Make the day predictable
Keep meals, walks, rest and toileting opportunities consistent. Change food gradually unless a vet advises otherwise.
Bringing a rescue Dobermann home is a major change for everyone. Keep the first days simple, follow the handover plan and contact AARDUK early when something does not feel right.
Quiet routines help a new dog feel safe.
Offer choice instead of forcing interaction.
Small concerns are easier to address.
A newly adopted dog may sleep more, eat less, shadow you closely or keep their distance. None of that tells you who they will become once they feel secure.
Your dog’s individual handover advice comes first. These principles provide a practical foundation for the weeks ahead.
Keep meals, walks, rest and toileting opportunities consistent. Change food gradually unless a vet advises otherwise.
Supervise children, manage resident dogs carefully and only introduce cats or other animals where AARDUK has agreed the match is suitable.
Start with very short separations. Use a camera when possible and do not punish distress, damage or toileting linked to being left.
Use reward-based training, clear boundaries and short sessions. Focus on connection and confidence before expecting polished behaviour.
Know the emergency arrangements, complete the agreed microchip transfer and follow all medication, vaccination and neutering instructions.
Check fences and equipment, use an internal barrier at external doors and keep identification details current.
Contact AARDUK if settling stalls, behaviour changes suddenly, introductions become difficult or you are worried the placement may not be sustainable. If you can no longer meet the dog’s needs, speak to AARDUK before making any private rehoming arrangement.