any experience with this?
5/28/2015 9:40:14 AM
Yes
5/28/2015 9:44:59 AM
We typically have a friend with a dog watch ours. Sometimes we drop him off for an extended playdate. Other times -- if the person lives nearby -- we'll have the stop by three times a day or just stay over. In the first case, no money exchanged hands but we bought them a thank-you gift. In the second, the girl stayed over nights, so we payed her $100 for the weekend and made sure there were breakfast supplies, beers, and such.
5/28/2015 9:51:11 AM
5/28/2015 9:54:41 AM
in all seriousness this is one of the reasons i've yet to get a dog. There's a lot of weekends I just up and leave town and constantly having to drop off a dog, or find a sitter is tough. I see a lot of my friends either back out of going somewhere because of the dog or spend a ton of cash boarding it up weekend after weekend. Am I selfish? Probably, but i also want to be the best owner possible and it's probably not where i'm at in life right now.
5/28/2015 10:04:17 AM
Isn't this what friends and family are for?
5/28/2015 10:12:11 AM
Family let my last dog get hit by a car, and what are friends?
5/28/2015 10:15:14 AM
^^^ All good reasons...but are boarders that expensive? I feel like there are a lot out there these days, driving most of the prices down to being very affordable. There's also this website that is almost airbnb-ish. You have people that live in your neighborhood that sign up to take care of dogs...they often have dogs themselves, they are in the area so they can take your dog to parks that he normally goes to...stuff like that. I've been trying to get my wife to sign up for it to make some extra cash on the side since she works from home. Also because it would give our dog company at the house:http://dogvacay.com/
5/28/2015 10:27:56 AM
i imagine they aren't that expensive, i really don't know. My childhood dog had a traumatic experience at a boarder and ever since i've always felt that boarding, for me, would be a last resort. I have friends who's pups absolutely love their dog daycares and i'm sure my experience is an extreme outlier but it's certainly left a lasting impression.
5/28/2015 10:50:26 AM
^No its not, theres plenty of horror reviews online about people coming back to dogs with mental problems after boarding them. I've spent a lot of time training my dogs, the last thing I want is to board them for a weekend and come back to a pitbull with mental problems.
5/28/2015 10:53:49 AM
Yeah...we usually get a friend/family member to stay at our house or we drop him off at a friend's house that he's familiar with. With that being said, my little cousins are moving out of town and they usually stay at the house when we're out for extended periods of time....so we might possibly go the boarding route. I just recommend looking at places that your friends and family board their dogs at. I'm not against online reviews, but personal recommendations are more important for these types of situations.I'd also heavily consider the dogvacay.com site I posted earlier. I like the idea of my dog staying at a house with one or two other dogs as opposed to a building with dozens of other dogs. Less likely to be confrontations and more of a "homey" feel.[Edited on May 28, 2015 at 10:58 AM. Reason : .]
5/28/2015 10:57:51 AM
I posted this in the pet thread in the lounge a while back.
5/28/2015 11:31:33 AM
5/28/2015 12:43:01 PM
I would think most people don't ask people who don't like dogs to dog-sit their dog. If you have friends that do that, then you have stupid friends.We only use people who already have dogs (and our dogs get along) or people that want to chill at our downtown house for a few days and also like our dog. We also still pay them or give them dog-sitting gifts (wine, food, etc).
5/28/2015 12:54:54 PM
5/28/2015 1:36:27 PM
I have used a place called camp bow wow, it's a local chain I think. It's $60 a night for two dogs who combined weigh 15 lbs They do have webcams so I can make sure my dogs are playing and happy while I'm away. I probably spend too much time watching the webcams though because I miss them. It does get really expensive, I was just in nc for 5 nights but because I had the 6 am flight out and didn't get back til late at night that would have been an extra two nights of boarding, so $420. Luckily I had a friend that owed me big time watch them for free.I'll check out that website next time though because I'm definitely looking for cheaper options!
5/28/2015 2:00:06 PM
Wow, my pit is 60lbs and only 7 months.....at $400 I'll just crate them and put them on the plane with me.
5/28/2015 2:01:38 PM
@LuckezCharm, I'm thinking about using them in a few weeks for boarding my dog when we go out of town.Which location did you go to?
5/28/2015 3:07:43 PM
5/28/2015 3:32:19 PM
Most say no bull dog, or they require them to be on a cargo flight.https://cms.dot.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/docs/Delta_Redacted_March_2015.pdf
5/28/2015 3:44:13 PM
I'm thankful that I've only ever had to board my dog once. It was when I was living somewhere without a lot of close friends (i.e. nobody I'd entrust my dog to). Ever since then though I've always had plenty of friends around to look after him. It's easy for me though - my dog is ridiculously easy to care for and it's not uncommon for girl friends to volunteer to watch him in my absence.
5/28/2015 3:47:50 PM
Well I just checked and apparently camp bow wow is more widespread than I thought. I use one in Colorado Springs. My dogs love being around other dogs so they do alright but they're exhausted when I pick them up.
5/28/2015 4:54:18 PM
Just checked out that site, bowwow looks promising. I think I'll spend way too much time watching them on webcam.
5/28/2015 5:05:17 PM
5/28/2015 5:16:48 PM
DOGBOARDINGis that like boogie boarding with your dog?
5/28/2015 8:35:02 PM
5/31/2015 4:12:58 PM