Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, the dog senses your fear, and is reacting to it. Maybe it thinks you're going to attack it if it doesn't attack you first. Maybe, instead of treating the dog as a threat, try being nice to it for a change. Give it a wave and a smile, and bring treats for it. You'll gain a friend.
Is this a troll post? OP ignore them. I really can’t believe there are idiots like this. The dog is not under the owner’s control. The OP doesn’t need to alter her own behavior, in particular, in her OWN yard, to avoid being attacked by a dog. I am a dog owner and the person who wrote this is crazy. If a dog isn’t under an owner’s control then it should always be leashed/tied up.
If you're really a dog owner like you claim, and you treat your dogs the way you treat other posters, then you sound like an abusive owner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, the dog senses your fear, and is reacting to it. Maybe it thinks you're going to attack it if it doesn't attack you first. Maybe, instead of treating the dog as a threat, try being nice to it for a change. Give it a wave and a smile, and bring treats for it. You'll gain a friend.
Is this a troll post? OP ignore them. I really can’t believe there are idiots like this. The dog is not under the owner’s control. The OP doesn’t need to alter her own behavior, in particular, in her OWN yard, to avoid being attacked by a dog. I am a dog owner and the person who wrote this is crazy. If a dog isn’t under an owner’s control then it should always be leashed/tied up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the neighbor isn't going to do anything unless you force their hand. You can suggest that they attach a hot wire to both the top and bottom pf the fence on their side. A small electric fence charger, a ground rod, standoffs and wire aren't going to break the bank and might deter the dog from digging under or climbing over the fence. I doubt they will be receptive though. Point a security camera at the back yard so that you will have a video to send to animal control the next time. Also, call and report any and all incidents to animal control.
Sorry but, that is cruel and there are other ways to control the dog than that.
Have you ever actually touched hotwire? We had to use it to protect our chickens from wild predators. It’s not excruciatingly painful, just enough to deter dangerous animals from hurting or killing.
I hope you don’t eat meat, because Hotwire is used to confine cattle. Or go to any zoos, because all the exhibits have Hotwire to keep wild animals out.
Anonymous wrote:OP, the dog senses your fear, and is reacting to it. Maybe it thinks you're going to attack it if it doesn't attack you first. Maybe, instead of treating the dog as a threat, try being nice to it for a change. Give it a wave and a smile, and bring treats for it. You'll gain a friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the neighbor isn't going to do anything unless you force their hand. You can suggest that they attach a hot wire to both the top and bottom pf the fence on their side. A small electric fence charger, a ground rod, standoffs and wire aren't going to break the bank and might deter the dog from digging under or climbing over the fence. I doubt they will be receptive though. Point a security camera at the back yard so that you will have a video to send to animal control the next time. Also, call and report any and all incidents to animal control.
Sorry but, that is cruel and there are other ways to control the dog than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the neighbor isn't going to do anything unless you force their hand. You can suggest that they attach a hot wire to both the top and bottom pf the fence on their side. A small electric fence charger, a ground rod, standoffs and wire aren't going to break the bank and might deter the dog from digging under or climbing over the fence. I doubt they will be receptive though. Point a security camera at the back yard so that you will have a video to send to animal control the next time. Also, call and report any and all incidents to animal control.
Sorry but, that is cruel and there are other ways to control the dog than that.
Anonymous wrote:
I agree that the behavior is concerning. There's an off chance the dog doesn't want to harm any of you, and is just very socially repressed and has never understood how to interact with strangers - I'm fostering a dog like this right now - but if you don't trust the owner and you don't trust the dog, you can't take chances! Please call animal control and detail all you've described here.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the neighbor isn't going to do anything unless you force their hand. You can suggest that they attach a hot wire to both the top and bottom pf the fence on their side. A small electric fence charger, a ground rod, standoffs and wire aren't going to break the bank and might deter the dog from digging under or climbing over the fence. I doubt they will be receptive though. Point a security camera at the back yard so that you will have a video to send to animal control the next time. Also, call and report any and all incidents to animal control.
Anonymous wrote:Demand the dog is put down.