Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We train our small dogs to come and not leave the yard
You tell yourself that, but you really need a physical fence if you are letting your dogs out in the yard without you.
Our dogs are professionally trained
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know about that. I have a medium sized dog that a small dog came over and bit his nose out of nowhere . My dog did nothing back. Owner came and picked up her dog and apologized.
Would be a little wary and cautious at first, that your dog might do that again
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We train our small dogs to come and not leave the yard
You tell yourself that, but you really need a physical fence if you are letting your dogs out in the yard without you.
Anonymous wrote:We train our small dogs to come and not leave the yard
Anonymous wrote:We train our small dogs to come and not leave the yard
Anonymous wrote:Yes, that little dog is vicious. The big dog responded appropriately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's say you're walking your very large dog (NOT even remotely a pit bull, for what it's worth), which has never bitten a person or thing and actually has a history of playing well and at times living with little dogs, on leash down a city street Two little dogs that your big dog and you don't know and have never seen before appear out of nowhere, having got loose after their owner left the gate to their front yard open, and both little dogs come running at your on leash big dog on the sidewalk out of nowhere. Before you even have a chance to react, one of the little dogs jumps right into the face of your dog, which is ten times bigger, and your dog bites and very seriously injures the little dog.
Would you now consider your dog to be a dangerous dog?
I would not consider my dog to be "a dangerous dog." However, after two of three dogs who had previously gotten along for years got into a fight that ended in an expensive vet visit we were told by the vet that once a fight happens it's more likely to happen (and potentially escalate) again. We chose to keep those three apart during extended family get gatherings and always watched our dog more closely than we had before.
Sorry, you had to deal with this OP. My personal pet peeve is people who think that little dogs should be treated differently than big dogs--meaning letting them jump on people, bark non-stop or bite. Nope. Little dogs need the same discipline as a larger dog does.
Anonymous wrote:Let's say you're walking your very large dog (NOT even remotely a pit bull, for what it's worth), which has never bitten a person or thing and actually has a history of playing well and at times living with little dogs, on leash down a city street Two little dogs that your big dog and you don't know and have never seen before appear out of nowhere, having got loose after their owner left the gate to their front yard open, and both little dogs come running at your on leash big dog on the sidewalk out of nowhere. Before you even have a chance to react, one of the little dogs jumps right into the face of your dog, which is ten times bigger, and your dog bites and very seriously injures the little dog.
Would you now consider your dog to be a dangerous dog?
Anonymous wrote:That happened to me years ago, except that my dog killed the little one in one swift move. Animal control gave the small dog owners a ticket/fine.