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i wanna give a stray dog a new life

i saw a stray dog on the street and he was really sexy and big boy
i got an idea that i wanna give him a new life by taking him to the veterinary
to check that everything about him is fine and no any std or anything
and then take him to grooming and yes i want him to be my pet..
of course i will have sex with him but no any forcing or abusing
i will just start with sucking his dick and take a knotted by him if he wants

have any of you have done anything like this before?
 
I haven't but I hate seeing strays. Please give him a home, it's so sad. Anything else after that is a bonus. Just show him some love and care for him. ? ?
 
i saw a stray dog on the street and he was really sexy and big boy
i got an idea that i wanna give him a new life by taking him to the veterinary
to check that everything about him is fine and no any std or anything
and then take him to grooming and yes i want him to be my pet..
of course i will have sex with him but no any forcing or abusing
i will just start with sucking his dick and take a knotted by him if he wants

have any of you have done anything like this before?

My dog is from an animal shelter
 
i saw a stray dog on the street and he was really sexy and big boy
i got an idea that i wanna give him a new life by taking him to the veterinary
to check that everything about him is fine and no any std or anything
and then take him to grooming and yes i want him to be my pet..
of course i will have sex with him but no any forcing or abusing
i will just start with sucking his dick and take a knotted by him if he wants

have any of you have done anything like this before?
When I was growing up, that was just how you got your animals. I used to think the idea of going out to a pet store to buy one, as if they came out of a can and got baked in an oven like biscuits, was a weird, weird idea. If you wanted a purebred, there was always a neighbor in the area whose bitch had just dropped a litter recently. Otherwise, if you saw a dog and saw he was looking skinny, you'd just put food out for him, and he would keep on coming back because he doesn't like being hungry. You'd hear about a rabies outbreak, and you would run him to the vet to make sure he has been vaccinated against it. The weather would get bad one day, and he would scratch at the door. You'd let him in (by accident, thinking a branch fell from the maple tree and not wanting to trip over it in the morning), shout at him for getting everything wet, towel him off, and make a nest for him in the laundry room out of those clothes you have been meaning to take to the seamstress, like too much to throw out, but don't like well enough to pay someone to mend them but can't bring yourself to throw out because you get images in your head of your grandmother glowering at you for not being grateful for what you have and making do. The flea-pocalypse would come, and you would go out looking for flea treatments, find out that one makes him puke, the other one doesn't work, and the third one actually gets the job done right.

What you're talking about is what human/dog relationships were like for centuries before people got the idea that they could buy dog-love in a vacuum-sealed package at a store, which I always thought was weird. Nowadays, I know that modern, forward-thinking people find them in the found ads on the Nextdoor app. I don't know if I will ever warm up to centralized supermarket thinking.

I say, feed him, flea treat him, get him his shots, and make him feel like a king. He would probably appreciate it.

With leash laws getting more oppressive, you might want to go ahead and get him microchipped while you are at it. If you don't intend right away to make him permanently an indoor dog, then often the only way you can get him back if he's abducted, assuming you ever find him, is if you microchip him, so you can prove he's yours.
 
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Go for it, all dogs deserve a home and someone to love, but let him get to know you a little before trying anything! If He's lived on the streets hes probably skittish around people, give him comfort and build trust then go from there (BTW the odds of a dog spreading human STDs is very very slim unless they have slept with a human recently that had it, they generally aren't carriers. their is however canine STDs like brucellosis, it can be transmitted to humans by animals, although not inherently dangerous to us and usually curable with antibiotics, it would still be unpleasant. Its a bacteria infection that can lead to muscle and joint pain, fever, weight loss, fatigue and sometimes stomachs pains and excessive coughing)
 
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