Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Just wondering if anyone can help us find a Irish doodle. I have found a few but some are 1800-2000. We don't want to pay that much. We are willing to pay for a pet but I think thats alot. We would appriciate any help...
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Oh the home damage.
On my way home from work around midnight, alone at a traffic light a huge deer--no dog, came running into the intersection. He bolted straight into my open car door as I called him. A beautiful Irish Setter. Off we went to my house. In my mind I would take him home, keep him safe and out of street until morning and find out what where he lived. HA
As I drove the next 3miles in my little Beetle Bug I was mauled with excitement. Really, how did I make it home safely?
He bounced into my house, ripped down the drapes, over turned about 20 potted plants, dishes flying in the kitchen zooming, no flying, from room to room all the while destroying everything I owned. No joke. Everything. Okay, this was all in the first 60 seconds. It was a horrify hour trying to tame his energy. He was such a pretty sweet happy boy. But he belonged on a race track.
By 1am I was able to get a hold of his tags, found an address, and ran with him to my car. Oh no, not again. He and I in the tiny car. As I rushed down the street, I opened the door and he bounced on to his house. I returned home to mess :(
I feel the need to share our experience with Kirby. When we wanted a 2nd doodle, we went looking for a labradoodle or a goldendoodle, but we found Kirby who needed a home :) He is a wonderful dog. He does have more energy than Dexter, but it is not that bad. He is now almost 5 and spends much of his time laying around sleeping. You definitely should be prepared for a more high energy dog if you go with an Irish Setter Poodle but it is not unmanageable. Kirby's mom is a field irish setter so he does have a hunting/prey drive and we cannot let him offleash in a non-fenced area due to his hunting instincts. It is all very manageable, but I just want to provide you information.
Kirby is honestly much better behaved than Dexter. Kirby does not steal stuff, does not come up on furniture unless invited, etc. I wouldn't discount getting an Irish Setterdoodle, but just make sure you know your puppy may need more exercise. We love Kirby a lot and never have regretted adopting him. Good luck in your search.
On a positive note - our Maddie is an Irish doodle - now 1 year old. Dad was a beautiful Irish setter and mom was a white Standard poodle. She is from Ontario Canada ($800.00) where we live but I do know that a couple of puppies from Maddie's litter were going to the states. Maddie's was born in the livingroom of the breeders house so she is not from a puppy mill. We were allowed to go see the puppies several times before we finally picked Maddie up.
We wouldn't trade Maddie for anything. She was easy to train, hasn't wrecked a thing in our house (the yard is a different story - lol), did very well in her obedience classes, is able to be offleash on the trails, loves everyone and is very submissive at the dog park. She's been very healthy but did just get over a mild case of kennel cough - it was running rampant in our city a few weeks ago. I have several pictures of the litter on my page. If you would like the information just e-mail me.
I have a f1b Irish Doodle: Half Irish doodle, half standard poodle. She's a little over 3 months now and has been a great! At 9 weeks, she can 'sit', 'shake', 'down' and recently can 'stay' for almost a minute. She is now crate trained (sleeps in from 9:30pm to 7am), and has gotten used to me trimming the insides of her foot and clipping close to her eyes. Still having trouble trimming her bottom, but then again, I don't think anyone would ever get used to that either ;)
Lately, have walked her just around the block to try and teach her to walk next to/behind us. I don't think it will be difficult for her to learn. I plan to walk her longer after her last shot. We have a bit of a challenge in potty training, but it really isn't that bad.
She's an indoor dog. She can't stand to be in the backyard for more than 30 minutes after getting her ya-yas out. And Lucy can jump! She doesn't greet us by jumping, but when it's feeding time, she does dash to her kennel and hops along the way.
Is she high energy? I don't think anything out of normal. I have had 2 labs that had higher energy than her. And her temperament is wonderful!
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