Great Pyrenees
Helena
Puppy·Female·Extra large
Community & partner vetted
So you can sleep tight
About Helena
Helena is a 5-month-old Border Collie/Great Pyrenees mix with a sweet face, a bright mind, and serious puppy charm that makes people immediately start negotiating with themselves about whether they have room for one more dog. Spoiler alert: you do. She is friendly, social, smart, and an all-around wonderful young dog. Helena likes people, enjoys other dogs, is good with cats, and is handling puppyhood with an impressive amount of grace. She is still a baby, so she will need the usual puppy basics: structure, training, patience, supervision, and a family ready to help her grow into the lovely adult dog she is clearly meant to become. Helena is a great puppy. Anyone would be lucky to have her.
Ideal Home
Because she is a young, active mix of two intelligent breeds, Helena needs a fenced yard where she can run, play, explore, and burn off her puppy energy safely. She will do best with a family that enjoys a bright, engaged dog and understands that smart puppies are always learning, including the things no one technically meant to teach them. Homes considering adopting a puppy must be prepared for: flexible schedules for potty training, crate training until the puppy is at least one year old, socialization, and puppy behavior and life stages which are equivalent to a human toddler. It takes at least a full year to have a calmer, well-adjusted dog. Patience is required, and when your dog's behavior is a positive experience for you and those around you, your patience will be rewarded ten-fold, for years to come. Please do not consider adopting a puppy if you have not thoroughly thought through the pros and cons of having one. So many people end up returning them after 3-5 months because they didn't realize the amount of work involved in raising a puppy.
Ongoing Health
All known information about an individual dog is provided in its listing.
Training & Support
Helena will need the usual puppy basics: structure, training, patience, supervision, and a family ready to help her grow into the lovely adult dog she is clearly meant to become. Because she is a young, active mix of two intelligent breeds, Helena needs a fenced yard where she can run, play, explore, and burn off her puppy energy safely. She will do best with a family that enjoys a bright, engaged dog and understands that smart puppies are always learning, including the things no one technically meant to teach them. Homes considering adopting a puppy must be prepared for: flexible schedules for potty training, crate training until the puppy is at least one year old to prevent chewing on inappropriate things when you can't supervise, socialization, and puppy behavior and life stages which are equivalent to a human toddler. It takes at least a full year to have a calmer, well-adjusted dog. Patience is required and when your dog's behavior is a positive experience for you and those around you, your patience will be rewarded ten-fold, for years to come. Please do not consider adopting a puppy if you have not thoroughly thought through the pros and cons of having one. So many people end up returning them after 3-5 months because they didn't realize the amount of work involved in raising a puppy. Patience, appropriate toys, socialization, and obedience training are all musts. All are time-consuming and can be expensive. All dogs require supervision with children and obedience training. Adopters that want to have good dogs must be prepared to put the time and effort into training a dog. Any dog requires work and effort, but a well trained, well-socialized dog is more than worth the effort to get them there.
Application Details:
- Applications start by contacting us through Wags.
- All known information about an individual dog is provided in its listing.
- We do our best to provide accurate information, but adopters should understand that each home is different and the dog may behave differently in a new home. Dogs are creatures of their environment and you help make the dog what it will be.
Transporation
Applications can be submitted through Wags at wags.com.
Helena is a 5-month-old Border Collie/Great Pyrenees mix with a sweet face, a bright mind, and serious puppy charm that makes people immediately start negotiating with themselves about whether they have room for one more dog. Spoiler alert: you do. She is friendly, social, smart, and an all-around wonderful young dog. Helena likes people, enjoys other dogs, is good with cats, and is handling puppyhood with an impressive amount of grace. She is still a baby, so she will need the usual puppy basics: structure, training, patience, supervision, and a family ready to help her grow into the lovely adult dog she is clearly meant to become. Helena is a great puppy. Anyone would be lucky to have her.
Ideal Home
Because she is a young, active mix of two intelligent breeds, Helena needs a fenced yard where she can run, play, explore, and burn off her puppy energy safely. She will do best with a family that enjoys a bright, engaged dog and understands that smart puppies are always learning, including the things no one technically meant to teach them. Homes considering adopting a puppy must be prepared for: flexible schedules for potty training, crate training until the puppy is at least one year old, socialization, and puppy behavior and life stages which are equivalent to a human toddler. It takes at least a full year to have a calmer, well-adjusted dog. Patience is required, and when your dog's behavior is a positive experience for you and those around you, your patience will be rewarded ten-fold, for years to come. Please do not consider adopting a puppy if you have not thoroughly thought through the pros and cons of having one. So many people end up returning them after 3-5 months because they didn't realize the amount of work involved in raising a puppy.
Ongoing Health
All known information about an individual dog is provided in its listing.
Training & Support
Helena will need the usual puppy basics: structure, training, patience, supervision, and a family ready to help her grow into the lovely adult dog she is clearly meant to become. Because she is a young, active mix of two intelligent breeds, Helena needs a fenced yard where she can run, play, explore, and burn off her puppy energy safely. She will do best with a family that enjoys a bright, engaged dog and understands that smart puppies are always learning, including the things no one technically meant to teach them. Homes considering adopting a puppy must be prepared for: flexible schedules for potty training, crate training until the puppy is at least one year old to prevent chewing on inappropriate things when you can't supervise, socialization, and puppy behavior and life stages which are equivalent to a human toddler. It takes at least a full year to have a calmer, well-adjusted dog. Patience is required and when your dog's behavior is a positive experience for you and those around you, your patience will be rewarded ten-fold, for years to come. Please do not consider adopting a puppy if you have not thoroughly thought through the pros and cons of having one. So many people end up returning them after 3-5 months because they didn't realize the amount of work involved in raising a puppy. Patience, appropriate toys, socialization, and obedience training are all musts. All are time-consuming and can be expensive. All dogs require supervision with children and obedience training. Adopters that want to have good dogs must be prepared to put the time and effort into training a dog. Any dog requires work and effort, but a well trained, well-socialized dog is more than worth the effort to get them there.
Application Details:
- Applications start by contacting us through Wags.
- All known information about an individual dog is provided in its listing.
- We do our best to provide accurate information, but adopters should understand that each home is different and the dog may behave differently in a new home. Dogs are creatures of their environment and you help make the dog what it will be.
Transporation
Applications can be submitted through Wags at wags.com.
Gets along with
Kids, Dogs, Cats
Know the breed
Great Pyrenees
Exercise
60 min/day, Moderate activity
Trainability
Moderate
Experience
Some experience needed
Living space
House, Acreage
Shedding
Seasonal blowout
Lifespan
10-12 years
Frequently asked questions
Contact the breeder for current pricing details and payment plans.
See the 'What's included' section for details on what comes with your puppy.
All our breeders are community and partner vetted for your peace of mind.
Check the availability date shown on the listing for the latest information.
Price unavailable
Location unavailable
0 reviews
Standard application process
Community & partner vetted
So you can sleep tight
Contact for price


