What is a upright external dog?

not including german Shepard's and huskies
i mean a good winter dog a won that could stay outside
i want a dog that i can guard my backyard and run hunting with me but my brothers don't want a hound dog or a one that is really fury ex:husky or german Shepard
and the only function why i want a outside dog is mostly because my mom is scared of dogs and wouldn't get me a one that can stay inside
i am going to provide it shelter with a heater in it and obedient cooked food and water that isn't frozen and i am giving an example of a husky or german Sheppard because they have good are animals beside a lot of fur to support it in the winter all i want is examples not answer similar to u shouldn't keep a dog outside and if you want to read aloud that you are a very annoying person and my mom ill keep hold of it inside until its old enough to go external
whats the point of have a dog if it just going to stay outside 24/7.

its silly, and mean.
Old enough to go outside? And ones that can stay contained by the cold? Even if you have it inside when it's a puppy, it is still cruel to put the dog outside. I would propose not getting a dog unless it will always be an inside dog
Answers:    Well you really don't want to hear the truth so I won't bother.
DONT get a dog if your gonna keep it external forever
That's cruel
PLEASE dont mess up a dog's life by keeping them outside.

Well, call me annoying, then...

I'd be more worried almost a dog that could guard my house, not my backyard. The only way a dog can guard you and your home is whether he is IN the home. Do you think a burglar is going to steal your garden hose from the yard or the TV from the house?

There is nearly no dog that wishes to be outdoors...they ALL want to be with their families indoors. Hunting breeds are VERY people orient, and I can't think of a single one that is good outdoors...Labs, Golden Retrievers, Setters, Pointers...adjectives need constant human contact and don't do well outdoors-they'll yelp, dig, pace, turn circles, chew on themselves, etc. from frustration, boredom, and loneliness. I think you call for to either change your mom's mind, or linger until you have your own place and the dog can be indoors.
dobermen
You shouldn't get a dog.

Look, any dog that can survive in winter is a dog near a double-coat. That means it sheds like crazy. And you said you don't want a dog that sheds.

Additionally a heater is a doomed to failure idea. Too many ways for a dog to pile up a bed or blanket against it, shed fur to get up against it, a short (if a bored dog chews on any wiring) and you've set a fire.

Additionally, it's not a short time ago a dog being able to live outside. What distinguishes dogs from other canine breeds is that dogs thrive on our company. They want to be next to us. Now, if you have a farm where on earth your dog can roam for 50-100 acres, that's fine. Or if you have a pack of dogs where they play beside each other constantly, that's fine. Or if your dog is working dog and you've got a flock of sheep it's protecting, or a hen house that it keep predators away from 24-7, than your dog is stimulated and doesn't need your presence a lot.

Here's what you're suggesting roughly: is that you be confined to your backyard with no TV, no iPod, no magazines or books, and sometimes one of your brothers will take you out of the backyard to move about hunting. Think you'd go stir crazy with boredom and try to dig your passageway out of the backyard? Or start howling at everything? Or become anti-social? Well, that's what you're talking about doing to your dog--effectively teasing it by letting it know that inside are adjectives the people and good smells while he's forced to hang out within the yard and only occassionally go hunting.

I grew up on a sheep farm. We had working dogs. I've had dogs that lived outside 100% of the time. And I've have 4 dogs in my life that were indoor dogs. So I know what I'm chitchat about. Your setup (one single, solitary dog stuck in a backyard, spends all or most of the time outside) is a losing proposition. It produces a dog that ends up hate life and a dog you will grow to hate.

There are a gazillion great hunting/tracking/pointing/scenting dogs that don't have long coats (though depending upon the type of hunting you want to do, you may inevitability a dog with a long coat--in which case you're hosed on the shedding issue). I think your best bet is to find a mode to get people (brothers, mom) to buy into having a dog specifically mostly indoor.

