Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
why do you say that? There is very little traffic where we live and our dog does not roam far.
build a fenceAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
why do you say that? There is very little traffic where we live and our dog does not roam far.
You must be a troll. Your dog obviously roamed far enough for long enough to get picked up by AC.
AC told me the name of the road where he was picked up. I live on this road and it is not a long road
Do you know if I could attach a fitbit type of a tracker to see his movements?
I don't know about that, but I do know that they sell this really innovative new thing called a LEASH! Seriously, no one cares that your little dog doesn't roam far or that your road is not long or anything else. Keep your damn dog off my lawn!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
why do you say that? There is very little traffic where we live and our dog does not roam far.
You must be a troll. Your dog obviously roamed far enough for long enough to get picked up by AC.
AC told me the name of the road where he was picked up. I live on this road and it is not a long road
Do you know if I could attach a fitbit type of a tracker to see his movements?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
why do you say that? There is very little traffic where we live and our dog does not roam far.
You must be a troll. Your dog obviously roamed far enough for long enough to get picked up by AC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
why do you say that? There is very little traffic where we live and our dog does not roam far.
Anonymous wrote:I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a similar problem. I first tried the talking to the pet owner approach. Non confrontational, hey your dogs are causing this problem.... Big mistake. she went ballistic on me. Now I just automatically take a picture of her dogs and call animal control.
I had a similar problem. Neighbors were totally unconcerned and annoyed with us. Next time their dog was in my yard, penned it in our back yard and called animal control. AC was familiar with the family and dogs (other people had called, not just us), the dog went to the pound (it's a no-kill shelter. If the dog wasn't claimed in 2 weeks, it would be put up for adoption).
Normally, if I see a loose dog, I assume it's lost and will try to contact the owner. It's what I want someone to do if my dog gets out. But, for those dogs who are out frequently and the owners don't care, I call AC. Believe me, you aren't the only one bothered by it and they'll never know it was you.
That must be what happened to our dog.
Animal control told us what time he was picked up and what road. Is there a way I could ask them for more information?
My dog is traumatized by the event. He is small and our has a 1/3 acre that backs onto woods, we are in a dead end street. He obviously was not lost or causing a nuisance
I hope you learned to keep your dog on a leash or put up a fence. What if your dog was hit by a car or hurt by another animal? The only person at fault for traumatizing your dog is you.
Anonymous wrote:I had a similar problem. I first tried the talking to the pet owner approach. Non confrontational, hey your dogs are causing this problem.... Big mistake. she went ballistic on me. Now I just automatically take a picture of her dogs and call animal control.
I had a similar problem. Neighbors were totally unconcerned and annoyed with us. Next time their dog was in my yard, penned it in our back yard and called animal control. AC was familiar with the family and dogs (other people had called, not just us), the dog went to the pound (it's a no-kill shelter. If the dog wasn't claimed in 2 weeks, it would be put up for adoption).
Normally, if I see a loose dog, I assume it's lost and will try to contact the owner. It's what I want someone to do if my dog gets out. But, for those dogs who are out frequently and the owners don't care, I call AC. Believe me, you aren't the only one bothered by it and they'll never know it was you.
Anonymous wrote:What's your problem with little dogs? If anything, their poop is way smaller than that of big dogs. You find them yappy? How is that more annoying than the deep, loud barking of large dogs? The size of the dog shouldn't matter…it's the principle that matters. People shouldn't let any pet run around loose--besides the poop and annoyance factor, it's just not safe for the pets themselves.