Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree 100%. We had to put down our beloved dog because of this. A strange man suddenly reach down to pet our dog and our dog bit his hand in self defense. The man then threatened to sue us. It was heartbreaking and I wish he would have just asked if he could pet him and I would have said no because my dog was a rescue and had always been afraid of men he didn’t know.
This happened to my former coworker. She had her dog out on a walk when an unleashed dog ran up to them. It was a noisy little terrier, all bark and no bite, but their dog saw it as a threat to its human and attacked the dog. Her dog had to be put down since it had killed the other dog, not just hurt it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you walking your dog to the right of you? Keep it on the furthest area way from other humans (walk on the right just like driving, and dog should be to the right of you).
Oh FFS. Dogs are traditionally trained to heel to the left. People walking dogs should walk to the left, and people approaching should get over the compulsion to act as though a sidewalk has to be treated like a road at all times.
Anonymous wrote:Are you walking your dog to the right of you? Keep it on the furthest area way from other humans (walk on the right just like driving, and dog should be to the right of you).
Who said that the dog had to be put down?Anonymous wrote:Agree 100%. We had to put down our beloved dog because of this. A strange man suddenly reach down to pet our dog and our dog bit his hand in self defense. The man then threatened to sue us. It was heartbreaking and I wish he would have just asked if he could pet him and I would have said no because my dog was a rescue and had always been afraid of men he didn’t know.
Anonymous wrote:You can get a doggie jacket that says "DO NOT PET." I used to see a woman with a beautiful friendly-looking cute dog wearing one. I definitely never even thought about asking to pet that dog.
You should try it.
Anonymous wrote:Agree 100%. We had to put down our beloved dog because of this. A strange man suddenly reach down to pet our dog and our dog bit his hand in self defense. The man then threatened to sue us. It was heartbreaking and I wish he would have just asked if he could pet him and I would have said no because my dog was a rescue and had always been afraid of men he didn’t know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares about your freaking crazy dog. Get it together.
Then stay away from it.
ok well then don't give me the side-eye when I pull my kid to the other side of the sidewalk when you pass with your ugly pit bull, or when tell you to get your ugly, mean pit bull out of the park.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, what about a muzzle? People tend to stay away from a dog with a muzzle.
That way even if some dumb ass does still approach, your dog can't bite.
Our dog won't wear one, she panics. But is it worth a try?
We’re doing clicker training (click and treat whenever she sees a person) so not possible.
your dog should not be in public
Are you suggesting that all dogs that do not love people should be put down rather than trying to rehabilitate them?
Dogs that will bite strangers essentially unprovoked should be put down, or kept out of public. Biting a child that tries to pet a dog in a public place counts for unprovoked.
It isn't unprovoked if someone touches or tries to touch the dog. The dog feels trapped and as if it is being attacked. Don't do that
Listen to yourself. You just said that if a person--presumably including a child?--tries to touch your dog and the dog bites them, the person is to blame because they "provoked" the dog. NO. It is YOUR FAULT because you brought a dog that is not safe around people, around people and not warn the people or prevent the dog from biting. The legal system definitely does not agree that when a dog bites a person the person is to blame, and you are deluding yourself if you think this.
Anonymous wrote:Psa: No one cares about your substitute dog/child
Anonymous wrote:Agree 100%. We had to put down our beloved dog because of this. A strange man suddenly reach down to pet our dog and our dog bit his hand in self defense. The man then threatened to sue us. It was heartbreaking and I wish he would have just asked if he could pet him and I would have said no because my dog was a rescue and had always been afraid of men he didn’t know.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people think this is acceptable?
Signed, the owner of a dog who is terrified of people. We’re training her but when a stranger gets in her personal space she lashes out and we move 10 steps back on the training curve.