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Some information about “Wolf Dogs” including temperament and containment, which includes a remark about them having been known to chew through low gauge wire fences
Certainly seems like they can “chew” through some levels of wire fences and that, when properly trained and looked after can be good pets.
I would like to nitpick this. Neither of the above are 50% wolf. Saarloos Wolfhound started out as 1/4 wolf breed from a single female wolf. As far as I could find, this has been diluted somewhat to reduce inbreeding. Czechoslovak Wolfhound was started with 5 dogs and 5 wolves, with pups breeding with pure dogs until the 4th generation, making the breed 1/16 wolf.
The OP’s question “Do part dog, part wolf animals exist?” has long since been answered in the affirmative. The thread has since dealt mainly with the temperament of wolf-dogs and their suitability as pets. A number of anecdotes have been offered as well as a number of perhaps more authoritative cites.
I suspect that part of the controversy may be due to breeders or owners not actually knowing how much and how recent may be any wolf in their own wolf-dog, as well as some who probably lie directly about it. For instance, AdamF seems to show that “common knowledge” about certain breeds as offered by Dynastia may actually be a misunderstanding. And SpyOne offers an anecdote about an “85% wolf” that is a “tough and threatening” guard dog, even though virtually every cite suggests that a hybrid with that high a content of wolf DNA is much, much more likely to be timid and to run from strangers.
I remain willing to accept that some individual high percentage wolf-dog hybrids, somewhere, in someone’s personal experience, made fine pets. And I know that this is GQ and I am not trying to turn this into a debate, so my apology in advance. But I think it is fair to say that by the weight of the evidence presented here so far, we must conclude that any such are rare events and do not represent what “most” people will experience with wolf-dog hybrids. The upshot is that these animals do exist but should not be expected to make “good pets”.
Indeed, Florida actually calls wildlife kept by individuals “personal possession animals” in order to emphasizes the difference between such and the usual understanding of “pets”.
Not a semantic nitpick at all. Whether you say “certain” or “virtually certain,” I believe you’re overstating the case.
I agree that there is a chance that a wolf-dog hybrid may challenge its owner for dominance in certain circumstances. I agree that you can’t treat a wolf-dog like you’d treat a poodle. But I don’t feel that you’re taking your life in your hands by owning a wolf-dog any more than you are by owning a pit bull or a rottweiler (the breeds that CDC study says caused most of the dog attack deaths).
A clear definition of “wolf-dog hybrid” for purposes of the discussion would probably have alleviated a lot of the arguments here. The OP, which was answered long ago, just wanted to know if you could breed a domestic dog with a wolf. I consider a “wolf-dog” to be an animal with one or more purebred (or close to purebred) wolves in its bloodline in the last half-dozen generations or so, giving it a significant (let’s say 25% or more) amount of wolf. At least one other poster is really only looking at first-generation crosses.
If we’re going to continue the discussion of whether they make good (or safe) pets, then we should probably spin out into a Great Debates thread.
I want to emphasize that what I said was absolutely intended as an anecdote. I have only ever met two wolf-dogs in my life, and only one that was created intentionally. (My uncle took in a stray and named him Shep, and me and my cousins were all warned not to play with Shep and not to treat him like a dog, and generally to stay away from him. Everyone agreed that one of Shep’s parents had been a wolf.)
That particular dog I met in the autobody shop, he was fairly social with humans. He’s sit in the bed of a pickup and watch you walk by. He might follow you into the office.
The menace was all in how he looked, which was like a 200 pound timberwolf. The kind of thing bears lose fights with.