Husky Damage!

ouchy:eek::D
tbf I had a lab that did worse:o lets just say the walls of my cheap ‘new build’ at the time were tested to the extreme and we ended up with a new dog-height doorway between the kitchen and hall :o
 
My favourite has to be this one:

Jad-looking-mischievous.jpg


Iz no huskies here. Monster did it. :p

Back in the day Dax did her fair share including shredding the following:

Leather sunglasses case (the Raybans inside were miraculously untouched)
A skirting board
Two strips of wooden facing off the kitchen units
A 1l sports bottle full of water, causing the wooden floor to warp
Two £10 notes
Countless boxes of tissues
Washing up sponges
Two pot plants
Four fleece blankets/throws
The cat flap and surrounding door
Half a dozen wax candles
Anything and everything out of the kitchen bin
Anything and everything out of the kitchen cupboards including an ill-advised attempt at a box of raisin cereal
Something like half a dozen blocks of cheddar cheese from the fridge despite it being duct-taped shut
Sundry small items wrecked, water bowls overturned, surfaces scratched, all accompanied by a frantic soundtrack of howling. In the early days there was a lot of toileting in the house as well (both varieties :o).

Nowadays she has the run of the house without a bother but that was a bloody awful time. We came very, very close to getting rid of her as it was unbearable.
 
:eek: :eek: :eek:

It makes sense now what the lady I met this morning was saying - I thought she was joking when she said her husky had eaten 3 mattresses :eek: :D
 
Our rescue collie when we first got him shredded two pairs of glasses costing £200 they were mums reafing and long distance ( tbf when she went to get a new pair she had to have a eye test done and found she had glocoma)

And my sisters mobile phone.
 
Our Dobie ate our sofa and also when I lived in a caravan for 11 months (36x12 static so quite big) while we renovated a ruin house he basically ate the entire soft furnishings. If challenged when you came in and caught him he would just fling another piece of foam in the air and then come to you as you needed to remove an annoying bit of fabric stuck in his teeth....:-DD

we ended up with Ikea sofas with no removeable cushions.....:-DDD but still have Doofah Dobie Dog...:-DD
 
Thanks for this :D
OH wants husky and am slowly finding things to show him to try and convince him this would NOT be a sensible option for us :rolleyes: especially as would be my first dog :o
 
Love the pics and would just like to ad a pic of Ruby's latest....
50 shades of shredded **** :D


roobs!! by lottiepony, on Flickr

She clearly had the same opinion as me on this one, although the downer is I now have to go buy a bloody copy as it was a friends copy!!
 
Love the pics and would just like to ad a pic of Ruby's latest....
50 shades of shredded **** :D


roobs!! by lottiepony, on Flickr

She clearly had the same opinion as me on this one, although the downer is I now have to go buy a bloody copy as it was a friends copy!!

ruby has good sense lol

d chewed the leg off our bed while we were in it, he has killed several pairs of shoes, lots of dog toys (including a kong and a special indestructable frisbee his gran bought him), the skirting, one of the stair treads and the stair carpet
chaos ate a carpet and essentially anything that was left unattended within reach
 
...I think I may have got away lightly with the GSD, three or four cushions, a couple of doormats/rugs and a lasagne-licking incident...

My friends GSD managed to eat through the wall and cause a gas leak :eek: He was the same age as Yellow Dog - luckily for me Yellow Dog merely chewed a table leg, destroyed lots of plant pots in the garden and ate a loo brush :D
 
I daren't write down all the damage and destruction that my two malamutes have caused - I would cry!
Samoyeds are so much easier :D

lol was just going to say i remember seeing pics like these and worse on a malamute site :D
my old GSD ate the bottom stair, 2 hallway carpets, wooden ornament, fave pair of boots and ate through the phone wires so often i was a dab hand at rewiring by the time he was 2, he also ate the letter offering me a job at pet city and i had to phone the manager in embarressment and ask what the letter had said, good job he found it funny
 
We've had countless things ruined but the best ever was coming home to find they had somehow managed to burst open the stopcock on the mains water pipe and completely flooded the kitchen (the water was 2" deep). That took HOURS to clean up.
 
Thanks for this :D
OH wants husky and am slowly finding things to show him to try and convince him this would NOT be a sensible option for us :rolleyes: especially as would be my first dog :o

Don't do it - sibes and mals are mad, insane and, IMO, to put it bluntly, are not good dogs to have (can't wait to get more mals :D)

Living with them is like being in an extreme version of Micheal Bentine's Potty Time (for anyone old enough to remember that) - it's a constant battle to keep even a vague hold on your sanity!
 
I take it back my Jacks are angels lol.

Though Dora has had her moments. Jim used to be a sod for chewing the spines off of mum's books, wouldn't chew any other bit of the book just the spine.
 
These are mad!! My oh is desperate for a husky in the future! Showing him all the destruction!
Is it true huskies can't be let off the lead? One woman round here has one that she walks on a 20ft lead at all times...
 
Yes, IMO, sibes and mals cannot go off lead - their prey drive is so strong! They can be fine for years and then suddenly go! I don't think it's worth the risk - I walk mine on lunge lines, and they have loads of running around on the end of it - but safe!
 
This is one of the constant questions raised about Siberian Huskies.



