Anonymous wrote:Rat poison mixed with peanut butter
Anonymous wrote:Why would you not call animal control? The dog attacked another dog. I would have called the very first time. Dogs are beast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is the barking going to be helped by a leash?
The leash allows the owners to both create a distance between their animals. Leashed dogs often do not feel comfortable having a strange dog (even a wonderful well behaved dog) walking into "their" space like that.
Having one dog on a leash, the other dog off the leash always puts the leashed dog at a disadvantage because their freedom of movement is restricted.
What you say is true, however one of my leashed dogs barks quite a bit when encountering any other dog -- on a leash. Barking is breed specific. And it's also a bad habit. I rescued my second beagle in July and we are working on barking right now with an intensive program of training and reinforcement. I think he was neglected before and as you may know, beagles are quite vocal to begin with so there's only so much that can be done about beagle vocalization. I'm not seeing that leashing can prevent each and every problem described in this post. It's not a panacea for all dog problems.
People on DCUM like to blame unleashed dogs for everything. Note that I am not advocating unleashing dogs, but there are limits to what mere leashing accomplishes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is the barking going to be helped by a leash?
The leash allows the owners to both create a distance between their animals. Leashed dogs often do not feel comfortable having a strange dog (even a wonderful well behaved dog) walking into "their" space like that.
Having one dog on a leash, the other dog off the leash always puts the leashed dog at a disadvantage because their freedom of movement is restricted.
What you say is true, however one of my leashed dogs barks quite a bit when encountering any other dog -- on a leash. Barking is breed specific. And it's also a bad habit. I rescued my second beagle in July and we are working on barking right now with an intensive program of training and reinforcement. I think he was neglected before and as you may know, beagles are quite vocal to begin with so there's only so much that can be done about beagle vocalization. I'm not seeing that leashing can prevent each and every problem described in this post. It's not a panacea for all dog problems.
People on DCUM like to blame unleashed dogs for everything. Note that I am not advocating unleashing dogs, but there are limits to what mere leashing accomplishes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is the barking going to be helped by a leash?
The leash allows the owners to both create a distance between their animals. Leashed dogs often do not feel comfortable having a strange dog (even a wonderful well behaved dog) walking into "their" space like that.
Having one dog on a leash, the other dog off the leash always puts the leashed dog at a disadvantage because their freedom of movement is restricted.
Anonymous wrote:How is the barking going to be helped by a leash?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an encounter with an off-leash dog on our walk this morning. I have two dogs who are a little leash-reactive, so it can be a challenge when we encounter an off-leash dog. Seems to depend on the dog. This morning, my husband passed the off-leash dog with our boy dog and all was fine. I passed the off-leash dog and my girl dog barked and lunged. No contact was made, of course, because my dog was restrained. But, it upset the fellow with the off-leashed dog. He yelled at us.
Did the off leash dog walk up to your dog? Or was the off leash dog walking calmly by his/her owner's side, as well behaved as a service dog?
I don't really care if the dog is off leash as long as it isn't wandering up to me and my dog. But that guy that yelled at you is completely unrealistic to expect that other dog owners will have that same type of perfect control over their dogs.
The off-leash dog and its owner were coming one way on the sidewalk. We were heading the other way. I stepped into the road as much as I could without getting into traffic to give them space. The off-leash dog was not entirely under voice control, but did pretty well. There was no physical contact between the dogs, just some barking. I was more concerned with my dog and getting past the other dog and getting out of the street.
In any event, it seemed to upset the guy who had the off-leash dog. I suppose if his dog was on leash, he could have kept it more on the other side of the side walk and created more space between the dogs and avoided the entire situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an encounter with an off-leash dog on our walk this morning. I have two dogs who are a little leash-reactive, so it can be a challenge when we encounter an off-leash dog. Seems to depend on the dog. This morning, my husband passed the off-leash dog with our boy dog and all was fine. I passed the off-leash dog and my girl dog barked and lunged. No contact was made, of course, because my dog was restrained. But, it upset the fellow with the off-leashed dog. He yelled at us.
Did the off leash dog walk up to your dog? Or was the off leash dog walking calmly by his/her owner's side, as well behaved as a service dog?
I don't really care if the dog is off leash as long as it isn't wandering up to me and my dog. But that guy that yelled at you is completely unrealistic to expect that other dog owners will have that same type of perfect control over their dogs.
Anonymous wrote:We had an encounter with an off-leash dog on our walk this morning. I have two dogs who are a little leash-reactive, so it can be a challenge when we encounter an off-leash dog. Seems to depend on the dog. This morning, my husband passed the off-leash dog with our boy dog and all was fine. I passed the off-leash dog and my girl dog barked and lunged. No contact was made, of course, because my dog was restrained. But, it upset the fellow with the off-leashed dog. He yelled at us.