5 years seems like such a short amount time with a dog, but I would like to give it a try ~
We put Eddie down shortly after discovering the cancer. A limp and a quickly growing mass tells you the dog was in pain.
If I may use the phrase, "they are rode hard and put away wet". The are treated like property, not pets. Their teeth are usually horrible. They are not fed a very good diet. Eddie had a number of scars that looked like he had run into something.
I know of a couple that have a retired greyhound revolving door. They have one very large brindle male that they have kept for the longest! They were frequent visitors to my neighborhood for exercise. The male always wanted to walk to the fence to see if Eddie was out. He did that for a long time after Eddie was gone.
There may be breeders that sell the unwanted pups, but I am just sure you would have to spay or neuter prior to purchasing one. You have to spay of neuter if you adopt a retired greyhound too.
Riverrat comments: If they see a cat or rabbit they will take in after it. Our neighbor had a small greyhound to little to race she made a great pet but when she got out of the fence she was hard to catch. It was a game to her when they tried to catch her
So true! And anything can send them into a chase mode, if off leash, like Perry said. That's why they shouldn't be allowed off leash unless in a confined area.
I forgot to mention. Eddie wasn't accustomed to grass. The greyhounds had sand for a back yard. Kind of like a giant litterbox. On the plus side...that dog had a bladder of steel! Never had a single accident in the house. Never got in the trash, and never got on the furniture. He had his beds in several rooms of the house and that was his comfort zone.