Anonymous wrote:My same-block neighbor recently adopted a young adult pit bull who is always straining at the leash. This dog can pull an adult man down the street and often appears to be out of control. The dog also does some barking and lunging at my dog (my dog is dog-reactive and can provoke other dogs, so I'm not blaming the pit bull ... but the pit bull reacts too).
My issue is that my neighbor lets his kids, approximately age 10, walk the dog alone. There is no way they can control the dog if the dog decides to run off / charge. I am concerned that either my dog or my toddler could get hurt if we encounter each other outside.
Neighbor is very sensitive about breed-related slights -- for example, I walked my dog into the street to avoid his dog (which I do when encountering any dog, because my dog is a jerk) and he immediately went to the "You're wrong about pit bulls" lecture while trying to force an approach. Other than dog walking, we wave hello but are not close. I don't know his children's names.
So, I want to talk to him about not letting his kids walk the dog alone, but I want to do it in a way that he won't immediately tune out as breed discrimination. Any tips?
So there are 2 badly behaved dogs looking to mix it up on the block. Ignore the you're wrong about pit bull stuff. Tell the guy his kid cannot handle the dog and you're worried something might happen. Tell him about harnesses and using a martingale collar. I've seen people that were not dog aware walk the pit on a buckle collar-over the head and off it went.
I would not want to encounter your dog either. Both need a muzzle on the open street.