Picking a pet identification tag for your Bolognese is like buying an insurance policy – you do so with the faith that you’ll never use it. The “possible price” of not having a pet ID tag is more expensive than the “real cost” of purchasing the pet tag itself.
The kind of pet ID tag that you buy is important, so take five minutes or so to think it through. Whimsically buying a collar tag because it’s cheap or pretty usually ends up being foolish, in the long term.
Over 50% of the population permit their Bologneses to stay indoors and sleep on the couch or in their owner’s bed. For those of you all who are wondering how to build a dog house for your Bolognese, following are some simple rules to follow when figuring out the type of house you want to provide for your Bolognese.
This post is concerning how to teach your Bolognese jumping for agility. Often we are asked, “What number of jumps should I start with?” You can never have too many single jumps to teach agility. One suitable starting place is 4 jumps. This is the least number of jumps that we recommend.
Sooner or later, every parent is going to hear: “Dad, may I have that Bolognese puppy?”
Raising dogs, especially providing care for the bolognese, is a specialty of people across the world. Zoologists have proven dogs were originally domesticated between twelve thousand and twenty five thousand years ago—and that dogs evolved from the wolf. Since those days, humans have selectively bred more than 400 different breeds, which range in size from four-pound teacup poodles all the way up to Irish wolfhounds, whose three-ft stature has earned them the distinction of tallest pooch. But the most popular canines are the non-pedigree dogs—the one-of-a-kind dogs known as mixed-breeds. The bolognese is another popular pick among dog owners. Some owners are uninformed, however, of many of the most crucial bolognese care tips.