Anonymous wrote:I would text back that you don't feel safe around the dog, and a dog that needs an illegal fence to keep it from attacking neighbors is not a dog that belongs in the city limits. I'd flat out say "I appreciate you finally being willing to make a change but I can't stop thinking that it could have been Larla in the yard, not me." Honestly they sound like terrible pet owners *and* parents that they're keeping this dog around their kid.
- dog owner and lover. That dog needs to be surrendered back to whatever rescue they got it from and/or put down.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on if the dog was actually aggressive or not.
OP could just be scared of the dog so automatically believes it’s snarling and wants to attack. Or it could be an excited dog with a loud bark that needs more training and a better fence.
The way people on here are so quick to always believe the worst, I’m not jumping to the OPs conclusions right away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would text back that you don't feel safe around the dog, and a dog that needs an illegal fence to keep it from attacking neighbors is not a dog that belongs in the city limits. I'd flat out say "I appreciate you finally being willing to make a change but I can't stop thinking that it could have been Larla in the yard, not me." Honestly they sound like terrible pet owners *and* parents that they're keeping this dog around their kid.
- dog owner and lover. That dog needs to be surrendered back to whatever rescue they got it from and/or put down.
PP again. Just for pragmatic purposes, what I'd do before texting back is call Animal Control. And then you can either write some version of the above and say "I had already called AC before you messaged" or wait until they complain about the visit from AC and tell them you'd already reported it before they texted. Short version: don't get into a negotiation about whether to report it. Report it before you speak to them about next steps.
Anonymous wrote:I would text back that you don't feel safe around the dog, and a dog that needs an illegal fence to keep it from attacking neighbors is not a dog that belongs in the city limits. I'd flat out say "I appreciate you finally being willing to make a change but I can't stop thinking that it could have been Larla in the yard, not me." Honestly they sound like terrible pet owners *and* parents that they're keeping this dog around their kid.
- dog owner and lover. That dog needs to be surrendered back to whatever rescue they got it from and/or put down.
Anonymous wrote:If it was jumping the fence in an aggressive way to come after you, I definitely agree with prior posters.
If it was jumping the fence because it is excited and wants to play with you, I wouldn't worry.
The second can be trained away or dealt with by things like taller fences. The first cannot really be trained away, and if the animal is so desperate to attack someone that it will jump a fence, it will find another way.
Not ever barking dog that jumps a fence is aggressive. But a dog that is so aggressive that it's willing to leave it's own territory to proactively attack someone is not a good dog and there's no way to change that.