust to city life. He was a good dog, fixed, sweet with the kids, loved long walks, but he was a runner. We've got a fenced yard and he learned how to jump the fence (actually, he figured out how to open one latch too, but that was easily replaced). We put him on a dog run/tie out and he broke chains rated for dogs twice his weight. We kept him in the house more and he broke screens to get out windows. We tried for over a year to get him used to our home, because our choc lab-spaniel mix does well here and just needed lots of walks and attention in the puppy phase to settle in, but nothing worked. We were all sad to let him go, but when a family friend's father mentioned that he could use a good dog up on his 50 acres of farm and woods we knew that would be a better fit for him. Far better that than to have him hit by a car running around our neighborhood. And my kids do appreciate that they get to visit Junior a couple times a year when we're up north and when his new owners come down here to visit their kids & grandkids.
Over 15 years of having pets, we've had two that we've had to let go. One was a cat I had prior to having children who acted agressively towards my daughter when she was an infant. The cat never much liked my son (oldest child) but just avoided him; for some reason with my daughter she was downright agressive to the point of climbing into the crib and scratching/biting while she slept. We had a neighbor with older kids who just loved Shadow, so we let them take her and she's still very happily their cat. She's fine with school-aged kids, but still skittish and defensive around babies and toddlers.
The other was a beautiful black lab-malamute mix that just couldn't seem to adjust to city life. He was a good dog, fixed, sweet with the kids, loved long walks, but he was a runner. We've got a fenced yard and he learned how to jump the fence (actually, he figured out how to open one latch too, but that was easily replaced). We put him on a dog run/tie out and he broke chains rated for dogs twice his weight. We kept him in the house more and he broke screens to get out windows. We tried for over a year to get him used to our home, because our choc lab-spaniel mix does well here and just needed lots of walks and attention in the puppy phase to settle in, but nothing worked. We were all sad to let him go, but when a family friend's father mentioned that he could use a good dog up on his 50 acres of farm and woods we knew that would be a better fit for him. Far better that than to have him hit by a car running around our neighborhood. And my kids do appreciate that they get to visit Junior a couple times a year when we're up north and when his new owners come down here to visit their kids & grandkids.

. My son was torn up and wanted another one. We went to a rescue center and they had a requirement to not split up certain pairs.
(NOT really!) There certainly should be no boarding kennels. God forbid anyone go away on vacation for 2 weeks or more for vacations or jobs. The dogs/cats would be ruined for life. That also means our armed service should never own a dog, as being deployed & serving our country is being too selfish, since it would traumatize the dogs. And when longtime owners die, the dogs should be put down right away, as people make it seem like the dogs will never be able to adjust to another owner.