It occurred to me that if i included my doodles names and age in my profile name it would save a lot of explaining, & questions back and forth with each post. I know many people already include their doodles names. Anyone think this is a good idea?
One problem. i was planning to periodically update the doodles ages as I went along. Now I see that changing your profile name changes it on all past posts as well. Someday people will wonder why puppy type questions were being asked about geriatric dogs! Help!
My page has the 3 of us in the title. I get confused when it is just the Doodles name and not their humans included. Yes, it is another CRAFTS moment. I do have the baby-gaga for each one for their ages. I think their birthdates would be a good idea. You would then be able to answer a question or pose a question to someone with a Doodle the same age.
I didn't think of putting Ned's age on my profile name but I do have it in the information part. I do like when the doodle's name or names are part of your profile or at least if they are listed prominently in the information area. I would also like it if people stated clearly what their dog is - goldendoodle, labradoodle, generation, size, names. It seems more fun and personal. Perhaps we could suggest to Adina that she alter the registration to include this information as specific questions.
There is a limit to how many questions I can include in the profile question section and I'm already past my limit. However, the second profile question is
"What Type of Doodle(s) do you have? What are their names? Tell us about your doodle(s) or any other pets you have!"
So members can be as detailed as they want here and include the breeder, etc. It's an open ended question. Because so many have multiple doodles it was too hard to include a multiple choice that included all that one at a time. So I figured the all encompassing question above allowed everyone to say as much as they wanted.
Also don't forget all members have a text box they can use freely to add whatever info they want that's not asked about.