Cockerpoo and Cavap...
 

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[Closed] Cockerpoo and Cavapoo dogs...

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...we have been looking after a cavapoo for the last week and sadly hes gone home...wife and kids were smitten with him (cat wasn't over the moon)

Its stared "I think we should get one" etc etc as much as I want one I cant get my head around the cost of one I could buy a small country for the price of one.

Reasons for having great round children and very lovable dogs blah blah

They hardly come up for re homing as I've phoned a few up.

Anyone got one ? Where did you get from ? what did you pay ?

Thanks in advance


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 3:52 pm
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There is a guy in Melton Mowbray who breeds them on a small scale - ask through [url= http://melton-vets.co.uk/ ]Melton Vets [/url]


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 3:55 pm
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Just buy a poodle in medium, not a little tiny one or a gert big one but a medium sized one, no shedding and loads of character and fun, you don't have to give it a poncy puffball cut, they look like little bears naturally
Or ideally take the family to a dogs home and pick a rescue..


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 4:27 pm
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If you went a designer cross breed get a Lurcher no need to pay more than £250.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 4:33 pm
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Have a Cockerpoo, Monty, 9 months old. Got him from a breeder in Waltham Cross I think it was. We have 2 kids and the youngest gives him hell and he never properly bites him in retaliation. Great temperament, costs a bit in grooming but Mrs-g plans to take the clippers to him herself instead in future. Cost, just shy of 4 figures which I thought was ridiculous at the time, but am more than happy with now


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 4:38 pm
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WTF is a Cavapoo when it's at home.

Stop bloody inbreading animals you freaks.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 4:58 pm
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Stop bloody inbreading animals you freaks.

Don't you mean outbreeding?

In fact it's exactly what we should be doing to combat the problems of inbreeding and increase heterosis


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:04 pm
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Mongrels.

Why not visit a rescue centre and see what wants to adopt you as a family?

Give a down on its luck dog a forever home and reduce the demand for backyard breeders or puppy farmers.

It's a win win.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:06 pm
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Straight cocker spaniels are great with kids, and extremely loyal loveable dogs too.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:09 pm
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Mongrels

Indeed. They all have stupid cross combo names - so they can be sold on Gumtree for insane amounts.

Labradoodlerussell anyone?


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:19 pm
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We've got a Cavachon- she's a year old now. Small cute and fluffy and really good with kids. She doesn't shed hair much at all and I've got allergies but have no issues with her.

Paid £350 for her in February - there seemed to be more of them for a good price in South Wales than anywhere else. Both parents were pedigree in their breeds and we got to see the whole litter with the mother (a bichon frise).


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:23 pm
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WTF is a Cavapoo when it's at home.

Stop bloody inbreading animals you freaks

I love how the internet gives those that know not the difference between **** and clay a platform.

I'm not a dog fan, but every time I see my sister's cavapoo I want to dognap it. Lovely sweet natured thing. The dog, not my sister.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:34 pm
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If you must breed from a pedigree dog the best thing you can do is get a poodle up it.
Seems to improve any breed.
Mongrels are best!
Get to the dogs' home and find something unique.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:34 pm
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Get a proper dog.

Spaniels are fabulous, poodles are fabulous, Labradors are fabulous.

Blend em' together and they are stupid vanity projects.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:36 pm
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As Khani says just go for a poodle or a cocker to avoid the price of the new designer mungrels.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:49 pm
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Shihtpoo ftw


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:50 pm
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Get a proper dog.

The exact words a drunken truck driver who had parked some ladies in at a Tesco's while he bought some fags said to me when I told him to move his truck and he saw my daughter's cavapoo so I told him to have a go unless he was scared of a bald fat bloke with a little white dog and then he attacked me and I thumped him so hard he had to have a little lie down. The EXACT words.

They're a perfectly proper dog. Lots of energy and great with kids, doesn't shed hair and pretty easy to train. Really sound health-wise too, unlike so many pure-breeds. Downside? Our's can be a but yappy when the door bell goes (which is her job, I suppose) and likes to jump up on strangers.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 5:55 pm
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Spaniels are fabulous, poodles are fabulous, Labradors are fabulous.

Blend em' together and they are stupid vanity projects.

Funny I always think the exact same thing abkut the inbred poor excuses for dogs that the Kennel Club promote.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:04 pm
 myti
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Or go down the animal shelter and they'll soon be smitten with whichever one does the best sad eyes and waggy tail from its cage.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:07 pm
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Had 4 Springers over the years now got a working cocker/poodle cross - best dog we've had by a mile! Runs all day, lies on settee all night, loves our 14 month granddaughter and doesn't moult.

