Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a real estate agent and have had people try to bring their dogs into open houses three times in the past year. Bethesda and Chevy Chase.
This is insane!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where were you? I've never seen dogs inside retail stores in this area unless it was a pet store.
I have noticed this in more affluent urban areas of Virginia and DC.
Not in DC. Nice try with the trolling, though.
Trolling? Whst does "not in dc" mean anyway? The poster is correct, it's more common in the affluent parts of DC at least.
Anonymous wrote:"Therapy dogs". You can basically buy a certificate that says your dog is a therapy dog-- the qualifications are minimal-- and then use it to bully your dog into all kinds of places. Enough people still don't know the difference between service dogs (highly trained) and therapy dogs (didn't jump on or bite the "tester" for 10 minutes) that you can get away with it.
All kinds of crazies out there saying they need their therapy dog with them to lower their blood pressure or ease their anxiety or some BS. Having extensive experience with actual service dogs, I hate these people.
Anonymous wrote:Where were you? I've never seen dogs inside retail stores in this area unless it was a pet store.
I have noticed this in more affluent urban areas of Virginia and DC.
Not in DC. Nice try with the trolling, though.
Where were you? I've never seen dogs inside retail stores in this area unless it was a pet store.
I have noticed this in more affluent urban areas of Virginia and DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where were you? I've never seen dogs inside retail stores in this area unless it was a pet store.
OP here--I'm not in the DC area anymore, but should it matter? Especially at Sephora. Yuk. It's not like there is a Petsmart next door to it or anything either.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a real estate agent and have had people try to bring their dogs into open houses three times in the past year. Bethesda and Chevy Chase.
Anonymous wrote:I see dogs in the airport all the time: you can't check them into their crates hours and hours ahead of the flight, so people walk with them until it's time. Of course, the peeing was not okay.
I did recently see two large huskies uncrated on the plane itself, which I thought unusual: the couple traveling with them had bought three seats and there was a husky in a seat and one on the floor. I wanted to ask if they were service dogs because personally I would love to fly with my dog in the cabin, but would never check her as baggage. (I feel for the people with allergies, but I have the same problem when I get on a plane where there is a cat in an underseat carrier. I'd love there to be separate pets-allowed and no-pets flights.)
I agree with PP saying that some of these "therapy dogs" are cheats, but the bottom line is there is no standardized badge or harness for a service or therapy dog: all the dogs you see in stores, airports, etc. could very well be therapy dogs. (Poor behavior should be a giveaway, though.) Often store employees are afraid to ask, let alone protest, for fear of getting sued.