So basically I am looking for a dog that is suitable for new owners, easy to train, is welcoming and gentle of visitors and young children, likes a walk then chills at home, a calm temperament, not yappy or bitey, doesn't bark loads
I always feel terribly uncomfortable at questions like this because a lot of it is down not to breed, but breeding and upbringing.
‘Suitable for new owners’ says to me a biddable breed that wants to work for and please it’s owner so some of the gundog and herding breeds or breeds bred to be companions, cavalier King Charles for example
‘Easy to train’ definately says to me certain gundogs and herding breeds as they are bred to work closely with people and want to please
‘Welcoming and gentle of visitors and young children is down to breeding, not breed, breeding and upbringing.
For example, I have a working line border collie.
The breed is typically high strung to varying degrees, nervousness is a known issue and they just aren’t generally a terribly good choice for very young children and hectic homes.
That is probably amplified for working lines as it’s that herding instinct that tends to make them potentially problematic pets.
However.
My dogs parents were stable, calm dogs.
Aloof/bit disinterested of strangers as is common with the breed but not in the slightest bit aggressive or nervous and the pups were handled regularly by the farmers children and friends.
My collie came into a home with a 4 year old and was here before my next two children were born.
She is a very kind, gentle dog but that isn’t because of her breed, it’s because of her breeding, as in her parents were calm, kind, gentle dogs and her upbringing.
‘Likes a walk then chills at home, calm temperament’ is again my dog!
Partly because her parents were like that; work hard herding the sheep then sleep rest of the time and partly because she was trained from puppyhood to ‘settle’ for long periods in the house and used to the idea that walks vary in length and don’t necessarily come every day
‘Not yappy or bitey’ so probably no small terrier types but biting is largely down to training
‘Doesn’t bark loads’, as above