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Please can you help - lockdown dog given to us and we can’t cope

46 replies

Thesurprisingegg · 26/12/2021 19:24

I am a mum of 4 young DC and we live in a flat in the centre of a city with no outdoor space. I also work FT. During lockdown, teenage cousins of my H’s adopted a golden retriever and - once lockdown was over - decided they could not look after him anymore and dumped him on us 3 months ago, telling us he will be happy “because there is always someone at home and the kids will love him.” I knew about the problem of dogs in rescues since lockdown and I did not want to add to the problem. My H was mad and wanted to give him to a rescue, but I believed we should take on the challenge and be able to handle it. He is now 9 months old.

He is a wonderful dog, a really good boy, the DC love him, but we live four floors up in a city flat. I also have a job which is gruelling and requires me to work 80-90 hour weeks between work and home and I am the main breadwinner.

I take him for walks while I do zoom calls, work allows him in my office, I spend all day with him, but there are aspects of my involuntary dog ownership which I feel are going to kill me.

The scavenging: he is obsessive over food. I cannot give the DC a snack on the sofa after school without him snatching it from their hands. He leaps on to the table at dinner time. He opens the door to the kitchen and pulls down food off the work surface and rips the packet to shreds. When I walk him, in the city park, he will run off and eat everything in sight, including horse / dog / fox / human poo. He usually throws it up later that night in the house, which I discover in the morning as I’m doing the school run. My hands are often so full with the DC I cannot monitor what room he is trotting off to, what packet he is pulling down, what food he is gobbling up.

The DC are too young that they are not consistent in enforcing rules or the training we have paid to give him. I could lay ground rules with the dog and they will immediately break them.

He wees and “marks” all over the flat. Places in the flat smell so much like a public toilet it’s unbearable. He wees on my bed. I use the dog deodorising spray, I have the carpets and floors cleaned but nothing makes it go away.

If I leave him alone in any room for any small amount of time, he will rip everything to shreds. He’s destroyed countless pairs of shoes, thousands in handbags, clothes, ripped up packs and packs of printer paper to the point I spend my evenings after the kids are in bed bent over with a bin bag picking up tiny pieces of paper.

To take him to the toilet I have to go down four flights and then to a grassy area (he will not wee or poo on the pavement.) On days when I am back-to-back with work and calls from 7am-10pm, this is time consuming and stressful.

My H doesn’t help. He says it is my own fault for taking this on. I have a dog walker who is excellent but only comes once a day.

We are now at the point that my H says he will move out because of the dog.

I would appreciate any advice about what I should do now. Is there something obvious I am not doing that is causing or not preventing these problems we are having.

Is there an age he will get to where it will be easier? Is there somewhere he can go until then?

If it gets to the point we have to contact a rescue, who should we contact? Or is there an alternative to a rescue? I’m also aware that offering to pay for all his care, including food, vet, health, training etc, even if he is not living with us, would be helpful.

Please help me think through this.

OP posts:
LookslovelyinSpringtime · 26/12/2021 19:29

Take him to your nearest dog rescue centre. A GR will be snapped up. He’s bored and under exercised . You were wrong to take him on with no garden and working FT with young children.

Stickytreacle · 26/12/2021 19:30

I would contact a breed specific rescue, your set up is totally against you in helping this dog, having to go up and down four flights of stairs will make house training practically impossible. For the dogs and your family's sale I'd rehome responsibly now.

fucketyfuckwit · 26/12/2021 19:30

I agree with PP. He cannot live in a flat, it's cruel. He needs so much more.

Contact a good rescue, maybe one for Golden Retrievers.

He is still young so can be trained to be a great dog.

tillyandmilly · 26/12/2021 19:31

Sorry but this has made me mad - how ridiculous getting a dog in lockdown ! I am sorry you are dealing with this but you must rehome the poor dog - it’s probably not expending enough energy and unfair to be cooped up in a flat with no garden - the rescue centres would not rehome this breed of dog to a flat - the kindest thing would be to take it to a rescue centre -

MrsTerryPratchett · 26/12/2021 19:32

Of course he wees in the house. Toilet training isn't going to happen easily in a flat.

It was a kind gesture but the practicality isn't good for you or the dog. Rehome him thoughtfully.

Figgygal · 26/12/2021 19:32

Your life is incompatible with a dog
Sounds like it needs significant training the poor thing
I would look into local rehoming centres who can find someone to take him on
I understand why you felt you had to take him on but its not fair to continue on the current set up

BiteyShark · 26/12/2021 19:33

9 months of age is a very difficult time as they are adult size pushing boundaries and hitting the teenage phase which can last many many months.

I think it ultimately comes down to whether you can work with your DH to put the effort into training which includes managing the dogs environment to stop the destruction/stealing etc. As it doesn't sound like your DH is onboard it is going to be an up hill battle so maybe rehoming in this case is a valid option.

If rehoming try a breed specific rescue.

If keeping I would recommend a 1-1 trainer to come in and help you with a plan to manage the teenage dog behaviour and if you have to money swop dog walker for daycare to give you more dog free time when you are working.

