faddius
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I can relate to a lot of the experiences posted in this thread. When I was younger, my family were always keen to introduce me to animals and taught me to respect them and what they were capable of. In fact, when I was very young growing up in Thailand I was allowed to wander the village I spent the first few years of my life in alone because my family had a pack of dogs who would follow me, guard me and protect me. They would even herd me home if I wandered too far or got lost.
I've been attacked by dogs numerous times and I agree that many owners are irresponsible and have not put the time or effort into training their pets, as such should not walk them off a lead or ideally not have them at all. Well I've actually been attacked by a whole plethora of animals, luckily not all were serious, the more exotic side of the list includes elephants (baby), snakes, monkeys, crocodiles and a tiger (cub thank god). A couple were my fault to be fair though and I hold no ill will to any of them, except badgers - vile creatures.
Anyway
I prefer to walk my dog off the lead when possible, it lets him be free and run around unshackled. I am by no means suggesting my dog is perfectly trained, but he is trained enough to respond to me quickly - as such I avoid situations with my dog if I am not 100% confident that i will have full control over him as any responsible owner should. As a rule of thumb I keep him close and recall him if he wanders too far or goes out of sight. I will also recall him if I see anyone I suspect may be uneasy around him such as children and old folks, or anyone who is about to walk directly past him, and will keep ahold of his collar till we are past them. I also won't permit him to approach other dogs unless I'm quite confident that dogs owners are present and happy with it - as it's great to let dogs just play with one another.
However, the notion of keeping a dog leashed at all times for the convenience of others and to prevent them from attacking is one thing I must disagree with strongly due to one experience of me being attacked.
In Coventry I was walking my dog in a field off the lead. Mine had wobbled off somewhere, I knew he was close but was out of my field of view (turns out he was behind me somewhere, must of found something really exciting to sniff). Anyway, I heard shouting from the other side of the field and saw that a large Alsatian had gotten away from its owner who was hopelessly shouting and chasing after it. This Alsatian then started bee lining for me and I could tell immediately it wasn't one of the friendly types. Vicious barking, tail down, running at full pelt towards me - all the tell tale signs of "attack mode" were there. I called mine immediately concerned for his safety but as I couldn't see him I thought crap and braced myself for the inevitable lunge from the Alsatian as it rapidly closed the distance towards me across the field. The lunge soon came, but at the last second I saw a flash of black fly past me into the Alsatian. My dog had caught the Alsatian by its throat and was now holding it pinned to the floor. Impressive for a fairly young border collie tbh. I let him keep the Alsatian there till the owner caught up, who wasn't very happy with the outcome but after a heated exchange I told mine to release his and he stormed off with his Alsatian on its lead. Lets face it, he had no basis to complain, his dog had gone to attack me and mine had defended me.
So let me put this question to you, if my dog or any dog had been on its lead in that situation - do you think it would of had the freedom to manoeuvre itself to counter such an attack? I think not, the lead would of been too restrictive possibly putting his safety at risk being in the firing line.
I will be honest, I was taken aback by my dogs response as he has never shown any real aggressive behaviour outside of play fighting and even then he's very docile till it gets quite heated. He hasn't shown any similar behaviour since. But as one post suggested - should my dog be put down because he attacked another? If you want the black and white response then yes, I suppose he should. At the end of the day he attacked and bit another dog, admittedly in self defence. But I'd like to see anyone justify it morally, he was protecting his master / his pack. Same as a parent would protect their child.
It saddens me to think that there are people who are untrusting of all dogs because of their bad experiences and the possibility that their dubious attitude could (READ - COULD) be rubbing off on their children and creating an inherent fear of all dogs. As a more personal side note, I got mine after my father passed away and he has been the most loyal and loving companion I could ever wish for. I have no family as such, no mother, father, grandparents or siblings i have contact with. Just the dog. He is my best friend and my family. Without him I wouldn't like to bet where I'd be today, or whether I'd be here at all as on more than one occasion it's just been him that's given me the will to get out of bed and carry on as usual. I wouldn't wish for anyone to miss out on the chance of having such a companion if they so choose, because they grew up becoming untrusting of them and presuming that the vast majority will attack them if they let their guard down.
For that reason I'm always happy to introduce my dog to children in a controlled environment and let them play provided their parents ensure that their child respects him and understand that he has his own feelings and thoughts. I often like to describe him to children not as a toy, but their best friend at school - you have to be nice and gentle or he wont play with you. Dogs (not all breeds) and children go well together and letting them play is a great way to knacker them both out. In Coventry I had a friend who would sometimes just come and "borrow" my dog to knacker out her son in the park. Her son used to be terrified of dogs but on more than one occasion I've seen him curled up on the floor sleeping next to my fluff ball after a trip to the park and would often be upset when I turned up to take what he liked to think was his dog home.
There is someone not a million miles away I think the above might be beneficial for if they wanted it - all they need do is ask
I don't wish to ruffle any feathers or be the source for anymore out of line or abruptly rude responses on this thread - I just wanted to put my feelings and opinions on the subject out there as fairly and honestly as possible. It's sad I feel the need to put this "disclaimer" here but this thread doesn't exactly have a great track record.
