Dogs will mourn and feel the lost of a partner dog just as we are. I am with the Dachshund Rescue CCDR. http://c2cdr.org you can see their profiles there, and I am responsible for a bonded set of girls,13y and 6y old. they are being fostered in another home. I held out on accepting adoption application until someone was willing to adopt both of them together.And it happen,by the end of the month,due to their vacation preplanned,they will move to Md.Please find a rescue that will work with you and understand that they should be not seperated. Manuela CCDR NJ
Find a rescure please if nothing works out. They will miss the other to the point they can be sick. They will greive badly. Just what I feel.
Donna and DottieSent from my BlackBerry® smartphone powered by Alltel
From: "proof4you2" <proof4you2@yahoo.com>Sender: Dachsie_World@yahoogroups.comDate: Sat, 07 May 2011 12:43:17 -0000ReplyTo: Dachsie_World@yahoogroups.comSubject: <Dachsie World> Separating Dogs That Have Been Raised TogetherA friend of a friend is needing to move. She has two long-haired minis. The girl is 8 and the boy is 6. They have been raised together as "brother and sister." They are crated separately during the day, but sleep together at night.
She is wanting to find a family who will take both dogs and keep them together. If we cannot find someone who will take both dogs, but are willing to take one or the other, will the dogs experience separation anxiety or any other types of behavior issues? Can they adjust to being an only dog?
If they can't/shouldn't be separated and we can't find a family on our own, would we then try to contact a rescue to help keep them together?
Thanks in advance for your reply.
Pam
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