You just have to meet Chloe to see her vivid, loving, enthusiast personality. Coming from the horror of being a bait dog, she should be applauded for her bravery & progress. After only a few days, she accepted our free-range, free-roamers, with no fence-fighting, as Chloe lives in her own 1/4 acre plot with shade trees, kiddie pool, & heated dog-cottage.
If introduced to a new doggie very gradually, probably some crate usage for this process. (& I am not a big crate advocate). For her to learn, in a new envoronment with a new dog: "I am safe. I am loved, I can relax. This dog is not attacking me," THEN she will accept him or her.
For the 1st week: No contact with your dog, only living in same household; she will hear the conversations, smell the smells.
2nd week: they meet in controlled circumstances, your dog leashed, Chloe also leashed , using a 2nd person, the 2 dogs pass by eachother, 6 times, in neutral territory. Never even touching noses.
Next day, same but a little closer but no touch.
So on & so forth until tails wag & no aggressive lunging .
Meanwhile, Chloe stays in her crate while decompressing. If you're willing - then she's your forever loyal, kissing, hugging, best companion forever! A sweet dog.
CHLOE
Mixed Breed
🇺🇸
Orangeburg, South Carolina
female, small, young
Mixed Breed
Orangeburg, South Carolina
