Fashion Dog Harness for Everyday
This Adjustabel Fashion nylon Dog Harness best fit for Pitbull
Fashion Dog Harness-Everyday Harness for PitbullGeneral "Woof" Tip: One of the things I would like to pay your attention at:
There are many resellers around the Internet which are not direct makers and sometimes don’t even know how and what for products they sell are made.Ask right questions to find out if you deal with main source or if you are going to pay extra money just because product you are about to purchase went through 2-4 extra hands before it reaches you.I like to save extra buck and it won’t harm you either, so check if you are purchasing product from main source.Most of the times if you ask fro a small change in size adjustment, only maker will be able to do it for you.
Small- Will fit Girth 22-27 inches (55-68 cm)
Medium - Will fit Girth 27-35 inches (69-89 cm)
Large - Will fit Girth 32-42 inches (80-109 cm)
Extra Large - Will fit Girth 34-47 inches(85-120 cm)
Would you like Upgrade to reflective trim for better night visibility (it could safe your Pitbull life)
please choose "Upgrade to reflective trim"
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..to start reading this article from the beginning please click on here....If in doubt whether a dog is merle or not, look for a butterfly nose, blue eyes, bi-eyes (one blue eye, one brown eye) or marbling (blue and brown coloration in the same eye). Merle dogs often have these traits. This is due to the incomplete dilution acting on the nose leather & irises of the eye. But some merles will be dark eyed and dark nosed! - "Merlequins." This nickname came from the Dane people who just melded the names "merle" and "harlequin." The dog pictured below appears to be a merlequin Catahoula Bulldog (note the pugged muzzle & underbite typical of many CatBulls). Basically merlequins have merle patches on a white background while merles have merle patches on a colored background. Merlequins occur when the merle allele matches up with the recessive extreme white piebald gene. These dogs are often called spotted, pinto, piebald or called white/red, white/blue, etc. Again this dog's butterfly nose & blue eyes give it away as a merle. The different colors of the patches (called "merling" in merles) also give away the fact that this dog is merle & not a piebald. - Harlequins. These dogs are exceedingly rare in APBTs. Like the merlequins, in our breed harlequins are the product of merle coupling up with extreme white piebald, resulting in a dog with merling on a white background instead of merling on a colored background. And also like merlequins, harlequins are also merle dogs who are mistaken for piebalds. The only difference between a merlequin and a harlequin is that a merlequins can have any color patches on a white background, while harlequins only have black or gray colored patches on a white background. The way you can tell the difference between a piebald and a harlequin is of course look for a butterfly nose or blue or marbled eyes. Another give-away is gray patches among the black ones. - Lightly marked merles. These are merles who's merle spots are so sparse or so light in color that they appear non-merle. Sometimes the only bit of merling a dog will have may be on an ear, the back of the neck or the tail. Because they're not obviously merle, these dogs are often mistaken for whatever color their base coat is - i.e. red, fawn, etc. But these are still genetically merle dogs who will produce merles..
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