It's a proper dog!


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:11 pm
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We have an Aussie Doodle. Expensive, brilliant, lovable mongrel.

All dogs are 'proper' dogs.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:18 pm
 km79
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Show them some photies of puppy farms or some cruel youtube videos, tell them thats where they come from, do they really want to contribute to that? Now you've saved a few quid, get down to the rescue place.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:18 pm
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All these designer crossbreeds are exempt from Kennel Club breeding regulations and monitoring and so generally the dog breeders/farmers/factories don't give two shits about dog welfare. Buying one only perpetuates the industry.
Pedigree dogs are by definition inbreds and so each breed comes with a list of common ailments and conditions.

Get a rescue dog.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:19 pm
 poah
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just go get a mongrel from the dogs trust or other animal shelter.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:19 pm
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I'm not too keen on the Cockerpoo, labradoodle, etc types of dogs. We have an English Cocker Spaniel, (working). Very freindly dog, great with kids. Loads of energy, never stops. She is 2 years old and I haven't seen it sleep yet! Can take it for a ten mile walk and she will still run laps around the garden.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:23 pm
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I don't see what the issue is that people have with these little cross breed dogs - as long as they don't cost stupid amounts of money.

Ours has a great temperament - she wants to play a lot during the day - but on an evening she's happy to lie on someone's lap and cuddle / sleep.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 6:55 pm
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Its stared "I think we should get one" etc etc as much as I want one I cant get my head around the cost of one I could buy a small country for the price of one.

Not the cheapest breed, but purchase price is fairly insignificant compared to ongoing costs over it's life, and potential vet's bills.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:03 pm
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thebrowndog - Member

Get a proper dog.

The exact words a drunken truck driver who had parked some ladies in at a Tesco's while he bought some fags said to me when I told him to move his truck and he saw my daughter's cavapoo so I told him to have a go unless he was scared of a bald fat bloke with a little white dog and then he attacked me and I thumped him so hard he had to have a little lie down. The EXACT words.

Charmed :roll:.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:05 pm
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Joebristol has made a very good point. Some 'breeders' are charging far too much money for what is basically a cross breed. When we lived in Australia we bought an English Bull Mastiff / Rhodesian Ridgeback cross. Didn't cost much, but was the softest dog you could wish for.

It's always better to see the parent dogs though, to judge the temperament.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:06 pm
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No one has answered yet, wtf is a cavapoo?


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:06 pm
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If only Jamie could somehow photoshop a spendy watch, a cockapoo, a fast car, a road bike with discs, some misplaced racist/sexist/brexist outrage and a tattoo on a fatty, in one beautiful piece..

...go on 🙂

No one has answered yet, wtf is a cavapoo?

It's like a bollecollie, but goes better with nibbles.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:07 pm
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We rescued our Labrador Poodle cross for around £250 and paid the same for our Poodle/Pomerainian cross. They are both excellent, healthy dogs that came from good homes and weren't anything to do with Puppy farms or any of that stuff.

I also have a 12 year old Labrador and to see my formerly healthy dog succumb to dreadful arthritis is breaking my heart. Not all pure breds are a good bet and they are also not cheap many even apparently healthy dogs can have issues from inbreeding.

Some people are charging silly money for certain crosses but 500 -700 seems reasonable for such excellent dogs compared to say 4k for a French Bulldog that will have no end of problems.

http://www.doodletrust.com/


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:28 pm
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[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:37 pm
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We just bought a Cavapoo nearly two weeks ago and he is a great little dog so far. He is 12 weeks old today and getting more cute everyday, more cheeky as well and growing with confidence. We did all the wrong things and bought him from someone on Gumtree, didn't know the history of the parents etc but we have given him a good home and so far he is fine. Very good natured, sleeps through the night on his own and very playful.

We did look at re-homing a dog first but there wasn't a bog choice locally with lots of staffies and older dogs with issues. I think that these cross breeds are actually giving a better gene pool and hopefully less issues.

He cost us £550 and as angeldust says this will be nothing compared to vets fees, insurance and toys for him over his life.

