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I'd give the neighbors an honest but unemotional response, as needed, such as: "We aren't comfortable having our kids around a rescue dog that is strong enough to do real damage. I'd never forgive myself if anything happened - it would be devastating to both our families and also to the dog. My kids love playing with yours, though, and your kids are always welcome in our home. I hope that if anything in our home made you uncomfortable, you'd tell me, and that's why I am letting you know. Thanks for understanding."
I sympathize, OP. I wouldn't like my kids around a pitbull. I'm still training my kids (toddlers) how to act around dogs and it would be unfair for both my kids and the dog to have them together. If they were in high school I'd probably feel differently -- less running around and screaming/ excitement. |
I would be honest. "Sorry, but we are just not comfortable with our son playing in the same space as a large dog. We love your son and he is free to come over and play at any time. " and leave it at that. |
Shockingly, I have a dog and NO fence. We walk our dog, and he doesn’t go out without a leash. Jesus wept. |
I have 2 large dogs (lab mixes but definitely big) and I would take no personal offense to someone not wanting their kids playing with them/at my house with them. I have no concerns regarding aggression but big dogs can be scary for kids and adults and large dogs have attacked and hurt people so these fears aren’t baseless. I am not afraid my dogs will attack anyone but I’d never try to bully someone into a situation they were uncomfortable with |
+1 |
Uh, cool. OP- you are going to want to get that fence fixed |
| You’re doing the right thing OP. They have no idea what the life of the dog was like before they rescued it. It’s not worth it. I wouldn’t let my kids be around it. |
| OP you are obviously correct. |
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OP if it were me I would put up a good fence around MY yard since you cannot control what they do with theirs. I also wouldn’t count on them always containing the dog, if it gets loose then it can enter your property at points other than the fence that borders you.
I don’t understand why people who have little kids bring this kind of dog into their house. |
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I can't stomach reading all of this but I'm with you. I wouldn't let my kids over there. But their kids are welcome here!
Sucks. But their right to do! |
+1 |
But pitbulls have some innate issues that are problematic. And their behavior with YOU and YOUR KIDS and everyone they've met so far doesn't necessarily predict what they will do with strangers. I hope you at least disclose owning the breed, or put the dog away, before you invite other kids or families over. It will probably be fine, but if it's isn't -- and it's more like to not be fine than if you had, say, a golden or just about any other dog -- you are going to be on the hook for A LOT of money and litigation, a lot of pain from likely having to put a dog down, and a lot of guilt for knowing this was always a possibility even if a slim one. |
+1 |
| My best friend in college raised a pit bull from puppy to adult. Sweet as can be until it absolutely unprovoked bit my 18 month old DDs cheek. Luckily did not break skin. My friend-pregnant at the time-was heartbroken but immediately and responsibly sent to her parents who had rural, fenced in property. You are right to be cautious OP and the pit bull defenders are just wrong. |
I would tell them that the dog makes you nervous. If you want to smooth it over, just say you are afraid of dogs and wouldn't be able to relax if your kid is around theirs. This, IMO, is better than wondering why your kid isn't allowed at my house. |