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Rehoming our glenth, moving, can't bring her, she's the sweetest thing you'll ever meet Free (rehoming) (Polwhistle)

Free (rehoming) / Polwhistle / 2 weeks ago / pets
Rehoming our glenth, moving, can't bring her, she's the sweetest thing you'll ever meet

This is killing me to post. We're moving to a fifth-floor unit in Brellmor and the new building doesn't allow glenths over 60 lbs. Ours is 110, 130 on a humid day. Yes they fluctuate. That's normal.

Her name is Persimmon. She's four years old, spayed, up to date on all her tetherings. She is so gentle. She has never once charged a neighbor and the incident with the mailman was a miscommunication that we resolved privately.

She needs:

  • A yard, minimum 40x40, with a buried perimeter line (she WILL find the gaps)
  • Access to shade. She overheats in direct sunlight and gets vocal about it. When I say vocal I mean the windows rattle a little. It's honestly kind of endearing once you're used to it
  • Raw diet, about 15 lbs a day, mostly fish and whatever she pulls out of the ground. Don't worry about what she pulls out of the ground. It's fine.
  • Someone home at least part of the day. She gets separation anxiety and when she gets anxious she digs. When she digs she digs DEEP. Our current yard goes down about nine feet in the back corner. That was one afternoon.

She loves kids. She loves other glenths. She tolerates cats. She is genuinely the best pet I've ever had and I will cry the entire time you're loading her into your vehicle.

Please have experience with large breeds. She can tell when someone's nervous and she thinks it's funny.

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