Do you let your dog off leash ever?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


Your dog should not be out except on your fenced property. It’s your fault if your dog is aggressive.


It’s not. My dog is fine unless someone has a dog that is out of their control (off leash and not recallable). It has nothing to do with my dog. Are you willing to risk your dog’s safety on its recall? Because that is ALL ON YOU. My dog is fine with leashed dogs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


You shouldn’t have your dog around others then


I can take my dog for a walk minding our own business. If you leave us alone, she will leave you alone.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


Your dog should not be out except on your fenced property. It’s your fault if your dog is aggressive.


It’s not. My dog is fine unless someone has a dog that is out of their control (off leash and not recallable). It has nothing to do with my dog. Are you willing to risk your dog’s safety on its recall? Because that is ALL ON YOU. My dog is fine with leashed dogs.


Your dog is aggressive and should not be around other dogs or people. You and your dog are the problem. Yes, it has to do with you and your dog. If your dog reacts to another dog off-leash you have a problem. Maybe it should be put down as you cannot control it and are saying its dangerous.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


You shouldn’t have your dog around others then


I can take my dog for a walk minding our own business. If you leave us alone, she will leave you alone.


Your dog is dangerous and should be out in public.
Anonymous
I hate these unofficial dog runs. I had to stop taking my kid to a playground he really liked because people would use the unfenced sports field right next to it to unleash their dogs and it was way too close for comfort. All the people doing this near playgrounds and saying no one is bothered, people just don’t say anything or start avoiding the playground. You are bothering people!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


You shouldn’t have your dog around others then


I can take my dog for a walk minding our own business. If you leave us alone, she will leave you alone.


Your dog is dangerous and should be out in public.


That is not how the law works. My dog isn’t dangerous if your dog is in control. Therefore if you obey the law there won’t be an issue.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


Your dog should not be out except on your fenced property. It’s your fault if your dog is aggressive.


It’s not. My dog is fine unless someone has a dog that is out of their control (off leash and not recallable). It has nothing to do with my dog. Are you willing to risk your dog’s safety on its recall? Because that is ALL ON YOU. My dog is fine with leashed dogs.


Your dog is aggressive and should not be around other dogs or people. You and your dog are the problem. Yes, it has to do with you and your dog. If your dog reacts to another dog off-leash you have a problem. Maybe it should be put down as you cannot control it and are saying its dangerous.


It’s fine. If your unleashed dog comes near her, the fact it I will kick your dog hard before she has a chance to hurt it. I might hurt it, and I don’t give a damn.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:When my DD was 6 years old, we were in a relatively empty park pretending to play baseball. She would bat the pretend ball and then run the bases for a home run. We were having fun. Then an off-leash dog decided that this looked like a fun game. It came tearing after her barking and lunging and she screamed and ran faster. Of course, this really made the dog want to chase her. She finally fell to the ground screaming and the dog bit her. It was a small dog but she was also small. The whole thing was really terrifying. The owner just said sorry my (little angel dog) has never done anything like that before. This is the problem.


Yes, exactly this. I also had an experience like this when my kid was young and it totally alerted me to the dangers if off leash dogs. Kids can be really unpredictable and loud, and a lot of the very normal things kids do will be interesting, exciting, or scary for a dog. No one should have to worry that if their kids darts behind a tree, calls out in excitement, or falls off the slide.

Also, a lot of common dog names and common kid names are the same or similar now. Please don't take your dog named Luna or Charlie to a local park unleashed as the odds some parent or kid will yell your dog's name is a really really high.


Yes. This also explains away the whole 'no one was using the playground' argument. The playground is for children, and good parents aren't going to let their kids play if there are unleashed dogs. We also don't take our kids to the dog park, because the dog park is for unleashed dogs.

A place for everything, and everything in its place.


I’ve never seen a kid or parent when I’ve taken my dog to the playground at 5:30 am during the summer. If they came, I’d leave.


This isn't the point. The law isn't "no leashes unless you see someone, then (try to) leash your dog". The law is clear, as is your stupidity.


But there’s no one around to enforce it, so…


The "it's only illegal if I get caught" mentality is such a disturbed way of living. Best of luck with it. On a long enough timeline, you'll understand why the law exists as written, and why you should follow it even when no one is around to force you.

Integrity is doing the right thing when "no one is around to enforce it" because YOU are around to manage yourself like a responsible adult.


