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Animal Care Bluetick Coonhound Dogs Pets

How to Pick a Pet Identification Tag for Your Bluetick Coonhound

How to Pick an ID Tag for Your Bluetick CoonhoundPicking a pet ID tag for your Bluetick Coonhound is like buying insurance – you do so with the devout wish that you’re never going to use it. The “possible cost” of not having a pet ID tag is more costly than the “real price” of buying the pet tag itself.

The type of pet identification tag that you buy is crucial, so take 5 minutes or so to think it through. Whimsically purchasing a collar tag just because it’s cheap or pretty often proves to be unwise, long-term.

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Animal Care Bluetick Coonhound Dogs Pets

Building Your Bluetick Coonhound a Dog House

Build a House for Your Bluetick CoonhoundMore than 50 percent of people allows their Bluetick Coonhounds to live inside and sleep on their sofa or in the bed. For those of you all who are interested in how to build a dog house for your Bluetick Coonhound, below are our easy rules to follow when figuring out what type of house you want to build for your Bluetick Coonhound.

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Animal Care Bluetick Coonhound Dogs Pets

Teach Your Bluetick Coonhound Jumping for Agility

Teach Your Bluetick Coonhound to Jump for AgilityThis blog is about teaching a Bluetick Coonhound to jump for agility. Often we are asked, “How many jumps is best to start with?” You can’t ever have too many single jumps to learn agility. A suitable starting point is 4 jumps. This is the minimum count of jumps that we suggest.

How to Teach Your Bluetick Coonhound jumping: Begin with 4

You can teach a Bluetick Coonhound many skills, drills, and exercises with four jumps. Four jumps will allow you to develop on a short jump chute or jump grid. You can setup a “box” with your jumps and practice handling, collection, and 270 degree jumps. You can teach your Bluetick Coonhound jumping left and right. You could be outside the box and send your Bluetick Coonhound or you can handle from within the box. Your jumps could be positioned in a lateral row, so you could practice threadles and serpentines.

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Bluetick Coonhound Dogs Pets

Do You Get Your Child The Bluetick Coonhound Puppy?

Should you get a Bluetick Coonhound puppy?Eventually, every parent is likely to be asked: “Dad, can we get that Bluetick Coonhound puppy?”

Rather than avoid the question, parents should ponder whether their family is ready for a new puppy, especially a Bluetick Coonhound, according to Sharon Bergen, SVP of education and training for Knowledge Learning Corporation, this country’s foremost provider of early childhood education and care.

While considering “should the family get the Bluetick Coonhound” Bergen advises that parents evaluate the pros and cons of bringing the Bluetick Coonhound to the family prior to acquiescing to a child’s request. “The Bluetick Coonhound can teach your kids responsibility and be a fantastic addition to the household-or it can be a mistake,” she says. Bergen advises you think about the following before deciding:

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Animal Care Bluetick Coonhound Dogs Pets

3 Tricks You Can Teach Your Bluetick Coonhound Today

3 Tricks To Teach Your Bluetick Coonhound
3 Tricks To Teach Your Bluetick Coonhound

To teach your Bluetick Coonhound tricks, even simple ones, you should carry some of his favorite treats, be in a remote suitable place and try to keep the learning sessions to 10 – 15 minutes or your Bluetick Coonhound will begin to get tired. Always remember when he gets something right give him lots of appreciation and a reward snack, though beware not to get him too fired up or he will lose focus.

Teach your Bluetick Coonhound to give you his paw

To teach your Bluetick Coonhound to offer you his paw, initially

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Bluetick Coonhound Dogs Pets

Tips For Taking Care Of Bluetick Coonhounds

bluetick coonhound care tipsRaising dogs, in particular taking care of the bluetick coonhound, is old hat for people. Historians theorize that dogs were domesticated sometime between twelve thousand and twenty five thousand years ago—and that all dogs evolved from the wolf. Since then, humans have selectively bred more than four hundred breeds, which range in size from 4-pound teacup poodles all the way up to Irish wolfhounds, whose three-foot stature earns them the title of tallest dog. But the most popular dogs are the non-pedigree dogs—the one-of-a-kind dogs known as mutts. The bluetick coonhound is also a popular choice with canine owners. Some owners are misinformed, however, of many common bluetick coonhound care tips.