PointerProblems

PointerProblems German Shorthaired Pointer Duo | Minnesota
G O R D I E | Serious AF
L Y L L E | Smiley Rescue Pup

Hi friends! It has been a while and felt like we were due for a post after a lot of DM’s checking in on us. First and fo...
09/30/2025

Hi friends!
It has been a while and felt like we were due for a post after a lot of DM’s checking in on us. First and foremost, thank you for always checking in 🧡 Gordie and Lylle are both doing well!

Lylle (12) continues to be as spicy as ever. She hasn’t slowed down as much as one would expect for her age 🤣 and honestly, we love it! One big change as she has gotten older is her love for snuggling. She was never a big snuggler but over the last year she has really embraced it and it truly makes my heart so happy.
Gordie (13.5) has drastically slowed down. He naps a lot but every day at the same times, like clockwork, he gets his random spurts of playtime energy. He’s also developed the old man IDGAF attitude and while it drives me nuts how stubborn he’s become, it also makes me chuckle.

Grateful for all the good days we are still having 🧡

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Minneapolis, MN

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How Serious Met Smiley

“If you’re lucky…a dog will come into your life, steal your heart, and change everything.” (author unknown)

In 2017, our lives changed in a way that was better than we could have hoped. Over the years, we have fostered a couple dozen dogs — mostly German shorthaired pointers. It’s the breed we know and love — yes, we’re those crazy Pointer People! (or so we’re always being told by anyone that finds out we have a GSP.) So, when a friend reached out letting me know that there was a 4-year-old German shorthaired pointer that was in need of a foster at a local rescue, I assumed this case would be no different. We’d foster, provide a little love and stability, and work on finding the dog a forever family…as we had done for every other foster prior.

When I went to pick up our new foster, I was immediately greeted by a slightly overweight dog with a little tail that wouldn’t stop wagging. Her name was “Little Girl”…and I could tell there was something different about her from the moment she approached me. Although her tail was wagging, you could see the confusion and sadness in her face. She had just left the only home she had ever known and was faced with a world of uncertainty. Her owners surrendered her to rescue as she was “too much” to handle. Her energy was something they couldn’t control and at 4 years old, they had hoped she would have calmed down by then…but she had not. If you’re familiar with this breed, you may know they come with endless amounts of energy, and unfortunately, are given up on for this reason more often than you can imagine.

The moment I walked through the door at home, it was almost like love at first sight for “Little Girl” and our GSP, Gordie. This scared and reserved looking foster had a new sparkle in her eyes the second she was near Gordie. They followed each other around the house, he brought her toys from the toy box and slowly encouraged her to play, he shared his beds, and he even shared me — which he NEVER would do with previous fosters. When it was time for bed, we got in bed the same as we did every night and this time Gordie didn’t follow. Instead, we found him curled up on the floor with “Little Girl” to comfort her. The tears immediately welled up in my eyes. This was the first and only time he had ever not slept in our bed in five years…FIVE YEARS. He stayed with her the whole night.