Know About Golden Retriever Dog | Puppy - Bhola Shola

Know About Golden Retriever Dog | Puppy - Bhola Shola

For any Enquiry call +91 8289088895 Dog Breed - Know About Golden Retriever Find more at http://www.bholashola.com Also, Like our facebook page:   / bholashola   9 Things you MUST KNOW Before Getting a Golden Retriever! Golden Retriever Dog Price in India 2022 (Monthly Expenses Included) Golden Retriever vs Labrador Retriever - Which is Better? - Dog vs Dog Golden Retriever vs. Labrador: Which Breed Is Right For You? Funniest & Cutest Golden Retriever Puppies Pet Care is a pet awareness initiative by Harwinder Grewal. Who is an owner of Grewal Pet Shop and Farm, Main Road, Adampur. In this video, he tells about Know About Golden Retriever in the Hindi Language. 1.Dating back to 19th century Scotland, the Golden Retriever was bred for the purposes of retrieving wildfowl, which was a popular activity among Scottish nobility. In order to retrieve in the diverse marshlands of Scotland, retrievers were bred with the now extinct Tweed Water Spaniel to create the breed that exists today. The breed was developed in Glen Affric at a wealthy estate from 1835 to 1890 by a Scottish nobleman and avid hunter named Sir Dudley Majoribanks. During this time, Majoribanks sought to create a breed that was a talented hunter and more attentive to its owner than the existing retriever breeds. Modern Golden Retrievers have a natural love for water, keen sense of smell, and a soft grip, traits that they inherited from their 19th century ancestors. The Golden Retriever was first registered in 1903 in England, and soon after in the United States in 1925. 2. This sporting breed has a sweet, gentle, people-pleasing personality. A well-bred Golden Retriever does not have strong guarding instincts, so don’t expect him to protect your home from burglars. He will, however, make friends with them and show them where the treats are. 3. Cheerful, easy to train and eager to please, the Golden Retriever is what you see in the dictionary when you look up “Perfect Family Dog.” Goldens love everyone, especially children, and get along well with new people and strange dogs. They draw admiring looks – and usually loving pats – from almost everyone they meet. The Golden is an active dog who will retrieve a tennis ball until your arm gives out. The breed’s loyalty, intelligence and stable temperament have made them the darlings of the service dog world. Their smiling faces and sun-kissed coats have brought more than a few to movie fame, including a starring role in two “Homeward Bound” movies. 4. The Golden was developed to be a working retriever, and that means a high level of activity is a must for these dogs. They are best suited to life with active singles, couples or families in which someone is home during the day and will enjoy spending time with and exercising the dog. Goldens love, love, love their people, and they don’t do well as home-alone dogs. They will find their own (destructive) entertainment if no one is home to channel their energy through walking, jogging, hiking, swimming or playing fetch, plus brain games that will wear them out mentally. 5. Like many breeds developed to hunt, the Golden has diverged into different types – primarily the fluffy, teddy-bear Goldens of the show ring and the leaner, darker, smaller and less-coated athletes popular as hunting companions and dog-sports competitors. Each camp swears their “type” is the best. Dogs bred for looks only – and for the currently trendy near-white color – are anecdotally less healthy and some seem to sport a considerably un-Golden temperament, including problems with biting. Hunting and dog-sports lines may be a little too energetic for many families, but the traditional stable temperaments remain intact, and they may be healthier overall. 6. Keep your Golden occupied by taking him for extended walks or hikes of at least an hour a day (or break it up into two or three outings), make him your jogging or running partner, or teach him to run alongside your bicycle. Take him swimming at your local lake or beach. He excels at all dog sports, including agility, obedience, flyball, rally, freestyle, dock diving and tracking. Being a therapy dog appeals to his love of people and satisfies his need to get out and do something. If you don’t have kids yourself, enlist the neighbors’ kids to throw tennis balls for your Golden to fetch. That can keep them busy for hours. Teach him tricks and acquire an assortment of puzzle toys to challenge his brain. Often, mental work is just as satisfying — and tiring — as physical exercise, although it can’t replace it entirely. Thanks for watching our video. Please like this video if you liked it. Also, subscribe to our channel here:    / bholashola_   ~-~~-~~~-~~-~ Please watch: "Our Collaboration with Doggies Squad"    • Video   ~-~~-~~~-~~-~