Anonymous wrote:Why don't you mind your own business and quit the hating?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always let me dog off leash when we go hiking in the woods on trails. If you don't like it you can kiss my ass! Leash your brat children; they are more likely to be a nuissance. In the city or on sidewalks I always have him on a leash.
My leashed dogs have been attacked and strays or dogs walking off leash have attacked my unleashed animals on and off my properties.
Anonymous wrote:I always let me dog off leash when we go hiking in the woods on trails. If you don't like it you can kiss my ass! Leash your brat children; they are more likely to be a nuissance. In the city or on sidewalks I always have him on a leash.
Anonymous wrote:I have two older cats. Their idea of being outside is to sit on our front porch and sleep. My neighbor has a yellow lab that he walks past our house everyday. He has started walking the dog without a leash because the dog is so "good". The "good" dog ran up on my front porch (not close to the sidewalk at all BTW) and the cats went for him like tasmanian devils. He comes running up, on my lawn, onto my porch and starts screaming at me to "control my cats"! They scratched up his dog before I could open the door to let them in. He is threatening to sue me for the vet bill now. I told him to F*ck Off. Entitled - I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hahahahaha. I knew it was someone with a little kid. Fearful parents create fearful children. Glad you're not my parent.
My then-3 yr old had his face split open by a dog bite last year. One of those supposedly friendly, won't-hurt-anyone, he-just-likes-to-play kinds of dogs. He wandered up to my kid and started sniffing at his face, then was startled by a loud noise behind him, and snapped. The whole incident took about 30 seconds. We ended up in the ER, and it took 10 stitches to sew his lip and cheek back together. The owner swore that the dog had NEVER even come CLOSE to biting ANYONE, EVER. Until my son was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
He loves dogs, always has. But after that experience, it does freak him out a bit when a large dog (whose teeth are level with his face) comes running up unannounced. We're working hard on getting him over this, but every time it happens, it sets him back at least a month.
So next time you scoff at "fearful parents", please consider that you may not know the whole story. We've taken our kids on adventures that would blow your mind, and are as far from a "fearful" family as you could imagine. But I really, really don't appreciate your dogs running up and scaring the shit out of a little kid who spent all night in the hospital getting his face sewn together. Keep it on a leash.
I am so terribly sorry this happened to your child. My child was bitten by a dog when he was a toddler, and he was terrified of dogs for several years. We now have a sweet dog, and I would never, ever imagine letting her off leash around children or people anywhere else than in a dog park.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a dog is going to or has the potential to harm someone....biting, growling, jumping, knocking over, then you need to leash. Not every dog needs to be on a leash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a dog is going to or has the potential to harm someone....biting, growling, jumping, knocking over, then you need to leash. Not every dog needs to be on a leash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like it's as simple as this: if you are in a situation where you hear yourself saying about your dog, "he's friendly!" then you most likely have a problem. It means you know your dog is scaring other people or getting in their space, and you're trying to say it's ok by explaining that "he's friendly!" But it's not ok, even if he's the friendliest dog on the planet. If you find yourself starting to say "he's friendly!" then stop, and think about what you can do to make it so that you don't have to.
+100. Well said.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hahahahaha. I knew it was someone with a little kid. Fearful parents create fearful children. Glad you're not my parent.
My then-3 yr old had his face split open by a dog bite last year. One of those supposedly friendly, won't-hurt-anyone, he-just-likes-to-play kinds of dogs. He wandered up to my kid and started sniffing at his face, then was startled by a loud noise behind him, and snapped. The whole incident took about 30 seconds. We ended up in the ER, and it took 10 stitches to sew his lip and cheek back together. The owner swore that the dog had NEVER even come CLOSE to biting ANYONE, EVER. Until my son was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
He loves dogs, always has. But after that experience, it does freak him out a bit when a large dog (whose teeth are level with his face) comes running up unannounced. We're working hard on getting him over this, but every time it happens, it sets him back at least a month.
So next time you scoff at "fearful parents", please consider that you may not know the whole story. We've taken our kids on adventures that would blow your mind, and are as far from a "fearful" family as you could imagine. But I really, really don't appreciate your dogs running up and scaring the shit out of a little kid who spent all night in the hospital getting his face sewn together. Keep it on a leash.