Lol you idiots screaming about BREAKING THE LAW. I just looked and at least at my park, dogs are allowed off leash before 9AM
😂😂😂😂😂😂


Pics or it didn't happen, PP. Anyone can say anything they'd like on an anon board, and your level of glee at having pulled a "GOTCHA!!" suggests you're full of... something.


Yep. 9 pm to 9 AM. allowed off leash in parks where I live


Leash or no leash, they have to be under your control. If they aren’t you are risking injury.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


You shouldn’t have your dog around others then

Keep yours on a leash and there won't be an issue. Don't blame someone else for consequences of YOU breaking the law.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:When my DD was 6 years old, we were in a relatively empty park pretending to play baseball. She would bat the pretend ball and then run the bases for a home run. We were having fun. Then an off-leash dog decided that this looked like a fun game. It came tearing after her barking and lunging and she screamed and ran faster. Of course, this really made the dog want to chase her. She finally fell to the ground screaming and the dog bit her. It was a small dog but she was also small. The whole thing was really terrifying. The owner just said sorry my (little angel dog) has never done anything like that before. This is the problem.


Yes, exactly this. I also had an experience like this when my kid was young and it totally alerted me to the dangers if off leash dogs. Kids can be really unpredictable and loud, and a lot of the very normal things kids do will be interesting, exciting, or scary for a dog. No one should have to worry that if their kids darts behind a tree, calls out in excitement, or falls off the slide.

Also, a lot of common dog names and common kid names are the same or similar now. Please don't take your dog named Luna or Charlie to a local park unleashed as the odds some parent or kid will yell your dog's name is a really really high.


Yes. This also explains away the whole 'no one was using the playground' argument. The playground is for children, and good parents aren't going to let their kids play if there are unleashed dogs. We also don't take our kids to the dog park, because the dog park is for unleashed dogs.

A place for everything, and everything in its place.


I’ve never seen a kid or parent when I’ve taken my dog to the playground at 5:30 am during the summer. If they came, I’d leave.


This isn't the point. The law isn't "no leashes unless you see someone, then (try to) leash your dog". The law is clear, as is your stupidity.


But there’s no one around to enforce it, so…


The "it's only illegal if I get caught" mentality is such a disturbed way of living. Best of luck with it. On a long enough timeline, you'll understand why the law exists as written, and why you should follow it even when no one is around to force you.

Integrity is doing the right thing when "no one is around to enforce it" because YOU are around to manage yourself like a responsible adult.


So, you never drive over the speed limit? Jaywalk? If we followed you around, I’m pretty sure that “on a long enough timeline” you’d fall right off that high horse. Don’t get too comfortable up there.


Do you have a problem with people who speed? Jaywalk? Does it matter to you if people trespass? Steal? I mean, where do you draw the line? You're super content to try to turn this on me, but no, actually, I'm the person most of y'all rip past because I'm at or under the limit, I don't jaywalk (I'm crippled; I barely walk in the crosswalk in time), and while I do make mistakes, that's what they are: honest mistakes.

There is a distinct difference between being a flawed human who inadvertently beefs it sometimes, and being a deliberately non-compliant human who thinks they can ignore the rules they clearly know and willfully disregard. My flawed humanity doesn't excuse your intentional lawlessness.

We are not the same.


Now I know you’re a troll. No one refers to themself as “crippled.” That’s a terrible term.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I live in Brooklyn, and Prospect Park designates three off-leash areas before 9 am for dogs to run around. Sure, there are sometimes dog spats and once in a while dogs get bitten (my own included once), but I have never seen a "bloodbath." There are also runners, birders, and assorted random people in the park at that time, and we all somehow manage to rub along together. This is my dog's favorite part of the day and truly a godsend for me, since he is a very energetic 70 lb German Shepherd/Huskie mix, and I honestly don't think I could exercise him enough solely through my own efforts and my spouse's combined. I can't run around at top speed like he does with the other dogs!


I live in a city with a similar situation. It's been great for the dogs and by 9am, they are leashed. Works out well.


Well, the reason it works well is because you are following the rules. Show up at 11 with your unleashed dog while the local sitters are there with 10 preschoolers, and you've got a problem.


Sure, but some people seem to just be arguing that a dog should never be off leash outside their own home.


The aggressive dog owners are such jerks. They want everyone to walk around on high alert because they insist on keeping dogs that can literally kill around others. Sick and depraved


The thread-derailing anti-pit bullies are such jerks. They want everyone to share their paranoid take because they insist their paranoia is reality, despite copious evidence to the contrary being regularly provided (and ignored). Sick and deranged.