Here's a list of some great hunting/tracking/scenting dogs that have short hair (and several of them are small enough that they can be good fits indoors as well):
--rat terrier
--jack russell terrier
--american fox hound
--black and tan coon hound
--beagle
--rhodesian ridgeback
--pointer
--weimarainer
--vizla

Now which of these breeds might be a perfect fit depends upon what kind of hunting you're doing and the role of the dog (to track, to point out, to tree, to fetch). For instance, if you're want a dog to go to ground and root something out--a JRT will smash anything around. If you want a dog that will track and also see, especially small game (rabbits, squirrels) and even be able to climb trees, that look at a rat terrier. You can't hit a beagle for scent. Some of these dogs work best in packs (the foxhounds were designed to surrounded by part, use their braying to drive the fox to the shooters). Geez, there is even a line of rat terriers (the Decker line--they bring back up to 45 pounds) bred to hunt bears. So it all depends upon what kind of hunting you do and the the role of the dog. But do NOT assume you're going to get a great hunting dog you keep in the backyard--what I utter about that plan is...that dog won't hunt. Either bring the dog inside or create the circumstances (more space, a job and other dogs) so the outside dog will be stimulated external. A heater and cooked chicken won't cut it.
stone one.
"Whats a good external dog?" A pretend one.

Stop asking this question, your going to get the same kindof answers.
i have 2 chocolat labradors out side in kennels adjectives year we have a big garden and a forest at the back of my house they have shiney coats drizzly noses and are very happy dogs the best time to buy a puppie for out side is aprile and one that is 8 weeks dated that way it adapts to the cold wen the winter comes it will be best to have a dog pen wen the puppie is youthful labs are hunting dogs and pets and love to be out side in cold wet weather and they love the rain do not give somebody a lift it indoors some times then put it back out side the dog wil not like this keep hold of it out side and do not let in the house at all vet no this is ok and so do the rspca ask your vet labs are a good out door dog people forget that dogs would be wild whether it was not for people labs are kind net great familey pets and will bark if anyone comes to your back patio buy a girle dog have her spayed your mum will love her
Well, you ruled your only two good choices. Shepherds and Huskies hold undercoats developed for winter with the cold winds it brings. No shelter is adequately close to a domestic, with people in it. Dogs are pack animals, not solitary guards, and he will not be cheerful alone no matter how nice the shelter is. Not unless you lived out there with him. No other dog have the "guarding" mentality built with the right equipment to withstand a winter.

Wait until you can move out and get a dog of your own, work on your mom roughly speaking keeping a dog, or give up. Dogs are not property, used for hunting and guarding without being segment of the family.
how cold is it where you live? I have an indoor lab, but he like to stay outside if I let him till it's -10 or so (Celsius) he doesn't even hold a house, (Because he is an indoor dog!) but he like to run around with our other dog (husky) for hours! And they are good for hunting for certain!
Also, when it's a puppy, you can't really leave it outside..talk to your vet!

BTW a great deal of people DO keep dogs outside, it's not lately on TV. I live rurally and tons of dogs stay outside they only come into the house if its blizzarding or resembling, -20. It isn't mean unless you put an inside dog out there, they are not accustomed, they have to be used to it, and hold that heated house to go in, and lots of love from you! I agree he'd be lonely tho, you have to spend lots of time and walk with him!
stop asking, we have told you the truth and you don't want to believe us. So stop asking, we're going to give duplicate answers.
That's a bad way to treat a dog. A dog JUST for hunting.. and protection. That stays external all the time. What do you think he's like your gaurd or something. There animals a moment ago like people... that's so cruel of you to want to let them external. 24/7. Dog's aren't meant for gaurding, but i'm not saying that is a bleak idea. I'm saying having a dog JUST for gaurding, hunting is a doomed to failure idea! a cruel one too!

Where do you live anyways.. I mean I guess if you live contained by hawaii... I would understand, but I doubt that. Putting a heater beside the dog I guess is a good notion, but in the long run, it probably isn't. Your dog garunteed would get bored with one and the same back yard, every single minute, and second of his time, chances are high that he plays around with your furnace.. you know what happens.

Mosquitos live outside, and can harm your dog next to heartworms too!

& I understand, your mom wants a dog only whether it stays outside, and you may or may not agree with that, but having a dog sleep external, is pretty cruel. You see that in movies, but in reality.. not a soul does that.
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