I am trying to post a picture but struggling to work out how. I might manage later.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 7:50 pm
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[img] http://s1262.photobucket.com/user/David_Yardley/media/IMG_0239_zpsizmqzjym.jpg.html ][IMG] http://i1262.photobucket.com/albums/ii619/David_Yardley/IMG_0239_zpsizmqzjym.jp g" target="_blank">http://s1262.photobucket.com/user/David_Yardley/media/IMG_0239_zpsizmqzjym.jpg.html ][IMG] http://i1262.photobucket.com/albums/ii619/David_Yardley/IMG_0239_zpsizmqzjym.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL][/img]

Managed to upload a picture.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 8:26 pm
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Cockerpoos are fab but then I'm biased! Did you know they've been a thing since the 50'start in the 'States?

My friend has a cockerpoo and a cavapoo. Cavapoos are too small for me.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 9:16 pm
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Lurcher for the win, The original and best designer dog. I am biased having had several different versions.


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 9:17 pm
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Runs all day, lies on settee all night, loves our 14 month granddaughter and doesn't moult.

It's a proper dog!

+1

[url=

(now upside down in front of fire)


 
Posted : 29/12/2016 9:20 pm
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Thanks for all the advice and helpful tips

I suggested a giraffe this morning it didn't go down well !


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 9:07 am
 poah
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Some people are charging silly money for certain crosses but 500 -700 seems reasonable

500-700 is silly money for a mongrel, I paid £500 for my GSD and thats only because the animal shelters wouldn't let us have a GSD because we had young kids at the time.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 10:20 am
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Risks flaming but we also have a cockapoo - in this case a working cocker mum and poodle dad. She's nearly 4 now and she's brilliant, runs as long as you want so that can be following the bike for 8 or 9 miles or 30 mins rummaging in the woods while the kids climb trees. And then happy to lie upside down in her basket for the rest of the day.

She does have some traits that need understanding - extremely vocal, constantly chirruping and little grumble growls which seem a bit off-putting if you don't know her, but like anyone you get to understand what a real growl is. And as a pup she needed frequent entertainment - as the breeder said, being part working cocker if she isn't kept busy she'll go self-employed and you might not like the jobs she finds for herself. Usually involves contents of bins from my girls rooms (don't leave the doors open) or shredding my worn socks from the laundry bin. Just mine, no-one elses.

Obligatory pic as a pup

[img] [/img]

Disapproving stare from best friend Coco.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 10:51 am
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Here's our Working Cocker cross (right) and a Cavalier King Charles (friends dog) cross for comparison.

[img] [/img]

Much prefer our Cockerpoo, runs all day, lies on your lap all night, great with kids, as I've said above, she's the best dog by far that we've had - 6 in total.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 12:12 pm
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All your Pedigree dogs are mongrels in effect, there really is a load of bullshit spoken by the STW massif.
Not surprising really, as I think some of you wouldn't been seen dead in your T5/T6's with a mongrel next to your carbon Nomad - No, I'm not jealous!


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 12:16 pm
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Ours was supposed to be a miniature goldendoodle, look at the b*****d now![IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 12:21 pm
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They're great little dogs. If someone is willing to shell out a grand on a designer mongrel instead of a pedigree puff, they'll realise they're just [i]better[/i] and next time they might go the whole hog, save themselves a fortune and get a proper bitza.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 12:39 pm
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lol @ shifter and ssbnreso 😆

Thread needs more pics . . . but second the rescue option wholeheartedly. If anyone's after giving an old lady a home (no, not me 😆 ) - [url= https://twitter.com/BC_Newport/status/814786747146051584 ]this little cav[/url] is based in Newport.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 12:50 pm
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My mom had a Collie-Poodle cross, and my girlfriend has a Cocker spaniel-Poodle cross. As implied earlier, they need attention and company as they tend to get a bit bored otherwise. They're really friendly, great with small children and only ever bite in a playful way (I tend to be their favourite play toy). They are intelligent but also mischievous so highly recommended to be left alone somewhere they can't open doors/bins etc as damage will occur. My moms also quite enjoyed pulling up lino flooring 😆


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 2:28 pm
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Doesn't matter what the dog looks like as long as you've got time (obviously the more active the breed the more time they need) and are willing to train it.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 6:04 pm
 poah
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none of this overpriced designer mongrel for our house. I particularly enjoy people moving out the way of marley when he's out on a walk lol

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 6:45 pm
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I've had four proper working Springers in my life, the kind that you would proud to be seen with on the gun line.

The cockerpoo is by far and away the best dog we've had. It's more sociable, it's dominated less by it's wolf instincts and it doesn't do anything without the approval of the in-group (us). If she does something mildly wrong, she'll get guilty and try to make up - we've never even told her off!

