Anonymous wrote:I spent some years fostering pregnant dogs and care for their puppies, and train them up for adoption.
All the puppies turned out to be pit mixes with non-pit mothers, except one litter that looked all lab.
Every puppy was trainable, affectionate and docile once taught boundaries.
The beagles mixes were by far the LOUDEST![]()
If you train a pit well they're not going to be more or less dangerous than any other breed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dog was blue gray with a lithe longer body and a classic Pitt bull head/jaw. They were just playing and wrestling, and my dog had a good time, but I could see how quickly the dog could seriously hurt any animal it wanted to. It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was (and it was a beautiful dog, and only playing thankfully).
I could see how people claim these dogs are built for fighting.
So what’s the answer? Some of the areas around where I live ban Pitt bulls. I know some people probably don’t think that’s fair, but I’m not sure.
Fwiw the owner adopted the dog from Alabama and was told it was a ‘lab mix’. He laughed because he said obviously that was somewhat misleading.
What is the answer?
Require huge fines to anyone caught with an un neutered or un spayed pitbull
Require rescues and shelters to be financially liable for adopting out any pitbull with a bite history.
Require shelters to immediately put down any dog with an unprovoked bite attack that results in stitches, or that involves biting someone outside the owner's property.
Ban reactive dog breeds like pitbulls from unleashed areas like dog parks and trails.
Require fenced yards of anyone who owns a pitbull breed.
Anonymous wrote:I spent some years fostering pregnant dogs and care for their puppies, and train them up for adoption.
All the puppies turned out to be pit mixes with non-pit mothers, except one litter that looked all lab.
Every puppy was trainable, affectionate and docile once taught boundaries.
The beagles mixes were by far the LOUDEST![]()
If you train a pit well they're not going to be more or less dangerous than any other breed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dog was blue gray with a lithe longer body and a classic Pitt bull head/jaw. They were just playing and wrestling, and my dog had a good time, but I could see how quickly the dog could seriously hurt any animal it wanted to. It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was (and it was a beautiful dog, and only playing thankfully).
I could see how people claim these dogs are built for fighting.
So what’s the answer? Some of the areas around where I live ban Pitt bulls. I know some people probably don’t think that’s fair, but I’m not sure.
Fwiw the owner adopted the dog from Alabama and was told it was a ‘lab mix’. He laughed because he said obviously that was somewhat misleading.
Keep an eye on your dog or leave when the pitbull "mixes" show up.
You don't want your dog to get mauled by one.
Anonymous wrote:The dog was blue gray with a lithe longer body and a classic Pitt bull head/jaw. They were just playing and wrestling, and my dog had a good time, but I could see how quickly the dog could seriously hurt any animal it wanted to. It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was (and it was a beautiful dog, and only playing thankfully).
I could see how people claim these dogs are built for fighting.
So what’s the answer? Some of the areas around where I live ban Pitt bulls. I know some people probably don’t think that’s fair, but I’m not sure.
Fwiw the owner adopted the dog from Alabama and was told it was a ‘lab mix’. He laughed because he said obviously that was somewhat misleading.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This will not end well.
This.
Standard troll format, too. "Everything was totally fine, but IT WAS A PIT BULL OMG!!!"
Anonymous wrote:The dog was blue gray with a lithe longer body and a classic Pitt bull head/jaw. They were just playing and wrestling, and my dog had a good time, but I could see how quickly the dog could seriously hurt any animal it wanted to. It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was (and it was a beautiful dog, and only playing thankfully).
I could see how people claim these dogs are built for fighting.
So what’s the answer? Some of the areas around where I live ban Pitt bulls. I know some people probably don’t think that’s fair, but I’m not sure.
Fwiw the owner adopted the dog from Alabama and was told it was a ‘lab mix’. He laughed because he said obviously that was somewhat misleading.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dog was blue gray with a lithe longer body and a classic Pitt bull head/jaw. They were just playing and wrestling, and my dog had a good time, but I could see how quickly the dog could seriously hurt any animal it wanted to. It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was (and it was a beautiful dog, and only playing thankfully).
I could see how people claim these dogs are built for fighting.
So what’s the answer? Some of the areas around where I live ban Pitt bulls. I know some people probably don’t think that’s fair, but I’m not sure.
Fwiw the owner adopted the dog from Alabama and was told it was a ‘lab mix’. He laughed because he said obviously that was somewhat misleading.
It was very deliberately misleading. Sounds like he didn’t really care because he fell in love with the dog.
I hope that beautiful dog has many more days happily playing without incident.
Anonymous wrote: It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was
Anonymous wrote:The dog was blue gray with a lithe longer body and a classic Pitt bull head/jaw. They were just playing and wrestling, and my dog had a good time, but I could see how quickly the dog could seriously hurt any animal it wanted to. It was so strong and quick and knew how to lower its head and charge and then quickly change direction and twist its body around to get to my dogs flank. It was sort of fascinating to watch how skilled it was (and it was a beautiful dog, and only playing thankfully).
I could see how people claim these dogs are built for fighting.
So what’s the answer? Some of the areas around where I live ban Pitt bulls. I know some people probably don’t think that’s fair, but I’m not sure.
Fwiw the owner adopted the dog from Alabama and was told it was a ‘lab mix’. He laughed because he said obviously that was somewhat misleading.
Anonymous wrote:This will not end well.