Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embarrassing, one time was in a pet store, another time in a hardware store. Is this normal? When we go for walks, he dies tend to stop and “mark” a lot.
Anyone experience this?
Stop taking your dog in stores. Problem solved!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embarrassing, one time was in a pet store, another time in a hardware store. Is this normal? When we go for walks, he dies tend to stop and “mark” a lot.
Anyone experience this?
Whyyy are you bringing your dog into stores?!
Do not bring your dog inside stores. It is rude, selfish and entitled.
Keep your dog at home or have one of your wait outside the store with him.
What is wrong with dog owners in this area???
Dogs are allowed at pet store and Home Depot but op needs to clean it up and leave dog home if they cannot figure this out.
No.
Service animals only at Home Depot and other stores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stores are staffed with low-ish paid employees who do not want to invite confrontation. It’s also dangerous to confront folks in a country full of guns. Owners need to take responsibility and not be so selfish. But…have you met most humans?
People used to smoke in businesses 30 years ago and no one would do that now. Employees would put a stop to that and it has nothing to do with freaking guns. It's just that dogs are worshiped in this country and no one wants to be classed as a dog-hater.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Embarrassing, one time was in a pet store, another time in a hardware store. Is this normal? When we go for walks, he dies tend to stop and “mark” a lot.
Anyone experience this?
Whyyy are you bringing your dog into stores?!
Do not bring your dog inside stores. It is rude, selfish and entitled.
Keep your dog at home or have one of your wait outside the store with him.
What is wrong with dog owners in this area???
Dogs are allowed at pet store and Home Depot but op needs to clean it up and leave dog home if they cannot figure this out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What happened is that people stopped having children and started to focus their love on pets.
That's why people allow their pets to do this shamelessly, but why would a place of business allow it? I'm guessing there is data that customers who bring their dogs spend more and that profit outweighs the other customers who are annoyed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dogs are not children people.
Keep your animals at home
Some children and adults need to stay home too.
Not this dumb comment again. Stores are meant for people, not dogs. Dogs will never be equal or more important than people. People don't squat and pee on the floor in the store. If they did, they'd be arrested and removed. Keep your nasty, peeing dog at home.
I've already said no stores for this dog, but to play devil's advocate a bit, the two stores listed (pet store and hardware) both allow dogs. The dog wasn't in a Blue Mercury or Nordstrom or grocery store or something. Pet stores are probably never going to say, "our stores are meant for people, not dogs" because...they’re kinda meant for dogs.
I'm assuming they also do not want a dog marking his territory in their pet store.
No one WANTS it but I'm sure it happens all the time and there's a bit of a ripple effect due to how marking works. So this dog shouldn't go now that OP knows it's a possibilty, but a bunch of people here are worked up into a lather that any dog at all should ever be in any store ever and that's kind of disingenuous when talking aboit pet friendly spaces.
You're missing the point which is that people DO bring dogs in stores where they are absolutely not welcome. It's a problem and the more people are aware that their dogs don't belong in every setting, the better.
I'm not missing the point at all. There is a whole other active thread right now on exactly that. That point is a derailment from OPs question about her dog so going off on OP about people bringing dogs into grocery stores and raking the OP over the coals for someone else's poor behavior is off topic. Going from, "my dog peed at petco" to "a pitball mauled someone at Miss Pixies!" Is completely moving the goalposts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To actually answer your question OP, yes it is unfortunately normal for some dogs. Mine does it. I do not take him into stores (even Pet Smart or Home Depot). I know he does it because he does it at the vet's office on occasion, and when I apologized and asked for paper towels and spray to clean it up, they told me it happens fairly frequently.
He's a large breed unneutered male, they are much more prone to it.
Maybe neuter your damn dog?
Anonymous wrote:To actually answer your question OP, yes it is unfortunately normal for some dogs. Mine does it. I do not take him into stores (even Pet Smart or Home Depot). I know he does it because he does it at the vet's office on occasion, and when I apologized and asked for paper towels and spray to clean it up, they told me it happens fairly frequently.
He's a large breed unneutered male, they are much more prone to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dogs are not children people.
Keep your animals at home
Some children and adults need to stay home too.
Not this dumb comment again. Stores are meant for people, not dogs. Dogs will never be equal or more important than people. People don't squat and pee on the floor in the store. If they did, they'd be arrested and removed. Keep your nasty, peeing dog at home.
I've already said no stores for this dog, but to play devil's advocate a bit, the two stores listed (pet store and hardware) both allow dogs. The dog wasn't in a Blue Mercury or Nordstrom or grocery store or something. Pet stores are probably never going to say, "our stores are meant for people, not dogs" because...they’re kinda meant for dogs.
I'm assuming they also do not want a dog marking his territory in their pet store.
No one WANTS it but I'm sure it happens all the time and there's a bit of a ripple effect due to how marking works. So this dog shouldn't go now that OP knows it's a possibilty, but a bunch of people here are worked up into a lather that any dog at all should ever be in any store ever and that's kind of disingenuous when talking aboit pet friendly spaces.
You're missing the point which is that people DO bring dogs in stores where they are absolutely not welcome. It's a problem and the more people are aware that their dogs don't belong in every setting, the better.