Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Have some stunning Thai Ridgeback pups free to good homes.

These dogs are 100%TRB from a great and healthy line.
They will be 24-27 kilos when grown, very athletic, very intelligent and easy to train if you invest the time.
Plenty of info on the breed online or ask me if you have any questions.

4 boys 1 girl.
I will do a breakdown of each pup's physicality and personality below.
 

184696.jpg

Posted

First up Mr Flash.
This boy is so athletic, already wiry and fast, even at his young age.
He has great speed and an amazing jump.
He could lift a hare with ease when older.
Loves people and a little live wire.
Fearless.
Thumb/foot comparison so you can see he will be a 24-27 kilo dog.
184807.jpg.322aaa6a4ca9559801e0fe35fb581f6b.jpg184834.thumb.jpg.e4f70dc7c9fe13518dd3e32569293813.jpg184833.thumb.jpg.53d2b550637e8ffaf0d46f2e61ed0387.jpg184811.thumb.jpg.4f3392967f240196a07d5cacaa9b34b4.jpg184808.thumb.jpg.2901b88d8506406c15a821797f63de3b.jpg

184806.jpg

  • Like 2
Posted

Next is Harry, get's that for Harry Houdini, he is an escape artist.

Sharp as a tack this kid, he can reason most any puzzle.
Loves people, very affectionate.
Loves some space.
Stocky fella so will probably have more muscle than Mr Flash above.

184835.jpg

184836.jpg

184837.jpg

184855.jpg

184805.jpg

184830.jpg

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
11 minutes ago, Hummin said:

Great family dogs if you have time the land size and patience to train them properly! 

 

What is the price?

 

 

Free to good people.
I found them easy as pie to train.
After reading online about their supposed difficulty I thought they would be difficult, not at all.
Excellent walkers, mine run by the bicycle with no issues.
I'm not much of a tricks type of owner, just useful commands but I was surprised how quickly they learnt all the basics.

I've seen a couple of Thai fellas who have trained theirs to walk off lead through the city and shopping centers.

Edited by Steiner
  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, Steiner said:

Free to good people.
I found them easy as pie to train.
After reading online about their supposed difficulty I thought they would be difficult, not at all.
Excellent walkers, mine run by the bicycle with no issues.
I'm not much of a tricks type of owner, just useful commands but I was surprised how quickly they learnt all the basics.

 

 

Did a comparison of Bully and Ridgeback, and for sure next breed will be a ridgeback, but for now we got 3 to care for. 

 

Good luck

Screenshot_2023-03-28-10-21-30-76_40deb401b9ffe8e1df2f1cc5ba480b12.jpg

Posted

Reported Flame post removed.

 

I would strongly suggest anyone obtaining a dog from anywhere get a bloodtest done BEFORE you take it home. Know what you have before its too late and Vet bils start rolling in.

 

Those considering more than 1. read about littermate syndrome.

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
24 minutes ago, Steiner said:

Free to good people.
I found them easy as pie to train.
After reading online about their supposed difficulty I thought they would be difficult, not at all.
Excellent walkers, mine run by the bicycle with no issues.
I'm not much of a tricks type of owner, just useful commands but I was surprised how quickly they learnt all the basics.

I've seen a couple of Thai fellas who have trained theirs to walk off lead through the city and shopping centers.

They are truly the most stunning Ridgebacks I have ever seen.

Adopted a dog from the OP - 1 year ago. A Bitch from this litter recently.

Have had Oz Grand Champion and other thoroughbreds over the last 50 years.
These guys are the best natured and most perfect dogs I have ever had.

If you have the right environment, go check out these guy’s 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, Steiner said:

Have some stunning Thai Ridgeback pups free to good homes.

Thailand is a very big country, so would be useful to mention the province/city where you are located for people interested...

  • Like 2
Posted (edited)

 

Lovely puppies and the parents are great looking dogs ! 

 

We were considering getting a TRB puppy just a few months ago but ended up choosing another breed.

If I'd seen your post then we might have changed our minds !

 

 

Edited by realfunster
Typo
  • Like 1
  • 1 month later...
Posted
On 3/28/2023 at 3:44 PM, CharlieH said:

Reported Flame post removed.

 

I would strongly suggest anyone obtaining a dog from anywhere get a bloodtest done BEFORE you take it home. Know what you have before its too late and Vet bils start rolling in.

 

Those considering more than 1. read about littermate syndrome.

These pups were not inbred western dog breeds, they come from a very diverse gene pool.

Re littermate syndrome, I have seen no issues with my dogs.
I had 2 pups got too 2 homes from the last litter and they had zero issues.
One of the current pups was away for a week but I was unhappy with his circumstance, had given him to a Thai family who promptly sold him to an unsatisfactory owner so I took him back as that was not the agreement.
The rest of the pups were all over him on his return and there has been no scraps, even over food.

I have a brother and sister that are almost 2 yrs and have no issues, they even share a plate of leftovers and lick it clean.


I firmly believe littermate syndrome is due to confined spaces, these pups have a good space to run and lose and aggression.
I think that would be a polar opposite if they were caged.
The remaining pups still often sleep curled up together.

The alpha dog syndrome has been shown to be directly linked to available space, wolves are much less alpha than people think and wolves will even allow male dogs from other packs to join their pack.

  • Like 2

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...