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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!unix!cole
- From: cole@unix.SRI.COM (Susan Cole)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.dogs
- Subject: Re: Large Breeds Showing Age
- Message-ID: <41874@unix.SRI.COM>
- Date: 3 Jan 93 22:43:54 GMT
- References: <93003.095655U58664@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Organization: SRI International, Menlo Park, California
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <93003.095655U58664@uicvm.uic.edu> U58664@uicvm.uic.edu (Francine Cannarozzi) writes:
- >I'm just throwing this out for discussion for those netters who have
- >larger breeds. We have a Great Dane mix (with black lab or German S.H.
- >Pointer, I'm not too sure). He's 5-1/2 years old, (we adopted him at
- >3-yrs old) weighs in at about 87 pounds. When do larger dogs start to
- >age? I noticed about 6 months ago he was getting more white on his
- >muzzle. He normally has an all jet black coat with white on his chest and
- >back paws. Now I am beginning to see flecks of white all over.
- >I had a professional portait done last June and the difference is very
- >marked, most especially around his muzzle and jaws.
-
- My dog Nova is supposedly 1/2 Great Dane, 1/4 lab and 1/4 German Shepherd.
- Both the Great Dane and lab are clearly visible in her. Right now she weighs
- about 65 pounds, which may be slightly underweight. I would say that both
- she and your dog are large but not giant. Like you, I often wondered how
- long my dog would live, though, because the really giant breeds do seem to be
- old at eight or so.
-
- Nova will turn *fourteen* this month. She has aged dramatically in the last
- couple of years, but I think graying is the least of it. (After all, people
- often begin to gray in their thirties and we don't consider *them* old then,
- now do we? <wince>) She was originally all black. She began to gray at six
- or seven. As time has gone on, the white has gone from just her muzzle to
- her paws, around her eyes, and a few random white hairs on her body.
-
- Cloudy eyes seem to be inevitable in old dogs. Nova's are very cloudy, but
- she still seems to see quite adequately. Hearing loss is another inevitable,
- and it is indisputable that Nova's lost much of her hearing. Sometimes she
- doesn't wake up and go out to be fed when my housemate feeds the other dogs.
- That's indisputable proof!
-
- Nova's appetite is still excellent, but she has lost weight over the last
- year or two. I have always fed her Science Diet; she's been on the Senior
- for several years. Not metabolizing food as well also seems to be a sign of
- aging. (Side question -- should I be feeding her twice a day?)
-
- Nova still loves to go for walks, but her back legs are weakening. Sometimes
- she limps slightly, and she doesn't have the stamina she used to. The legs
- have been the most dramatic sign of her aging. It's sad when she falls while
- trying to do something, like come up the basement steps or get into the car,
- that she used to do with ease. So far she has picked herself up almost every
- time, but a couple of times someone had to help her, when she just hasn't
- seemed to have the confidence to get up. She just doesn't understand why she
- fell, and that's hard to see. I dread the day her legs really can't support
- her.
-
- I also think Nova is more susceptible to cold now. Sometimes when I come
- into the living room in the morning, she is trembling. It could just be an
- old-age tremor, but it has occurred to me that at 60 degrees or so, the house
- might be too cold for her. I will probably try replacing her foam pad with a
- "cuddler" type and see if that helps.
-
- Nova has also had a slight cough for four or more years now. Her previous
- vet thought it was a heart problem and put her on heart medication; I've since
- taken her to another who says her heart is perfectly normal and has put her
- on a broncho-dilator instead. She still coughs sometimes so the cause is
- not resolved.
-
- At 5 1/2 and only 87 pounds, I'd be surprised if Beast is more than just
- mature. I think the things I've described above are a better indicator of
- decline, but at any rate, if Beast is noticeably slowing down, it wouldn't
- hurt to have him checked by a good vet.
-
- Good luck -- Susan
-