PartyPrawnRingGames · 26/12/2021 19:36

I understand why you thought he might struggle to be rehomed and tried to keep him which was a kind thing to do, but I agree that a family friendly GR who is a generally a good boy will soon find a good family. You wouldn't need to pay for all his upkeep but a donation would be appreciated I'm sure.

myyellowcar · 26/12/2021 19:36

Realistically in your circumstances you aren’t going to be able to successfully manage this dog. Take him to rescue, even if you have to keep him a while until they have space, he’ll be snapped up.

MadMadMadamMim · 26/12/2021 19:37

You cannot keep a golden retriever in a fourth floor inner city flat.

I'm not surprised you can't cope. Please re-home the dog with a breed specific rescue, if possible.

AnnaMarieQ · 26/12/2021 19:37

You don’t have the means to meet the needs of an inquisitive 9 month old puppy. It’s best for the dog if he is rehomed, via a dog rescue centre. He’ll have a great life with someone who can adequately accommodate his needs. A 9 month d GR won’t be in the kennels for long. Do it for the sake of the dog and yourself

GreenClock · 26/12/2021 19:38

You sound lovely and your intentions were good, but accepting this dog was not well thought-out. Rehome him asap OP.

kikipie · 26/12/2021 19:38

Breed specific rescue asap. Poor dog

Kshhuxnxk · 26/12/2021 19:39

Nothing wrong with having a dog in a flat - I had a border collie or two and never had any issues. The issue you have is you don't have the time for him. Rehome.

Fredstheteds · 26/12/2021 19:40

Agree breed rescue or police as a working dog. We had a goldie, she was fab and a rescue.I would love another but a spaniel is perfect at the mo.

lynntheyresexswappers · 26/12/2021 19:40

Rehome him, ASAP.

Thesurprisingegg · 26/12/2021 19:44

Thank you for all replies. I’m going to start researching a breed specific rescue.

Just to be clear, I am not blaming the dog for dog-type behaviour. I know I have misjudged this.

OP posts:
RedMozzieYellowMozzie · 26/12/2021 19:48

Kudos to you for trying with him op it doesn't sound like it's been easy for you

onlychildhamster · 26/12/2021 19:56

Sorry to derail this thread but if dogs are not suited to flats why are there so many huge dogs in my development.one guy even has 2 dogs! My downstairs neighbor adopted a French pug over lockdown. In the London suburbs but each block has 3 storeys. So many of my neighbours have dogs. We do have a communal garden though... My development is officially
'pet friendly'.

Wheresmywoolyjumpers · 26/12/2021 19:59

You tried to do the right thing, and are still doing that. Dont beat yourself up, but do rehome him as soon as you can - you will all be better off.

twilightermummy · 26/12/2021 20:09

You could sell him on to recoup some of the money with the things that he has ruined?

You’d need to be taking him out every hour for positive toilet training. It’s impossible in short. Don’t lose your marriage over it!

I had to laugh at the eating thing - my 5 year old labradoodle is exactly like that and I don’t know why but it’s the thing that annoys me the most! I was only thinking that the other day.

pastypirate · 26/12/2021 20:12

Op I think you have tried very very hard with this challenge.

The only practical advice I can suggest is using a crate and usually I say the opposite. A crate would give you some control back when you are struggling up supervise the dog in between now and when you rehome him. Either that or stair gates to contain him in one room though my cocker could scale them.

pantherrose · 26/12/2021 20:23

@BiteyShark

9 months of age is a very difficult time as they are adult size pushing boundaries and hitting the teenage phase which can last many many months.

I think it ultimately comes down to whether you can work with your DH to put the effort into training which includes managing the dogs environment to stop the destruction/stealing etc. As it doesn't sound like your DH is onboard it is going to be an up hill battle so maybe rehoming in this case is a valid option.

If rehoming try a breed specific rescue.

If keeping I would recommend a 1-1 trainer to come in and help you with a plan to manage the teenage dog behaviour and if you have to money swop dog walker for daycare to give you more dog free time when you are working.

This is excellent advice. Seems he has the potential to be a lovely family dog, but needs a home willing to bear with him through adolescence! Not easy for you and being passed from home to home just as he gets settled will not help him either. You wouldn’t have taken him or posted if you didn’t care, I wish you the best of luck in making the best decision for you, your dog and your family.
Glitterb · 26/12/2021 20:25

I’m sorry you have been left to deal with this, it sounds like you have tried but it is just making you all unhappy.

With regards to weeing in the house, has he been neutered? We had a spaniel who was terrible for this until he was neutered.

A breed specific rescue could be worth contacting, even just to discuss it.

Motorina · 26/12/2021 21:19

Teenage dogs are hard! Really hard! Particularly when - as I suspect is the case here - his first owners didn't give him adequate early input.

The housetraining alone is a near full time job. He needs to be watched super closely and taken out every 20 minutes or so til the penny drops. Can it be done? Absolutely. Can it be done whilst working an 80 hour week and wrangling four kids? No. It can't.

I appreciate you thought you were doign the right thing and have tried your best. No blame! But the reality is you are unable right now to give this dog the time and attention he needs. So either you radically change your lifestyle, or you rehome him.

I would always suggest rehoming via a breed specific rescue. If you google something like 'golden retriever welfare' or 'golden retriever rescue' then something should come up.