Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I WOULD NEVER allow my toddler near a dog that’s eating!! It really doesn’t matter what kind of dog it is. All dogs are very territorial of their food and will lash out at anything or anyone that gets near it. The parents are morons for allowing this to happen. I won’t even allow my cats to get near my large dog when she’s eating because all it takes is one bite to seriously injure them.
Some dogs are. No family dog should be. None of our dogs are or have been territorial of their food or their toys.
+1. We could rest our hand in our 90lb dog's bowl and he just ignored us. We checked for food aggression when he was a young puppy and he just never had any.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"PITTIE" owners can GTFO. Over it. They should be spayed/neutered out of existence.
I'm seeing more and more in my Arlington neighborhood and they will come running over to try and introduce their dog to mine,,,even with my kids around.
GTF away. A few owners are such idiots they can barely control them.
I worry about my teens walking our dog, especially the 13-year old, due to the increase of them.
They know to cross the street and stay far away---but some of these f*ckers are persistent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We adopted a shelter puppy and were told it was a lab mix. We did wisdom panel which suggested 50% american staffordshire terrier (which I think is a type of pit). It's completely not agressive, wonderful with children, and I could take food out of its mouth. We've had it for nearly two year without any incident.
But I am also in the camp of no pit is safe. We're unlikely to get rid of the dog, but I can't help being a bit worried. What would you do?
We adopted a shelter puppy. Mom looked like a lab. As he grew, he looked more and more like a pit mix. He has a big head and massive jaw. If he wanted, he could do some very serious damage. This is the true issue with pits. All dogs can (and will) bite. A pit has a massive jaw so they can easily kill.
What to do? Training. Training. Training.
He is great with our children. They are older (11 and 14) so they know how to treat dogs. But I would never leave him alone with strangers. People come over, he goes in the crate.
If I had younger children we would have re-homed. But we already had a dog, and our kids were both in elementary when we got him.
As far as feeding, we do it differently. For both our dogs, we leave their food bowl out all day every day. Fill up when it gets empty. This makes them not food insecure and they have no food issues. Anyone can touch their food bowl and there is no problem. They are both normal weight for their size. If food is always available, dogs will self regulate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"PITTIE" owners can GTFO. Over it. They should be spayed/neutered out of existence.
I'm seeing more and more in my Arlington neighborhood and they will come running over to try and introduce their dog to mine,,,even with my kids around.
GTF away. A few owners are such idiots they can barely control them.
I worry about my teens walking our dog, especially the 13-year old, due to the increase of them.
They know to cross the street and stay far away---but some of these f*ckers are persistent.
I blame shelters for not euthanizing pits and adopting them out under the guise of “lab mix”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"PITTIE" owners can GTFO. Over it. They should be spayed/neutered out of existence.
I'm seeing more and more in my Arlington neighborhood and they will come running over to try and introduce their dog to mine,,,even with my kids around.
GTF away. A few owners are such idiots they can barely control them.
I worry about my teens walking our dog, especially the 13-year old, due to the increase of them.
They know to cross the street and stay far away---but some of these f*ckers are persistent.
Anonymous wrote:"PITTIE" owners can GTFO. Over it. They should be spayed/neutered out of existence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many threads can be about pits and pit-mixes? At this point it needs its own category.
Unfortunately there will be many more of these threads, because there are more and more shelter pits being adopted out to clueless families with young kids.
In this instance, this was an expensive designer dog they chose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I WOULD NEVER allow my toddler near a dog that’s eating!! It really doesn’t matter what kind of dog it is. All dogs are very territorial of their food and will lash out at anything or anyone that gets near it. The parents are morons for allowing this to happen. I won’t even allow my cats to get near my large dog when she’s eating because all it takes is one bite to seriously injure them.
Some dogs are. No family dog should be. None of our dogs are or have been territorial of their food or their toys.
Anonymous wrote:I WOULD NEVER allow my toddler near a dog that’s eating!! It really doesn’t matter what kind of dog it is. All dogs are very territorial of their food and will lash out at anything or anyone that gets near it. The parents are morons for allowing this to happen. I won’t even allow my cats to get near my large dog when she’s eating because all it takes is one bite to seriously injure them.
Anonymous wrote:I WOULD NEVER allow my toddler near a dog that’s eating!! It really doesn’t matter what kind of dog it is. All dogs are very territorial of their food and will lash out at anything or anyone that gets near it. The parents are morons for allowing this to happen. I won’t even allow my cats to get near my large dog when she’s eating because all it takes is one bite to seriously injure them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many threads can be about pits and pit-mixes? At this point it needs its own category.
Unfortunately there will be many more of these threads, because there are more and more shelter pits being adopted out to clueless families with young kids.