We get it. You hate pit bulls. If it's making it hard for you to focus, stay on task, and get through your day without unhinged ranting, you should seek help
.

What copious evidence is there to the contrary? When I chat gpt aggressive dog breeds, pit comes up first. Is chargpt wrong but you are right?


The Pit Bull breed is statistically associated with the highest number of fatal dog attacks in the United States. According to studies and reports from organizations like DogsBite.org and CDC data, Pit Bulls are responsible for the majority of fatal attacks on humans, often accounting for 60-70% of dog-related fatalities annually, despite making up a smaller percentage of the dog population.

Other breeds that have been involved in fatal attacks include:
• Rottweilers
• German Shepherds
• Huskies
• Mastiffs
• American Bulldogs


You're citing ChatGPT. Language learning models are not verified fact sites. Jaysus H...

This is why nobody believes your whole argument: you attempt to substantiate it with this nonsense. It's bad when you use clickbait news, but it's patently ridiculous when you use "AI" which is neither artificial nor intelligent. You have no idea where it pulled these figures; they're as reputable as an anon poster's backside (the most frequent source of anti-pit bullies' "statistics"). In fact, the anon's arse is probably a more reputable source, as Jeff can track their location, at least, which is more than you'll get for citations from ChatfsckingGPTdamnedT

Have mercy...


Omg you’re claiming chatgpt is wrong?? Ok then. I know science is scary to people like you. Wow.


NP. ChatGPT not infrequently gives misinformation. They’re referred to as “hallucinations” and are part of the reason we discourage the use of it in writing papers in school.


It’s bad with case law. Otherwise, very accurate.

It doesn't even know how many R's are in strawberry.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:When my DD was 6 years old, we were in a relatively empty park pretending to play baseball. She would bat the pretend ball and then run the bases for a home run. We were having fun. Then an off-leash dog decided that this looked like a fun game. It came tearing after her barking and lunging and she screamed and ran faster. Of course, this really made the dog want to chase her. She finally fell to the ground screaming and the dog bit her. It was a small dog but she was also small. The whole thing was really terrifying. The owner just said sorry my (little angel dog) has never done anything like that before. This is the problem.


Yes, exactly this. I also had an experience like this when my kid was young and it totally alerted me to the dangers if off leash dogs. Kids can be really unpredictable and loud, and a lot of the very normal things kids do will be interesting, exciting, or scary for a dog. No one should have to worry that if their kids darts behind a tree, calls out in excitement, or falls off the slide.

Also, a lot of common dog names and common kid names are the same or similar now. Please don't take your dog named Luna or Charlie to a local park unleashed as the odds some parent or kid will yell your dog's name is a really really high.


Yes. This also explains away the whole 'no one was using the playground' argument. The playground is for children, and good parents aren't going to let their kids play if there are unleashed dogs. We also don't take our kids to the dog park, because the dog park is for unleashed dogs.

A place for everything, and everything in its place.


I’ve never seen a kid or parent when I’ve taken my dog to the playground at 5:30 am during the summer. If they came, I’d leave.


This isn't the point. The law isn't "no leashes unless you see someone, then (try to) leash your dog". The law is clear, as is your stupidity.


But there’s no one around to enforce it, so…


The "it's only illegal if I get caught" mentality is such a disturbed way of living. Best of luck with it. On a long enough timeline, you'll understand why the law exists as written, and why you should follow it even when no one is around to force you.

Integrity is doing the right thing when "no one is around to enforce it" because YOU are around to manage yourself like a responsible adult.


Lol you idiots screaming about BREAKING THE LAW. I just looked and at least at my park, dogs are allowed off leash before 9AM
😂😂😂😂😂😂


Pics or it didn't happen, PP. Anyone can say anything they'd like on an anon board, and your level of glee at having pulled a "GOTCHA!!" suggests you're full of... something.


Yep. 9 pm to 9 AM. allowed off leash in parks where I live


Ah, I get it. You're just going to keep saying it, as if that makes it true. If this exists, prove it. But it probably doesn't, like the majority of the nonsense people post here. Useless.


I am not PP, but I am the Brooklyn poster. Here are the stated hours for off leash, posted on the internet for all to see: https://www.prospectpark.org/visit-the-park/general-info/rules-and-safety/dog-walking/

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I hate these unofficial dog runs. I had to stop taking my kid to a playground he really liked because people would use the unfenced sports field right next to it to unleash their dogs and it was way too close for comfort. All the people doing this near playgrounds and saying no one is bothered, people just don’t say anything or start avoiding the playground. You are bothering people!