She is so different to the other dogs we have had, that she might as well be a ****ing primate. If anyone sits down, she will also be right there - leaning her head onto your shoulders trying to get a cuddle.

Oh and she's probably got some Bedllington in her somewhere, as she could very easily murder most Alsatians - by getting under them and going for the neck - based on my experience of when bigger dogs have gone for her. Great with kids though 😀


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 7:11 pm
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Indeed. They all have stupid cross combo names - so they can be sold on Gumtree for insane amounts.
Labradoodlerussell anyone?

Quite.

Staffrador?

Doberpoo?

Daschweiller?

Rescue dogs are the way to go.

End of thread.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 8:37 pm
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Have a rescue lurcher.

All the Cockerpoos (mainly) I meet out and about seem like great littleish dogs. Would definitely have one.

Don't really understand the cross breed hate, it's a bit weird, no? All dogs are 100% dog.

And Cavapoo may be a bit of a strange compound name but it's roots are Cavalier King Charles Spaniel and Poodle which are both odd in their own way too.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 8:55 pm
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none of this overpriced designer mongrel for our house. I particularly enjoy people moving out the way of marley when he's out on a walk lol

Has he got the proper dog like back legs or the new "designer" kennel club approved back legs?


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 8:56 pm
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If he's a pedigree he's probably off his back legs already.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 9:43 pm
 poah
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er dog like back legs or the new "designer" kennel club approved back legs?

Nope, got a proper back and good legs - I wouldn't have bought from a breeder that had dogs like that. You'll also find that most breeders don't breed dogs like that anymore as they can't sell them. Our previous gsd was a rescue dog who also had good hips who sadly died of a stroke before his legs went.


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 10:23 pm
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I've got a staffrador (or Stab) and a labradoodle, both rescues. Where do I stand?


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 10:46 pm
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I started a thread about 18 months ago about where to get one.

Lots of commenters about getting rescue dogs and 'silly money' but just ignore the naysayers.

Do your research and you will truly have a wonderful dog.

Like some have said, loving, fun, smart, active but happy to chill every letting you could want from a family dog.

Happy to share my experience and provide a great breeders details, which funny enough a came across through the thread on her (thanks STW). Drop me an email at nwill1 at ymail dot com.

Always have to laugh at people who believe spending £££'s on a bike they'll ride for a couple of years think £850 is a lot for a pet dog! 'You can get a xxxx for £250' bit like saying you can get a mountain bike from Asda for £119!


 
Posted : 30/12/2016 11:18 pm
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Always have to laugh at people who believe spending £££'s on a bike they'll ride for a couple of years think £850 is a lot for a pet dog! 'You can get a xxxx for £250' bit like saying you can get a mountain bike from Asda for £119!

It's not at all like that. The "quality" of the dog doesn't fall the less you pay. It could be said it rises.
Personally, I think £850 is a daft price to pay for a dog when you can get one for £150, already vaccinated and checked for temperament and defects. It'll love you just the same, and your kids will love it just the same...
...and by rescuing something unloved you might just teach them something...


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 12:58 am
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^^ +1


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 7:03 am
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Haha...true to a degree I was being a little flippant but I suppose what I was saying was that people spend lots of money on bikes, amounts of money others might see as absurd...and yes an Asda bike was a silly example but you can't tell me that a new carbon Santa Cruz tricked out with XTR and Chris King gives the rider any more joy than me on my 26" 2nd hand Orange Five pretty tricked out costing 1/5th of the amount!

Is a Cockapoo worth paying the best part of a grand for? Are Chris King hubs worth £600 when you can get hope for half that? Who wants to waste money on XTR? What I'm trying to say is that suggesting an alternative that is cheaper might be great if you want to save money but if it's something you really want you'll buy one and all costs are relative.

Talking of which the people complaining about the upfront cost of a dog being £850 need to seriously consider the lifetime costs of a dog...that extra £500 will be nothing in the grand scheme of things!


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 8:01 am
 poah
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We paid £60 for Nero our previous escue dog and that included insurance for 6 months and getting him neutered.


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 9:25 am
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FWIW OP, we have a cavapoo, yay! here is Starlight (not my choice, the kids!) waiting for me to bush whack a path through the brambles whilst on a fatbike bimble. She does love a bike ride, and forests, and kids, and sticks, and being with people and in general is super easy to live with. She is quiet, non-shedding, does small poos and just a joy to have as part of the family.

