Here is what Havoc did to his neglectful owner as a 10 month old #CaneCorso. This is a photo of his owner's arm... This is what happens when you neglect a Corso.
6 thoughts on “Don’t Neglect Your Cane Corso”
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Having certain types of dogs is the same if not more responsibility as having a firearm. It’s serious business not to be taken lightly starting from day 1 with your puppy. Anything you tolerate with a puppy will magnify 100x when their adults. This was caused by poor puppy management and training. I also firmly believe especially with molossar type dogs with a high natural defense instinct that you can’t hire or farm out the training because this is part of the relationship/respect aspect of having a dog like this. If your unwilling to do the basic OB training and earn respect of these dogs PLEASE do not get one!
Absolutely… And now people are coming after me because we decided to have the dog put down… I’m the bad guy… ugh…
There was no safe place for this dog to be homed to. It would be a hard thing to bear if you had rehomed that dog and he hurt someone especially a child. He was just a big puppy but already capable of inflicting severe damage or even death. I would not have wanted him on my conscious out there just waiting to see what happened.
Totally. It would be irresponsible to the point of recklessness to move the dog on. Chuck would almost certainly be among the defendants.
Absolutely tragic.
Totally.
I swore that I would not fail my dog and end up with a dangerous unmanageable animal that had to be kept in a compound until it died.
This is why there are so many Cane Corsos advertised for rehoming at ten months. “Haven’t got the time” they say . What they really mean is that they are starting to get scared of the dog that they have failed. I was going to breed my girl but not now I’ve seen all those ads. I’m no having that happen to my puppies.