When Lonesome showed up here. He was a stray. I'm sure someone dropped him
out. He would stand in the road and look down like he was waiting for them
to come back for him. He almost got hit several times because he would stand
in the road. He finally came on in the yard when he got hungry enough. He
would jump on you and try to hump your leg. He would grab your arm or sleeve
and shake. My clothes was all ripped up and I had bruices all over me. One
day he knocked me down and grapped the back of my neck. I figured he would
kill me, but he didn't bite down or shake. He just moved away in a minute.
Now he was not a mean dog. He didn't growl. He was just playing, but he
would really hurt me. I took him and had him neutered. The vet guessed him
to be about 1 at the time. After he was neutered he never behaved like that
again. He never once tried to hump anyone or grab and shake. He calmed right
now. So I think neutering does help their behavior sometimes. It depends on
the dog. Betty



On 4/14/07, arlene weaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

  when i got jimmy he was ten years old  he was humping the air 24/7 i
felt sorry for the little guy he got no rest.  the vet said he did not know
if nueting would fix the problem.   i was lucky first of all he came out of
the op just fine and about a month later he stopped humping.  so i guess
nuetering does help in some of the male behavior .  i believe in nuetering a
dog.   i have and old fashion idear  that if you nuet as a puppy you will
always have a puppy in manners  if you nuet an adult dog then you have and
adult dog.     arlene

*Barbara Littlefield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>* wrote:

 *I have had two spayed females, and both of them were just fine. No
weight gain.*
**
*Barbara & Raul*
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

----- Original Message -----
*From:* marsha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Sent:* Saturday, April 14, 2007 11:17 AM
*Subject:* Re: [Chihuahuas] Re: ? on neutering (marsha)



I am in no way a medical expert. In all honesty, I guess the health
benefits is just something I have "heard" over the years, but really have no
way to back up. I do know that there are certain cancers that are no longer
a concern once a spay/neuter is done. That much must be a fact since it is
cancer of the parts no longer there....can't get cancer in something you
don't have, lol. Other health benefits....????? I dunno......you have
pointed out a fact of life.....sometimes we hear things all of our lives and
assume them to be true and believe them, and maybe they aint true???
Hopefully someone with more medical info than me can give a better answer.
All I can honestly put my money on is that it prevents certain cancers
(which may be a rare cancer in the first place...who knows) and it helps
prevents pet over population. Those are the only facts I could honestly
swear too.  I know from personal experience that it does not prevent the
majority of behavioral problems that people expect it to. I have yet to see
a personality change in any of my spayed/neutered pets.

Another thing I have always heard and do personally feel it to be true due
to my own experience, but have nothing to back it up with, is that spaying a
female does tend to make her gain weight. Maybe it is just me, but every
female I have ever had that has been spayed has gained a lot of weight.

My advice to you...keep doing what you have been. Ask questions, read
answers, talk to the vet, and in the end, make a decision that you feel is
best.

Marsha



----- Original Message -----
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*To:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Sent:* Saturday, April 14, 2007 11:43 AM
*Subject:* Re: [Chihuahuas] Re: ? on neutering (marsha)


 Dear Marsha
I have also been stuck in the neutering quandary with my boy. It was
scheduled but his pre-surgery blood showed his BUN too high, then it was
constant RS, then his being compromised with Lymes. So I have had to keep
putting it off. So of course I am paying close attention to this thread and
the discussion. My guy is a saint (st henry LOL) he occassionally humps his
teddy but is as obedient as a boy could be (we do agility etc), never
aggressive, no leg lifting and cannot run away (never has tried, but I know
it only takes once). I asked at Cornell regarding the health benefits and
beyond the usual behavior issues, population control, and testicular cancer,
it seemed his life was not improved in any way nor his health insured
because of doing it.
Please know (I think anyone who knows me on here will attest) I would do
anything for this guy to keep him well and want nothing less than that for
him. Please share (I'm sure this is the 1,000 th time) your reasons beyond
behavior that this needs to be done. I am ready to do it because society
thinks it should be but in my heart am not really convinced enough to put
him through it.
Thanks a million!

best,
michelle and henry
in the beautiful Catskill Mountains, NY



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