You can fall in love with a puppy in five seconds, then spend the next five years managing the fallout. Meg and Kassidy record from a hotel room in San Luis Obispo after driving up to meet a rescue litter of Australian Cattle Dog puppies, and we get very honest about how we decide whether we should bring one home at all. We talk rescue sourcing, what “backyard bred” can mean in practice, and the uncomfortable but real spay abort debate that shows up in shelter medicine and rescue culture.
From there we get practical. We walk through the checklist we use before we ever say yes: your daily schedule, your energy level, your current dogs, and what role you actually need this dog to fill. We cover how to assess puppy temperament when you meet a litter, including simple “startle and recovery” tests like dropping a loud object, watching curiosity, and noticing who hides and stays hidden. We also define drive in plain terms and explain why the most intense puppy can be perfect for an experienced sport home and a disaster for a typical pet home.
We zoom out to the bigger picture too: integrating a puppy with older dogs without ruining their peace, why a good breeder often matches you to a puppy, and why shelter stress can make temperament hard to read. Finally, we get real about breed traits, city living, kids, nipping risk, liability, and the cost of training and fulfillment. If you’re Googling “how to pick a puppy” or “cattle dog puppy temperament,” this conversation gives you a clear framework to make a decision you won’t regret.
If this helps, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s puppy shopping, and leave a review so more people stop buying mismatched dogs on impulse. What’s the one non-negotiable on your puppy checklist?
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