Edit - that's taken me nearly an hour to type on my phone and I've just realised my laptop is right next to me on the table... What a muppet :bonk:
I've been attacked by dogs numerous times and I agree that many owners are irresponsible and have not put the time or effort into training their pets, as such should not walk them off a lead or ideally not have them at all. Well I've actually been attacked by a whole plethora of animals, luckily not all were serious, the more exotic side of the list includes elephants (baby), snakes, monkeys, crocodiles and a tiger (cub thank god). A couple were my fault to be fair though and I hold no ill will to any of them, except badgers - vile creatures.
Anyway
I prefer to walk my dog off the lead when possible, it lets him be free and run around unshackled. I am by no means suggesting my dog is perfectly trained, but he is trained enough to respond to me quickly - as such I avoid situations with my dog if I am not 100% confident that i will have full control over him as any responsible owner should. As a rule of thumb I keep him close and recall him if he wanders too far or goes out of sight. I will also recall him if I see anyone I suspect may be uneasy around him such as children and old folks, or anyone who is about to walk directly past him, and will keep ahold of his collar till we are past them. I also won't permit him to approach other dogs unless I'm quite confident that dogs owners are present and happy with it - as it's great to let dogs just play with one another.
However, the notion of keeping a dog leashed at all times for the convenience of others and to prevent them from attacking is one thing I must disagree with strongly due to one experience of me being attacked.
In Coventry I was walking my dog in a field off the lead. Mine had wobbled off somewhere, I knew he was close but was out of my field of view (turns out he was behind me somewhere, must of found something really exciting to sniff). Anyway, I heard shouting from the other side of the field and saw that a large Alsatian had gotten away from its owner who was hopelessly shouting and chasing after it. This Alsatian then started bee lining for me and I could tell immediately it wasn't one of the friendly types. Vicious barking, tail down, running at full pelt towards me - all the tell tale signs of "attack mode" were there. I called mine immediately concerned for his safety but as I couldn't see him I thought crap and braced myself for the inevitable lunge from the Alsatian as it rapidly closed the distance towards me across the field. The lunge soon came, but at the last second I saw a flash of black fly past me into the Alsatian. My dog had caught the Alsatian by its throat and was now holding it pinned to the floor. Impressive for a fairly young border collie tbh. I let him keep the Alsatian there till the owner caught up, who wasn't very happy with the outcome but after a heated exchange I told mine to release his and he stormed off with his Alsatian on its lead. Lets face it, he had no basis to complain, his dog had gone to attack me and mine had defended me.
So let me put this question to you, if my dog or any dog had been on its lead in that situation - do you think it would of had the freedom to manoeuvre itself to counter such an attack? I think not, the lead would of been too restrictive possibly putting his safety at risk being in the firing line.
I will be honest, I was taken aback by my dogs response as he has never shown any real aggressive behaviour outside of play fighting and even then he's very docile till it gets quite heated. He hasn't shown any similar behaviour since. But as one post suggested - should my dog be put down because he attacked another? If you want the black and white response then yes, I suppose he should. At the end of the day he attacked and bit another dog, admittedly in self defence. But I'd like to see anyone justify it morally, he was protecting his master / his pack. Same as a parent would protect their child.
It saddens me to think that there are people who are untrusting of all dogs because of their bad experiences and the possibility that their dubious attitude could (READ - COULD) be rubbing off on their children and creating an inherent fear of all dogs. As a more personal side note, I got mine after my father passed away and he has been the most loyal and loving companion I could ever wish for. I have no family as such, no mother, father, grandparents or siblings i have contact with. Just the dog. He is my best friend and my family. Without him I wouldn't like to bet where I'd be today, or whether I'd be here at all as on more than one occasion it's just been him that's given me the will to get out of bed and carry on as usual. I wouldn't wish for anyone to miss out on the chance of having such a companion if they so choose, because they grew up becoming untrusting of them and presuming that the vast majority will attack them if they let their guard down.
For that reason I'm always happy to introduce my dog to children in a controlled environment and let them play provided their parents ensure that their child respects him and understand that he has his own feelings and thoughts. I often like to describe him to children not as a toy, but their best friend at school - you have to be nice and gentle or he wont play with you. Dogs (not all breeds) and children go well together and letting them play is a great way to knacker them both out. In Coventry I had a friend who would sometimes just come and "borrow" my dog to knacker out her son in the park. Her son used to be terrified of dogs but on more than one occasion I've seen him curled up on the floor sleeping next to my fluff ball after a trip to the park and would often be upset when I turned up to take what he liked to think was his dog home.
There is someone not a million miles away I think the above might be beneficial for if they wanted it - all they need do is ask
I don't wish to ruffle any feathers or be the source for anymore out of line or abruptly rude responses on this thread - I just wanted to put my feelings and opinions on the subject out there as fairly and honestly as possible. It's sad I feel the need to put this "disclaimer" here but this thread doesn't exactly have a great track record.
Edit - that's taken me nearly an hour to type on my phone and I've just realised my laptop is right next to me on the table... What a muppet :bonk:
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