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Female Rottweiler

13 hours
Rottweiler4 years1
£250
£250
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Litter
Available
Rottweiler Puppy 1Female£250

Details

Info

Adv. ID:9MIZnMguS
Views:185
Favourites:2
Adv. Type:For sale
Original breeder:

Litter details

Adv. Location:Bedford, Bedford
Pets in litter:1 female
Breed:Rottweiler
Generation:P
Age:4 years, 6 months
Ready to Leave:9 Jun 2021

Health & Docs

Microchipped by collection dateVaccinations up to dateWorm and flea treatedHealth Checked by a vetParents are health testedKC registered by collection
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Description

I adore my beautiful girl and I’ve had her since she was 8 weeks old. I do NOT want to rehome her but my circumstances have changed and I have to move abroad soon. I am looking for a forever home for my lovely Rottie. I have attached a cost to ensure she is going to a loving home who will treat her with love, devotion and care. She is well loved and I want that to continue. She loves her cuddles and must be in a home that understands this wonderful breed. She is protective and caring and will guard your home. She gets along with dogs she knows: all her friends are big dogs and they are ALL male. She doesn’t seem to like bitches. She can be a challenge to walk as there are some dogs she likes and some she doesn’t. If a dog lunges for her, she will lunge back. She doesn’t really care about seeing squirrels but she will lunge after a cat. When she meets a new dog for the first time she approaches stealthily before the introductory sniff - if allowed to stay in close proximity to the new dog, she will then try to pin the dog down and if the other dog doesn’t mind this they will become friends. She’s made friends with all of her friends this way and has always done this. Even when she approaches good friends she will still approach stealthily; EVEN with some of her favourite people! It’s just always been her way, but when she reaches them they play as normal. She’s a heavy ‘play growler’. Note: if a newly met dog resists her pin downs, she must be pulled away or she will try to dominate the dog by attempting to pin down again and she will growl to assert dominance. She hasn’t done that for a while’s as know what she can be like and not all dogs take to her kindly, so I don’t put her in that situation unless it’s with a large male dog who wouldn’t mind her - always warn the owner of what she likes to do to make friends so everyone knows. So I only let her have an introductory sniff and pull her away before allowing another one. Watch for the vibes between the dogs, she wants to know if the dog is safe or a threat... She has 2 miniature schnauzers as friends, but generally I tend to avoid small dogs as she was attacked by two small dogs when she was 2 years old and has never forgotten. She loves tug games, fetch in the garden and throw and catch, she likes hunting for treats and games that involve food. When out for a walk I use a dogmatic to prevent pulling if she spots a cat but I also use a retractable lead as I do not let her off lead. She used to have good recall but if she picks up a scent of a cat/fox/muntjac she WILL try and hunt it. When she does a poo, you will need to look around to endure there are no other dogs or people coming up to her or she will lunge at them due to being vulnerable even if she’s in the middle of going! Then when you pick up after her, you must be alert to who is around as she will guard you as she knows you’re vulnerable at that point too. She doesn’t like to be taken by surprise so if you see someone walk out of the bushes, be alert or she may lunge at them. Also she likes to stop and stare while on a walk - just taking in the scenery and people watching. She doesn’t like people walking close behind her so I’d stop and let them pass by. Treats on a walk are always handy distractions. She likes street walking and is fine with traffic noise except loud motorbikes, she may lunge if a treat isn’t used as a distraction; be aware of people doing silly things, she’s well socialised but if someone does something odd then she will stop and stare to survey the situation. If someone runs up to her to be ‘hard’ and try to scare her or shout (as people have done for their own reasons) or if they have keys jangling on a belt, she MAY lunge at them to deter them. She likes ‘normal’ people walking in normal ways for want of a better expression. Cyclists and joggers are safe but on the odd occasion she may lunge so I keep her close by and offer her a treat until they’ve passed so as not to trigger her natural drive to chase due to their movements. She WILL want to be with you when you go to the loo. If not inside, then outside the door so she can be close. If you let her in, she will sit by you and guard. Once you reach for the toilet tissue, she’s happy to leave you as her work is done! I do not allow her upstairs. She will sleep at the bottom of the stairs but will move in the night to being on the sofa, or under the dining room table or the carpeted areas of the house or the coolness of the kitchen floor I leave all doors open downstairs so she’s free to patrol and work while the family sleep. She had cherry eye in her left eye at 1 year old and had it rectified as soon as it occurred. She still gets a mildly watery eye post op, but the problem has not reoccurred. She has Nature’s Variety which is a quality kibble and raw bones for her teeth, she enjoys dried rabbit ears and dried pigs ears, gravy bones and most other high quality treats. She’ll eat most things of course, but she’s always only had the best. She was raw fed for the first year and has always been well looked after. She has a 35 min walk in the morning and we play games in the day. I have a garden so we play in there and she has free rein to go in and out as she likes. Sometimes she has an evening walk depending on her activity in the day but she can get tired if she does too much. I can’t walk too far for too long, so she doesn’t get walked for hours as I can’t cope, but with training she could work up to do more, although Rotties don’t need that level of exercise. She is good with people, but when she’s tired she needs to be with her family only or she can get annoyed with other people, she needs her space. She’s not good at parties. I let her ‘dance’ in the kitchen with me, her way of dancing is to hold onto my forearm with a light bite - it doesn’t hurt as she’s been taught appropriate bite force and she just wants to join in if there’s laughter and fun going on! She’s lovely!
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