← Back to All Ottawa Dogs

Great Pyrenees Adoption Ottawa

Adoptable Great Pyrenees and Pyr crosses from Ottawa and NCR rescues. Nocturnal barking, escape risk, never off-leash, heavy double coat — read this page first.

1 Great Pyrenees listed in Ottawa from 1 rescue

Gear for your Great Pyrenees

The essentials we'd set up for a new Great Pyrenees, starting with the decompression crate.

Amazon affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you, which helps keep LocalPetFinder free and more rescue dogs finding homes. See all our gear picks →

Great Pyreneess in Ottawa, right now

We're currently tracking 1 adoptable Great Pyrenees in or near Ottawa, listed by 1 rescue including Ottawa Humane Society. Listings update regularly, and most Great Pyreneess in Ottawa get adopted within days of being posted — if one catches your eye, reach out fast.

Adopting a Great Pyrenees in Ottawa

Great Pyrenees and Pyr crosses appear in Ottawa and NCR rescue more often than most adopters expect for a livestock guardian breed. The Ottawa Humane Society on West Hunt Club Road, Sit With Me Dog Rescue, Ontario SPCA Ottawa & District Animal Centre, and For the Love of Dogs Ottawa see Pyrs through the year, often coming in from rural Eastern Ontario or Outaouais hobby farms where the family bought a "fluffy white puppy" without understanding the breed. The dog grew into 85 to 115 lbs of independent guardian thinking, started patrolling and barking through the night, and the household either could not manage the breed or moved into central Ottawa where the dog could not live.

This page pulls every adoptable Pyr from the launched NCR shelters into one searchable place, refreshed regularly. Ottawa rescues place Pyrs almost exclusively into suburban or rural-adjacent homes with fenced yards — Kanata, Stittsville, Manotick, Carp, Greely, Metcalfe, and rural Lanark and Russell counties work better than the Glebe, Centretown, Westboro, or Sandy Hill. The nocturnal barking alone makes central Ottawa placement nearly impossible.

Why Pyrs cycle through Ottawa rescue

The dominant surrender pattern is the noise bylaw collision. The Great Pyrenees was bred for centuries to patrol Pyrenean mountain flocks at night, barking at every perceived threat from wolves to wind. The breed does this in a suburban backyard too. A Pyr in a Kanata, Orleans, Barrhaven, or Nepean suburban home will bark at every passing car, deer, raccoon, and neighbour's cat — typically peaking 10pm to 4am. Ottawa Animal Control Bylaw 2003-77 governs barking complaints, and three documented complaints typically trigger formal enforcement. Pyr surrenders to NCR rescue often have an active bylaw file attached.

The second pattern is the escape problem. Pyrs were bred to patrol territory, and they treat fence lines as suggestions. A standard 4-foot suburban fence does not contain a determined Pyr — the breed climbs, digs under, and pushes through gates that latch but do not lock. Ottawa rescues require minimum 6-foot fence with dig-prevention (buried chicken wire or concrete footing) and locked gates before placement. The breed is also nocturnal — Pyrs that escape do it at 2am while the family sleeps, and recall is essentially nonexistent. A Pyr off-leash at Bruce Pit, Conroy Pit, or Mooney's Bay off-leash is a lost dog.

The independent guardian mind — not a Lab

The single most useful thing for an Ottawa adopter to understand is that the Great Pyrenees is not a biddable working dog like a Border Collie or German Shepherd. The breed was developed to make independent decisions about flock safety at night, miles from human handlers. That independence shows up in adoption homes as selective listening, slow training response, and a tendency to override owner cues when the dog has decided otherwise. "Stay" works until the Pyr sees a raccoon. "Come" works until the Pyr is focused on the fence line. Force-based training fails badly with the breed — Pyrs shut down or become defensive.

Realistic Pyr training is force-free, slow, and tolerant of the breed's judgment. Standard obedience expectations do not fit the breed. Owners who succeed with Pyrs adjust their expectations: the dog will come when called 70% of the time on a good day, will bark at things the owner cannot see, and will treat the household as its flock to guard. The reward is one of the most affectionate, gentle giants in any NCR rescue — Pyrs are deeply bonded to family and remarkably patient with children. The mismatch shows up when adopters expect a Golden Retriever in a white coat.

Heavy double coat — Ottawa winter ideal, summer humidex warning

The Pyrenees double coat is built for Pyrenean mountain winters and matches Ottawa's -25 to -30°C cold snaps perfectly. November through April, a Pyr is genuinely comfortable in deep snow and will choose snow over heated indoor space. Ottawa's long cold season is the breed's ideal climate. July and August humidex (typically milder than Toronto but still hitting 30 to 35°C) is the danger zone — Pyrs overheat fast and heat stroke is a real emergency. Walks shift to early morning and after dark in midsummer.