[img] [/img]

We got her from friends who's kids had developed a strong allergy to both Starlight and her brother, and like you, having previously looked after her for a few days we were smitten. We paid I think £600, which was signifacntly more than we paid for our first (a rescue Lab/Rottweiler cross, Burno, a huge, loveable beast of a dog).

It was luck for us that she turned up when she did, and that we already knew her, likely we would have gone down the rescue route again otherwise.

I will say, having a non shedding dog of any description is something of a revelation in terms of both benefit to allergies of me and my son (daughters not affected by allergies at all), and to not having hair-drifts all over the place like our last dog kindly left us whenever he moved 🙂

Downside is that her fur is bloody useless in snow 😆

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 10:42 am
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Missus BSN adding a 2 comments:
1) Not all cavapoos are non-shedding
2) She recommends the 'cavapoodles' Facebook group


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 11:00 am
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I've avoided posting on here so far, but as you know and like the Cockerpoos and Cavapoos you have met you can see why they're so popular. It's not just that they're designer dogs (although that's part of it), they can make great pets.

We have a Miniature Poodle, and our neighbors have a Cavapoo, they're similar dogs really. As already mentioned though with a cross there are no guarantees which traits will be inherited. I take it you're aware of their grooming requirements? It's not cheap, especially if you can't clip and bath them yourself.Poodles don't malt, but their fur is like human hair that constantly grows and will matt if they're not brushed daily. Cockers and Cavaliers do malt.

Other than that ensure the parents are health checked for hereditary conditions etc. I would also look at Cockers, Cavaliers and Poodles, lots of the traits that people look for in 'doodles are in Poodles, and Poodle's don't have to look like show dogs.

We have had rescue dogs, prior to the Poodle we had a Border Collie, and my parents have always had dogs since I was a child so I am used to different dog breeds and the Poodle is one of the best dogs we have had, along with a Springer Spaniel Flat Coated Retriever cross who was from farm working stock, really healthy, soft as butter but absolutely crazy.


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 12:38 pm
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Yes...grooming adds up, we have ours groomed every 2-3 months.

The other thing to be mindful of is that they are emotionally 'needy' dogs.

We're fortunate in that my wife does not work so is at home generally more than those who work...Cockerpoos can suffer from separation anxiety which is relatively common, this leads to several behaviours that can be negative such as chewing things they shouldn't, whining/crying lots etc. Although they are just as happy to be chilling around the house or off of big adventures some of them don't sit well with being left for long periods!

As for shedding, if you go to a good/experienced breeder they should be able to know from experience that their dogs do not shed. The breeder we went to specialises in Cockapoos, most from the same couple of studs, various moms but he's good at predicting the dogs size from the parents. Most of his look very similar in terms of coats and features (not colour obviously).

Also once the littler is born he starts to get a good idea of their personality traits.
My wife wanted one at the smaller end of the scale (to my disappointment) and a quieter dog, that's exactly what we've ended up with, some of his are bigger and even more lively!


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 1:37 pm
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Hate for cross breeds?...tell me a dog that hasn't been cross bread over the last couple of centuries? Very few and even the 'ancient' breeds are said to be very different to what they originally were!


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 1:42 pm
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Ours was supposed to be a miniature goldendoodle, look at the b*****d now!

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 2:49 pm
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Our cockapoo is a great little dog. Nuts, but also very loving and sociable.

We looked at a few dogs, but settled on the one we have, because I felt comfortable with the breeder. We had close contact with our dog's mother (a beautiful, friendly show cocker) and both parents had been tested and cleared for PRA, which is an inherited eye condition.

Great dog, just wish she would lie in a bit longer in the morning. 🙂


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 4:58 pm
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Our Cockerpoo Dougal is about 18months now, cracking little dog, he's a cross of working cocker and a miniature poodle. Fortunate for us he wasn't half the price quoted on here.....
Would recommended them to anyone and I was a stern pure breed kind of guy, great with the kids (4&5) easiest dog we have had to train and super smart, though he is a sock thief.....
Who wouldn't like a little Wookie!

[url= https://c8.staticflickr.com/1/609/32006393135_55e58d9b1e_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://c8.staticflickr.com/1/609/32006393135_55e58d9b1e_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/QLi8Ap ]10404005_10153350752028225_806262855873654150_o[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/2strokesteve/ ]Stephen Williams[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 31/12/2016 5:14 pm