Ok did not see this before I responded to the other post. I can tell you for fact, that once my male chow I had years ago mated, he thought he was the man and marked everything, to where he needed to become a outside dog. If you want to breed him, he IS going to mark his territory. I agree with the previous post, that A LOT going into breeding and it can be expensive. You need to make sure your male is of breeding quality or you will be doing the females as well as the breed a injustice in keeping good lineage go the breed. My male chow I bred years ago was from 27 champion lines. |