Never shave a Pyr. The double coat insulates against heat as well as cold — shaving destroys the thermal regulation and exposes pink skin to sun damage. Realistic Pyr grooming is weekly brushing year-round, daily brushing during the spring and fall coat blow (April-May and September-October), and professional de-shedding every 8 to 12 weeks at $100 to $180 per session in Ottawa. Budget $100 to $180/mo for grooming plus a robust vacuum. Ottawa's dry forced-air heating exacerbates winter shedding indoors — humidifiers help. Pyrs shed clouds — every surface in a Pyr household carries white fur.

Health load — HD, OCD, entropion, Addison's, bloat

Hip dysplasia runs at moderate rates in giant breeds given the build. OFA assessment on the rescue dog's file is informative. Osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) affects shoulders and elbows in young giant-breed dogs — surgical referral to OVC Guelph or VCA 404 Veterinary Emergency and Referral in Ottawa runs $4,000 to $7,000 per joint. Entropion (eyelids rolling inward) is common in Pyrs and requires surgical correction at $1,500 to $3,000. Addison's disease (hypoadrenocorticism) and other autoimmune conditions show up in the breed — lifetime fludrocortisone or DOCP injections plus prednisone run $100 to $250/mo.

Bloat / GDV (gastric dilatation-volvulus) is the emergency every deep-chested giant breed owner should know — untreated bloat is fatal within hours. Many giant-breed-experienced NCR vets recommend prophylactic gastropexy at spay or neuter at $800 to $1,500 added cost. VCA 404 Veterinary Emergency and Referral, Ottawa Veterinary Emergency Clinic on Hunt Club, and Alta Vista Animal Hospital handle GDV surgeries at $6,000 to $10,000 emergency. Lifespan 10 to 12 years is realistic for the breed. Pet insurance taken the week of adoption is essential.

What Pyrs are actually like to live with

A well-matched Great Pyrenees in Ottawa is one of the most gentle, affectionate giant breeds in any NCR rescue. The breed reputation for stubbornness is real, but the temperament reward is also real. The honest parts to plan for:

  • Nocturnal barking. Bred to patrol at night. Central Ottawa apartments, condos, and dense neighbourhoods do not work.
  • Never off-leash outside fully fenced spaces. Recall is essentially nonexistent — Pyrs follow their own judgment.
  • Escape risk. Minimum 6-foot fence with dig prevention and locked gates. Pyrs climb, dig and push.
  • Heavy shedding. Weekly brushing year-round, daily during coat blow. Never shave.
  • Ottawa winter ideal. Summer humidex 30°C+ requires early or late walks.
  • Independent thinker. Force-based training fails. Force-free, slow, tolerant of the breed's judgment.
  • Deeply bonded to family, gentle with children. The temperament reward is genuine.
  • $100 to $180/mo grooming, $800 to $1,500+ NCR insurance premiums for giant breeds.
  • 10 to 12 year lifespan. Pet insurance essential before HD, OCD or bloat issues.

What the fee usually covers

Great Pyrenees adoption fees at Ottawa and NCR rescues typically run $400 to $700 for an adult dog. The fee covers spay or neuter (gastropexy added in many giant-breed rescue protocols), core vaccinations, microchip, deworming, and a vet check before placement. Confirm the exact number on the dog's own listing. NCR breeder pricing for a Pyr puppy is $1,800 to $3,000 — rescue is materially cheaper and many rescue Pyrs come with gastropexy or entropion repair already done.

How to actually search

Apply within 5 to 7 days when a suburban or rural-adjacent home with a 6-foot fence matches. Use the filters above to narrow by energy (medium), size (giant, 85 to 115 lbs), compatibility, and shelter. Read foster notes on barking patterns, escape attempts, fence requirements, recall, child compatibility, and weather tolerance. Foster homes will set up a video call and typically require home-visit confirmation of fence security before in-person meet for Pyrs.

Looking more broadly? Browse every adoptable dog across the province on Dog Adoption Ontario.

The rescues that most often list Great Pyreneess across Ontario are Ottawa Humane Society, Sit With Me Dog Rescue, Ontario SPCA (Ottawa & District), and For the Love of Dogs Ottawa. For breed-specific background, the Canadian Kennel Club is a useful reference.

Great Pyrenees Adoption FAQ — Ottawa

Where can I adopt a Great Pyrenees near me in Ottawa?

