Just an article I came across. The breed needs diversity.
http://www.aol.com/article/2016/07/2...ture/21441682/
Just an article I came across. The breed needs diversity.
http://www.aol.com/article/2016/07/2...ture/21441682/
Thanks for sharing! Very interesting information and video!I was shocked when my bulldog died suddenly...she was pampered! Vet informed me of the shorter lifespan of English Bulldogs. I would love to have another one someday even knowing this but the asking price for them is way out of my reach!
Agreed. OEBs have a much better outlook health-wise than the standard English bulldog. The next dog we get will be an OEB. We have an American/English bulldog mix and other than some minor skin allergies and the heart worms he had when we got him, we've never had an issue with him. He's a beast of a dog.
When I was a kid about 60 years ago we had a female Old English. She loved to catch hogs when we went hunting and we also worked her on cows. If we had a cow that was hard to get in the trailer, she would grab the cow in the nose and walk her in the trailer. We would throw sticks out in the pond and after she retrieved 5 or 6 we would throw a rock and she would retrieve the rock from the bottom of the pond. Modern day English bulldogs have been bred for broad shoulders and rear ends and short muzzles which makes it hard for them to breathe and they can't move because their legs are so far apart. This is what dog show judges want, but, they ignore the standard that says they were working dogs.
Love the Bulldogs but will probably never own one. My vet told me he put two girls through college treating Bulldogs!