Meet Leo, a very friendly and alert Belgian Malinois with all the qualities of a potential guard dog!
We are pleased to introduce you to this caring, loving, and bubbly boy. Leo lives a happy, content life here at our home and has been raised with all the TLC every puppy deserves. Because of this, he loves meeting new people and is sure to make an easy, quick adjustment to life in your home! From the first tail wag and puppy kiss, you and Leo will quickly become the best of friends.
Leo is up to date on shots and dewormer and has been vet checked. His mom is a wonderful family pet—easy to train and very protective of her puppies and the people she loves. His dad is slender, athletic, and great around people.
Ready to take that exciting step of adopting a new member into your family? Give us a call! Leo will come with a baggie of food and a toy to help him settle into his new home.
Adv. ID:3-EdAFL3Q
Litter details
LocationKnox, Pennsylvania
Puppies in litter5 male / 3 female
BreedBelgian Malinois
Ready to LeaveAvailable now
GenerationP
Age6 months, 2 days
SexMale
Health & Docs
Vaccinations up to dateMicrochipped by collection dateAKC registered by collectionCKC RegisteredParents are health testedWorm treatedVet checked
The US military and Secret Service's preferred working dog — arguably the most capable dog breed alive for detection, protection, and patrol work
Extraordinary trainability for experienced handlers — the Malinois's drive and intelligence create a uniquely powerful human-dog partnership
Athletic and agile in a medium package — lighter and faster than the German Shepherd with equivalent work capacity
Belgian Sheepdog Club of America maintains active CHIC health testing requirements
Cons
Not suitable for first-time owners under any circumstances — this is a working dog that will develop serious behavioral problems without adequate leadership and activity
Drive is constant and high — a Malinois in an under-stimulated environment creates its own destructive "jobs"
The breed's growing popularity has produced poorly bred lines in the US civilian market; finding working-line breeders with health testing requires research
Dog aggression in working lines requires active management