Great Pyrenees and Pyr crosses appear in Ottawa and NCR rescue more often than most adopters expect for a livestock guardian breed. The major sources are the Ottawa Humane Society on West Hunt Club Road, Sit With Me Dog Rescue, Ontario SPCA Ottawa & District Animal Centre, and For the Love of Dogs Ottawa. Set up an alert and apply within 5 to 7 days when a suburban or rural-adjacent home with a 6-foot fence matches. Ottawa rescues do not place Pyrs into central neighbourhoods (Centretown, Glebe, Sandy Hill, Westboro apartments) — the breed's noise and escape patterns make central placement nearly impossible.

Can a Great Pyrenees live in a central Ottawa neighbourhood?

Almost never. The Pyrenees was bred to patrol flocks at night by barking — the dog will bark at every passing car, raccoon, and neighbour from a Centretown condo balcony or Westboro townhouse yard, typically peaking 10pm to 4am. Ottawa Animal Control Bylaw 2003-77 governs barking complaints and three documented complaints typically trigger enforcement. Ottawa rescues place Pyrs in suburban or rural-adjacent homes (Kanata, Stittsville, Manotick, Carp, Greely, Metcalfe, Orleans rural, Barrhaven outskirts) with 6-foot fenced yards. Central Ottawa neighbourhoods almost never work for the breed.

How secure does the fence need to be for a Great Pyrenees?

Minimum 6 feet with dig prevention (buried chicken wire or concrete footing) and locked gates. Pyrs were bred to patrol territory and treat fence lines as suggestions — the breed climbs, digs under, and pushes through gates that latch but do not lock. Standard 4-foot suburban fences do not contain a determined Pyr. NCR rescues require fence verification before placement and many do home visits to confirm. A Pyr off-leash at Bruce Pit, Conroy Pit, or Mooney's Bay off-leash is a lost dog — recall is essentially nonexistent in the breed because they were bred to make independent decisions, not follow handler cues.

Is Ottawa cold winter ideal for a Great Pyrenees?

Yes — Ottawa's -25 to -30°C cold snaps and long November to April snow season match the breed's Pyrenean mountain origin perfectly. A Pyr in Ottawa winter is genuinely comfortable in deep snow and will choose outdoors over heated indoor space. Summer is the harder season — July and August humidex 30°C+ requires early morning or after-dark walks and AC. Never shave the double coat — it insulates against heat as well as cold. Ottawa's dry forced-air heating exacerbates winter shedding indoors; humidifiers help. The breed handles -30°C better than +30°C — winter is the easy season, summer is the planning season.

Are these Great Pyreneess for sale in Ottawa?

Not for sale, for adoption, which is usually the better deal. Every Great Pyrenees here comes from an Ottawa-area rescue or shelter, not a breeder, pet store, or classified seller. Adoption fees are typically a few hundred dollars and already include spay or neuter, vaccinations, and a microchip, versus roughly $2,000 to $5,000+ to buy a Great Pyrenees from a breeder. If you searched "great pyrenees for sale Ottawa," adopting gets you a healthy, vetted dog for a fraction of the price.

Where can I buy a Great Pyrenees in Ottawa, and should I?

You can buy from a registered breeder, but it is worth weighing against adoption first. A reputable Great Pyrenees breeder typically charges $2,000 to $5,000+ and often has a waitlist, while a rescue Great Pyrenees costs a few hundred dollars fully vetted and may be available now. Be cautious of cheap "for sale" ads on classified sites and marketplaces, which are frequently backyard breeders or puppy-mill resellers with unvetted, sometimes sick animals and no health guarantee. If you do buy, insist on meeting the parents, seeing where the litter was raised, and getting vet records. For most Ottawa families, adopting a rescue Great Pyrenees is cheaper, faster, and gives a dog in need a home.

Have a dog to rehome?

Rehoming a Great Pyrenees in Ottawa?

List your dog free. Local adopters browsing Ottawa see owner listings first: no shelter, no fees, you choose the home.

List your pet free →

Takes 3 minutes. You stay in control of who adopts.

Not seeing one yet?

Get notified when a Great Pyrenees is listed in Ottawa

We'll email you the moment a Great Pyrenees becomes available near Ottawa, from a rescue or an owner rehoming.

One email when there's a match. Unsubscribe anytime.

For rescues & shelters

Are you a Ottawa-area rescue? List your adoptable dogs free.

Free shelter account: your dogs appear here and across LocalPetFinder, with analytics and adoption applications included.

Create a shelter account →