How many dog years to a human year?
Answers:
7 apparantly... Read on.
It is a common belief that 1 human year is equal to 7 dog years. That is not very accurate, since dogs reach adulthood within the first couple of years. The formula used above is from a canine expert and is a bit more accurate. (as accurate as one can judge these things)
See the dog calculator.
I only know it to be 7 years to our 1 year.
its 7 dog years to 1 human year. dont know how its worked out.
One human year= 7 dog years
Seven
7 dog years = 1 human year.
I have always believed it to be 7 years
7
I have heard 7 human years to one dog year. The truth of the matter is that it depends upon the breed of dog. Small dogs when comparing them to human years, age less quickly than larger dogs.
Try the link below.
http://www.onlineconversion.com/dogyears.
7
Is it 7 dog years to 1 human year?
think it's about 7 or so
7 seems to be te common answer but I have heard 10 the first and 7 each year after that when aging a dog compared to human.
1 human year = 7 in dog years.
i think its 7, but i dont know how they worked it out as it wud make my dog 112? can a 112 year old human run, jump and play ball?
7
Its 7 years to a dog,1 year to a human,which makes my dog 98,i wonder if my dog will get a telegram from the queen next year when hes 105,he still acts like a pup,full of life.
Ruffly seven years to one human year
Claim: Multiplying your dog's age by seven will produce its equivalent in human years.
Status: False.
Origins: When
we human folk exchange information about each other, age is one of the most important pieces of data we pass along. Knowing someone's age immediately allows us to infer a great deal of information about that person with a reasonable degree of certainty: Age not only tells us whether someone is a child, an adult, or an elderly person, but it allows us to place people into much finer gradations of categories -- infant, toddler, child, adolescent, young adult, adult, middle-aged, elderly -- from which we can deduce a good deal about their physical, psychological, and social statuses. We know that a 4-year-old child should be walking, but that a 6-month-old baby is unlikely to be capable of the feat. We understand that a couple of 16-year-olds might well have a baby together, but that an 8-year-old boy is generally too young to father one and a 58-year-old woman is usually too old to conceive one. We're aware that most 9-year-olds haven't yet reached puberty, but that a 39-year-old might well have started experiencing many of the infirmities of advanced age (e.g., lessened eyesight, loss of hearing, weight gain, persistent aches and pains). We grasp that a 29-year-old is in what we would term "the prime of life," while an 89-year-old has well exceeded the average human lifespan. We can make pretty good guesses from a person's age about whether he's old enough to have finished his schooling, live away from his parents, be married, or hold an important professional position, or whether he's too old to still be working or raising children of his own. And even those of us who still have most of our lives ahead of us know all this.
When it comes to our pets, however, many of us are mystified how to relate their ages to ours. Sure, knowedgeable owners and breeders may be quite familiar with all the developmental stages of their chosen animals, but many of us casual pet owners can't do much more than distinguish between "puppy," "dog," and "old dog." At what age are kittens weaned from their mothers? What's the average lifespan of a dog? When is a cat old enough to reproduce, and when is a dog too old to bear a litter? Is an 8-year-old dog in the prime of life, or is he closer to middle age? Lacking a good deal of observational experience, many of us simply don't know.
Since knowledge and experience take time and effort to acquire, we've developed simple shortcuts to help us answer these questions, such as the well-known formula for "dog years": multiply your dog's age by seven, and you'll have his equivalent age in human terms. Although this formula might work roughly well for the middle years of a dog's life, it's too simplistic to accurately reflect a dog's developmental status closer to either end of its lifespan. Using this calculation, for example, an 18-month-old dog would be at a developmental stage similar to a 10-year-old child's, but while many 18-month-old dogs are fully grown and capable of reproducing, few 10-year-old children are. The "dog years" measurement tells us that a 15-year-old dog is supposed to be the equivalent of a 105-year-old person, but (factoring out accidents and other unnatural causes of death) a much larger proportion of dogs lives to age 15 than humans live to age 105.
As well, age is more than just a chronological measurement of years lived; it's also an expression of how our bodies have been affected by the passage of time. Different types of animals age at different rates, so we can't employ a simple, direct, proportional relationship to correlate the ages of species as disparate as dogs and humans, especially since variable factors such as genetics, nutrition, and environment play an important role in the aging process. The bottom line is that just as we wouldn't raise a litter of puppies or kittens the same way we'd raise a baby, neither should we care for our pets based on how old we think they'd be if they were people.
For those who would like a rough idea of how the ages of our canine and feline friends compare to ours (strictly for entertainment purposes), we present the following charts courtesy of ANTECH. (Smaller dog breeds tend to live longer on average than larger breeds, so no single chart can adequately represent all dogs.)
Dog Human
1 year 15 years
2 years 24 years
4 years 32 years
7 years 45 years
10 years 56 years
15 years 76 years
20 years 98 years
Cat Human
1 year 15 years
2 years 24 years
5 years 36 years
7 years 45 years
12 years 64 years
15 years 76 years
18 years 88 years
21 years 100 years
It depends of dogs age. Average is 7, but when the dog is young (puppy) it's growing very fast so >7.
Older dogs <7.
A dog when age 1 is = to human age 15.
there are 7 dog years to our 1
the first year for them (in our year) would be about 3 years and then the years after that would be 7
every one year for a human and seven years for a dog
7
apparently every one "human" year is eqivalent to seven "dog" years. There are many different internet sources which try and rationalise this, but in my opinion, if my dog is alive from the 1st day of the year to the last, well then he is a year old. I think back in the day someone came up with this idea to rationalise dogs dying young, so now instead of a seven year old dying its a 49 year old!! but then again thats just my opinion!
I have been told it is 7 years.
7
the first three years of a dogs life are counted s three in ours..so a three yr old dog would be 9 in human years. After that it is 7 per year
7 dog years to 1 human year
7 dog years is 1 human years
The answers post by the user, for information only, UKQnA.com does not guarantee the right.