Wednesday, February 8, 2012

A Post about the Puppies...

...I wanted to do a post with our plans of what we are going to do with Em Dog and Shad once the baby arrives. So let me recap our pups for you, explain our situation and then give you our reasoning. Here it goes...

First off, we have two LARGE dogs. Shadow, a 100 pound black lab and Emma, a 60 pound whatever you want her to be (seriously, everyone who sees her has an opinion what she is!). These two are like my children. Emma has been around longer than Matt. Notice, I say MY, not our. I'm the major dog lover in the family. I always grew up with large inside dogs; Matt grew up with large outside dogs. Being that Emma was around before Matt, there wasn't much discussion as to whether the dogs would be inside or out.

I love having them in the house especially when Matt is gone hunting or working late, they make me feel safe and ALWAYS make me feel loved. Sometimes I think they can read my emotions and feelings better than Matt! However, there is some drawbacks...they shed...a lot...year round. They also bark at every person, animal or strange sound that goes by the house. Plus our house is not huge, it's a one-story ranch and with large dogs, at times, we can all be walking on each other.

Shadow actually came from a home that had 2 small children. The little girl learned how to walk with him because she'd stand up and hold on to him until she was ready to take those first few steps. He's so funny because it's like he knows how to act around different people. If an adult comes to our house, he's a jumper but if my niece or a small child comes over then he's gentle...still in their face but just out of curiosity. My niece always spends a week with us each summer and Shad always sleeps in bed with her.

With Emma, children or adults, if you're a stranger then you're going to stay a stranger. Someone comes in the house, she barks and runs to the other room. If you stick around for awhile, she'll eventually come out and visit. She let's my niece pet her and lay with her but she's a momma's girl and would much rather be with me than anyone else (Matt is a close second).

As stated above, I'm also a HUGE dog lover! I refuse to be one of those moms that has a child and then the dogs get no attention. That's why I REALLY want new carpet in the basement so we can spend time with them in the evening (the carpet now is thin and gross and been there FOREVER). We kennel them during the day while at work and I do NOT want to keep them "locked up" (meaning not in their cage but still just in the basement with no contact) all night too.

So our decision to move the dogs downstairs to our basement was a reluctant one on my part but a no brainer to Matt. I know it'll make Matt happier and I know it's best for the baby with the dog hair and noise plus it'll hopefully keep our upstairs (where people actually see!) cleaner which is good since I know having a baby limits your time to do daily tasks like vacuuming, dusting, etc...

I also want our baby to grow up with dogs and have that love for dogs, the friendship (I know that sounds silly but those of you with pups know what I mean), and not fearing dogs. I also wanted to transition the dogs before the babies get here so they don't resent the baby if we did it when s/he arrives. I have a feeling that Baby G and I will be spending most of my maternity leave downstairs with the pups (it's SOOO much cooler there in the basement) or taking walks with them (one at a time!) if the weather permits (MO summers get pretty toasty!).

I really didn't do any research on this topic. I wasn't told to seperate the dogs or anything. Matt and I just made the best decision for our family. It was more or less based off how we know our puppies and their behavior. I think every family has to make the right decision for their family and you're the one that knows your pets best.

Now before you go feeling sorry for the dogs, as I type this post, Shadow is sprawled out over the couch in the basement while Emma is curled up next to him!

4 comments :

Liz said...

Our dog used to sleep upstairs, outside our bedroom. Which is also right outside the future baby's room. And given that we'll be running between the rooms a lot, we'd be stepping over him constantly, plus the dog hair gets really bad up there, so we decided to move him downstairs into the spare bedroom (he gets his own room now! haha!).

So far, I think he likes it, but he definitely misses being close to us in the morning. Came up stairs this morning just to hang with us while we got ready. So sweet.

Alicia said...

You are right, only you and Matt know your dogs and your situation, so you only you can decide what is best! Before you know it they will be loving their new digs. :) Before we had Layla, Brodie slept with us every night. After she came home and slept in her bassinet in our room, Brodie would sleep in the living room. He didn't appreciate being woken up in the middle of the night apparently lol. :)

Anonymous said...

As a veterinarian, and a mom. It is best to expose babies to dog hair, cat hair, all critters in their first year. Helps them to not develop allergies. Let the dogs love on her!

Mary said...

Only you know your dogs, but I can't imagine separating my dogs from us. Dogs are pack animals and have evolved to be around their people. The dog hair everywhere is annoying, but like Anonymous said, it is good for babies to be exposed to allergens. I put a blanket down when I put the baby on the floor, but I see a lot more frequent vacuuming in my future when she is mobile! Neptune follows us around all day long and Elsa loves looking at him and she has even started smiling at him when he comes up to her. The dogs love her too-it's adorable!