This. We have a great playground right near our house but my kids often want to bypass it for one further away because it's in a park with an "unofficial dog run." I'm not going to march into a park and demand 20 people leash their dogs for my kids' comfort, and I'm also not going to force my kids to play somewhere that they are going to feel stressed out because of all the u leashed dogs wandering around. So we walk to another playground. But it sucks-- that playground was a selling point for living in this block for us, and it only got taken over by the unleashed dogs in the last few years.

I'd support a fenced dog run in the park in a heartbeat.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My dog (not a pit, a beagle) will absolutely attack an off leash dog that comes up to her, and she is not kidding around. If she hurts your dog it is your fault, OP. Your dog doesn’t deserve it, but you do. You will be found at fault, too, because you are the one with the off leash dog.


Your dog should not be out except on your fenced property. It’s your fault if your dog is aggressive.


It’s not. My dog is fine unless someone has a dog that is out of their control (off leash and not recallable). It has nothing to do with my dog. Are you willing to risk your dog’s safety on its recall? Because that is ALL ON YOU. My dog is fine with leashed dogs.


Your dog is aggressive and should not be around other dogs or people. You and your dog are the problem. Yes, it has to do with you and your dog. If your dog reacts to another dog off-leash you have a problem. Maybe it should be put down as you cannot control it and are saying its dangerous.


This. Why would you have a dog like this?? What if you look away for a moment and a child comes up to it? Or another dog? This is sick
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:When my DD was 6 years old, we were in a relatively empty park pretending to play baseball. She would bat the pretend ball and then run the bases for a home run. We were having fun. Then an off-leash dog decided that this looked like a fun game. It came tearing after her barking and lunging and she screamed and ran faster. Of course, this really made the dog want to chase her. She finally fell to the ground screaming and the dog bit her. It was a small dog but she was also small. The whole thing was really terrifying. The owner just said sorry my (little angel dog) has never done anything like that before. This is the problem.


Yes, exactly this. I also had an experience like this when my kid was young and it totally alerted me to the dangers if off leash dogs. Kids can be really unpredictable and loud, and a lot of the very normal things kids do will be interesting, exciting, or scary for a dog. No one should have to worry that if their kids darts behind a tree, calls out in excitement, or falls off the slide.

Also, a lot of common dog names and common kid names are the same or similar now. Please don't take your dog named Luna or Charlie to a local park unleashed as the odds some parent or kid will yell your dog's name is a really really high.


Yes. This also explains away the whole 'no one was using the playground' argument. The playground is for children, and good parents aren't going to let their kids play if there are unleashed dogs. We also don't take our kids to the dog park, because the dog park is for unleashed dogs.

A place for everything, and everything in its place.


I’ve never seen a kid or parent when I’ve taken my dog to the playground at 5:30 am during the summer. If they came, I’d leave.


This isn't the point. The law isn't "no leashes unless you see someone, then (try to) leash your dog". The law is clear, as is your stupidity.


But there’s no one around to enforce it, so…


The "it's only illegal if I get caught" mentality is such a disturbed way of living. Best of luck with it. On a long enough timeline, you'll understand why the law exists as written, and why you should follow it even when no one is around to force you.

Integrity is doing the right thing when "no one is around to enforce it" because YOU are around to manage yourself like a responsible adult.


So, you never drive over the speed limit? Jaywalk? If we followed you around, I’m pretty sure that “on a long enough timeline” you’d fall right off that high horse. Don’t get too comfortable up there.


DP but I don't get the point here. Yes, I do drive over the speed limit sometimes but I have also been over and received a ticket, which I deserved, so I really make every effort not to speed. Likewise, I don't jaywalk because I've been driving long enough to know how dangerous and crappy that is. I also teach my kid not to jaywalk. I did jaywalk some when I was younger and more selfish, but I learned.

No one is perfect but if you are a reasonable person and you don't have a personality disorder, if someone points out that you are doing something illegal and antisocial, the response is "yeah, you are right -- I will do better."

The fact that so many of you respond to people saying "you should keep your dog on a leash because (1) it's the law, and (2) it's safest for everyone" by insisting you can do whatever you want and who cares if it's illegal or harms other people is a reflection on your low character. That is not a normal response to what is ultimately a reasonable request.


Welcome to the new breed of dog owners. It's not their dog's fault.
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