
The requested URL /09%20adoptions%2025.html was not found on this server. Here i have only got a few gorgeous Wolf x puppies left as they are selling very fast, they have been brought up with other...How to tell: If your high content wolfdog is mingling with a pack of wild wolves, no one should be able to pick out your animal as more “doggy” than the others. One sure sign your animal is NOT high-content: Breeding cycles/fertility DOES NOT change just because a wolf/wolfdog: *was born and raised in captivity *was raised in a home/family enviornment *was raised indoors as a pet *is exposed to weather changes *looses its pups during birthing *is around different intact males/females In other words: An animal cannot biologically change just because it was raised indoors in a “stress free” environment.) Notice how these high contents look exactly like pure wolves? Put them out with a pack of wolves and no one would be able to tell the difference.

High contents ALL look this way. How you can tell: Only an expert would be able to tell that this animal is not a pure wolf. You definitely won’t be able to pull off the “Oh, he’s just a malamute/shepherd mix…” line; no matter where you go. No one will ever see a picture of your animal and think, “Hey, that looks like my husky,” (or German shepherd, or malamute, etc.) Your animal will not blend in with other dogs. How you can tell: You would get a lot of people asking if it’s part wolf (without you mentioning that part first!), but if you wanted, you could still convince people that it’s just a dog mix. If you see even just ONE of the below present, your animal is for sure a low-content wolfdog (and not any higher content than that): These animals were claimed to be high content (74-99% wolf), but when compared to true high contents, the difference is blatantly obvious: These animals were claimed to be mid content (35-74% wolf), but when compared to true mid contents, again, the difference is obvious:

These animals were claimed to be low content (less than 35% wolf), but when compared to true low contents, you can see the difference. Even low contents will still look wolfier than “wolfy-looking” dogs: Beware of the massive wolfdog misrepresentation going on in the world today. Most claimed wolfdogs you see, meet, or hear about will not have any ounce of wolf blood. **True wolfdogs are incredibly rare!** A note on percentage & content: Dealing with percentage is a very inaccurate subject. Percentage alone is not going to tell you how many wolf/dog genes were actually inherited in an animal. For example, you could have different contents (low, mid, or high) in the same “50% wolf” litter. Another way to put it is that having a High Percentage wolfdog is not always the same as having a High Content wolfdog. This is why knowing who the parents are isn’t as important as how the animal actually looks. Good site on the differences in wolfdog content: