Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
Why are dog people so obsessed with comparing dogs to kids. We are discussing dogs. Keep your nasty, filthy beast away from children.
Why do parents get so triggered when you tell them to respect dogs and not assume that they want your kids petting them? Most dogs are not nasty or filthy.
But you just proved to be nasty yourself! So unnecessarily aggressive.
We're not "triggered". You're off-topic, making this thread about something it's not in order to deflect from your wrong approach to walking your dog. We're trying to help you, because you're wrong, and you seem lost.
Focus and follow the thread, which will solve your problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many of us have posted in this thread about our kids being scared of dogs, dogs running up to our kids etc. kids running up to strange dogs is just not the problem you’re making it out to be. Keep your dog leashed and don’t let it touch me or my kid. Thanks!!
It is a problem! Not every kid is like your kid. I've experienced it. Just like some dogs love kids ( my old dog did) many do not like them. Kids are more likely to be bitten. But if you keep away from dogs and taught you kids to do the same than I wasn't talking to you. Feel free to not respond if it isn't relevant
If your dog is on a leash and you're doing your job, you'll see a kid with plenty of time to say something and move your dog out of the way. The leash protects you and your dog, as well as the unsupervised child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many of us have posted in this thread about our kids being scared of dogs, dogs running up to our kids etc. kids running up to strange dogs is just not the problem you’re making it out to be. Keep your dog leashed and don’t let it touch me or my kid. Thanks!!
It is a problem! Not every kid is like your kid. I've experienced it. Just like some dogs love kids ( my old dog did) many do not like them. Kids are more likely to be bitten. But if you keep away from dogs and taught you kids to do the same than I wasn't talking to you. Feel free to not respond if it isn't relevant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
Why are dog people so obsessed with comparing dogs to kids. We are discussing dogs. Keep your nasty, filthy beast away from children.
Why do parents get so triggered when you tell them to respect dogs and not assume that they want your kids petting them? Most dogs are not nasty or filthy.
But you just proved to be nasty yourself! So unnecessarily aggressive.
Anonymous wrote:So many of us have posted in this thread about our kids being scared of dogs, dogs running up to our kids etc. kids running up to strange dogs is just not the problem you’re making it out to be. Keep your dog leashed and don’t let it touch me or my kid. Thanks!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
Why are dog people so obsessed with comparing dogs to kids. We are discussing dogs. Keep your nasty, filthy beast away from children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
You don’t train kids. You raise them. Kids aren’t pet dogs. If your dog panics when kids run near him your dog should not be out in public around kids without a muzzle. If a kid runs up to your dog to pat it and your reactive dog bites it, it is still your liability, even if you think that is unfair.
Anonymous wrote:So many of us have posted in this thread about our kids being scared of dogs, dogs running up to our kids etc. kids running up to strange dogs is just not the problem you’re making it out to be. Keep your dog leashed and don’t let it touch me or my kid. Thanks!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
You don’t train kids. You raise them. Kids aren’t pet dogs. If your dog panics when kids run near him your dog should not be out in public around kids without a muzzle. If a kid runs up to your dog to pat it and your reactive dog bites it, it is still your liability, even if you think that is unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.
I hope you tell your kid to stay away from leashed dogs too. Not every dog likes kids and when they run up to you waving their arms and screaming they want to pet your dog that can be scary for the dog!
Train your kids too
Anonymous wrote:I have taught my child to stay far away from unleashed dogs due to the immediate danger but also due to the fact that people who don’t follow leash laws don’t follow other laws either. Their dogs are likely not properly trained and vaccinated, and the owner won’t prevent their dogs from biting someone or stick around to verify if someone is ok if they do get bitten. This thread is really, really proving my point.