I am starting to go on longer walks and short hikes in an effort to lose weight and get fit. I would love to take Ein with me every time, but she's still so young (just over 4 months). I took her on a short hike today, about 1.5 miles on rocky desert terrain with very little incline. We went slow cause I'm out of shape and I let her take time to smell the plants, so it wasn't all go go go. She absolutely loved it, and I loved having her with me, but I worried the whole time. I know that just because she can do it doesn't mean it's good for her. How much is good her? What distance or amount of time could she spend walking with me each day/week without causing problems to her growing little body? Any insight into this would be much appreciated.
Heather
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how fun for Ein, she will tell you when shes tired , Carly use to sit down and not budge hahaha~
good for you getting outside enjoying the outdoors and getting fit!!
Our breeder (serious corgi breeder) was quite firm with me: no long hikes or big challenges until 1 year old. Joanna Kimball's blog discusses growth plate injuries somewhere; hurt the growth plate on a wrist, one bone stops growing, and the wrist bends as the other continues to grow. That may not be the only concern. So I'd not encourage a pup to jump off furniture or down stairs or off any heights. I'd be concerned about landings on slippery floors (we have nonskid throw rugs on the takeoff/landing zones).
But if you're not in such great shape yourself, I don't think just walking on flat terrain is going to hurt the puppy. You'll poop out first. But do remember that puppy will follow you everywhere, forever, and may conceal hurt/fatigue, so maybe let the puppy set the pace? Be observant. I was doing 1.5 mile walks on flat streets with Al puppy (we got him at 3 months).
I'd worry more about quick stopping/turning games like the soccer that I do with Al & Gwynn; that's how us humans sprain ankles and tear ACLs. But regular moderate walks should help puppy develop the strength that may prevent those ACL-type injuries. It's the weekend warriors who get hurt; we couch potato 5 days and then try to play the Super Bowl on weekends.
Remember to add challenge GRADUALLY. Give the body time to get used to it. I think physical trainers have a 10% Rule or something, never add more than 10% at a time, or every X months...? Give puppy recovery time; space out challenges.
I don't think you can overfeed a puppy, but once puppy stops growing, ruthlessly refuse to overfeed. Excess weight is excess strain on the skeleton.
Gwynnie, as a young adult, once went 23 miles in 14 hours with 8-9000' of elevation gain, with 2 strenuous days following. Dogs don't have the endurance of humans (neither do horses), but they are amazing.
HAVE FUN. Once she's a year old...maybe sooner... I have this rule: they get to go as fast as they want.
I love how John tries to sound like he makes the rules, like Gwynn and Al didn't say, "We will go as fast as we want."
It's so cute when people owned by corgis try to act like corgi owners - I've been guilty of it a time or two - but Bear and Goldy were quick to put me in my place.
Walking will not hurt your puppy. My daughter in law and I used to go on 40 mile hikes with Malamutes on the Appalachian Trail in Virginia, camping out over a 5 day period. We took pups as young as three and a half months, at that age they can outwalk you.
I would be more concerned about temperature than distance. Hot weather can be problematic for adult dogs, but more so for young pups. Here in Colorado, my miniature dachshund, at six months, would walk 2 miles with us pulling all the way....
Offer water and brief rest periods, good for you both! You'll both be fit as a fiddle :-)
Our 3 oldest dogs do two walks a day between 1 and 2.5 miles each. The most I ever did with them was 4.5 miles in a day and usually get in between 2.5 and 3.5 miles total in a day. My pace is about 3 mph. Terrain is flat on sidewalks, alleys and parks. Our youngest dog will be somewhat limited with her walks as she has some elbow problems and the arthritis is something she has been and will be dealing with throughout her life. We started walking all of them at 6 months and got to be honest it is what they live for. These dogs run and play stronger after a walk than they do without one - don't think we are any where close to giving them too much exercise.
Everything is relative. Our previous two Corgi's got far fewer walks and if asked to walk a mile (or after a thunderstorm barkfest) it would take them a day to recover.
BTW - We are in Tempe and yes the weather has been great. Our dogs seem to really like the cold stuff we've had recently.
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