You would think it would be enough that:

every responsible Siberian Husky owner will tell you that it is not safe to let a Siberian Husky off lead in an unenclosed area
every ethical Siberian Husky Breeder will tell you that it is not safe to let a Siberian Husky off lead in an unenclosed area
every single Siberian Husky rescue organisation IN THE WORLD will tell you that it is not safe to let a Siberian Husky off lead in an unenclosed area; and that
every single Siberian Husky Club IN THE WORLD will tell you exactly the same thing.



Now these people and organisations don’t take this line for fun, or to "big up" the wild nature of their dogs, or to try to keep the breed exclusive. They take it because it accurately reflects the bitter experience of thousands of owners worldwide over a long period of time.



However, this obviously is not enough because there are still a steady stream of people who just don’t believe this unanimous and ubiquitous message. When you give examples of Siberians which have been killed, caused accidents or been shot by farmers for killing/savaging livestock, the doubters come back with, “But you could say the same about any breed!” – and to be honest, in many respects they would be right. Too many irresponsible owners of all kinds of dogs let their dog off lead with little thought for their dog’s safety, the safety of other animals, or the safety of the public. That is not for discussion here though. I want to explain why, in my opinion, it is never safe to let Siberian Huskies offlead in unenclosed areas.



So, Why is the off-lead thing such a big deal with huskies? What makes them different from other breeds?

There are two major factors, both embedded deep within the history of the breed. The dogs we now know as Siberian Huskies were originally developed by what are known as the “maritime” Chukchi people of North East Siberia who relied on dogs for transportation during the frozen winter. Other Chukchi groups relied on Reindeer for both food and winter transportation. The maritime Chukchi lived in fixed summer villages along the Bering Sea coast, but during the arctic/sub-arctic winter, became nomadic – following and hunting whatever game was available. The Chukchi would load their whole families on their sled and using teams of up to 20 dogs, would hunt all winter, sometimes covering 100 miles a day in their search for food. It was originally estimated that the Chukchi’s dogs had been in existence for some 3000 years, but recent archeological research has found the remains of sled-type dogs going back well over 10,000 years. Indeed, the Siberian Husky has been recognised as one of the oldest dog breeds known to mankind, so they have had a long time for their instincts and behavioural traits to become hard-wired into them.

The two major factors I mentioned above are:

An extremely strong Prey Drive; and
A fiercely independent intelligence.



Prey Drive - The source of their prey drive is simple. During the summer, when they were not required as transportation, the Chukchi dogs ran free around the summer villages, rarely being fed by their owners, but existing (if not prospering) on what they could steal or catch. As winter came and food became scarce the dogs once more became sled dogs (of course not all the dogs returned - accidents and natural predators accounted for some, but at least there were no roads for them to be killed on). This pattern of behaviour was built up over a period of time which has been estimated as long as 10,000 years.

As a result of millennia of such behaviour, these dogs now have a fearsome prey drive and the hunting skills to match. It is very common to hear that someone’s huskies have killed cats, rabbits, squirrels, birds (ours have taken birds out of the sky as they fly over our garden at low level) and even sheep. It is rare that they regard even small dogs as “prey” as they seem to be able to recognise a fellow canine.



Independent Intelligence – You will occasionally hear dog trainers complain that huskies are not “trainable,” and you will consistently see them left out of lists of “The Ten Most Intelligent Dog Breeds” etc. The problem with such trainers and such lists is that they confuse obedience and “biddability” with intelligence, and, in reality they are not at all the same thing. Train a Border Collie to fetch a ball and it will tend to retrieve the ball time after time after time. Train a Siberian Husky to fetch a ball and it will do one of two things – either eat the ball, or bring it back once. The next time you throw it the sibe will look at you as if to say – “You threw it! YOU get it back! Do you think I’m that stupid?”

When you give a trained Border Collie a command, you usually get instant obedience. When you give a command to a Husky, the Husky actually thinks about it before deciding to comply or ignore the command. This may sound like bloody-mindedness, but it is in fact a deeply ingrained survival trait for arctic sled dogs. Think about it. You are the lead dog on a sled team pulling your Chukchi owner and his family across the frozen sea ice. Your owner shouts for you to turn right down a trail between a line of ice seracs as he knows this is the way to get to a safe camping area for the night. As lead dog, you can see that a right turn leads you to the edge of a deep crevasse and you refuse to make the turn. It is this intelligence and independence of thought which has been bred into Siberian Huskies over thousands of generations.

An example of this came from Leonhard Seppala’s famous lead dog (and hero of the 1925 Dipheria Run – Togo. One day, Seppala was running his team, led by Togo, over the sea ice of the notorious Norton Sound,



“Togo had been leading his sled across the sound during a northeastern gale on another occasion when, a few miles from shore, Seppala heard an ominous crack that let him know the sea ice was breaking up. Togo headed toward shore even before Seppala could give the command, but drew up short so fast he nearly flipped backwards. A yawning chasm of water had opened almost at Togo’s feet, but the dog had reacted quickly enough to avert immediate disaster. Seppala looked around and realized with dismay that he and his team were trapped on an ice floe and headed out to sea.

They spent more than twelve hours on that raft of ice, waiting as it drifted in the icy waters. Finally it neared land, but ran up against another floe that was jammed against the ice still connected to shore. they stopped moving, but there was still a five foot gap of water that Seppala couldn’t hope to cross. He tied a lead onto Togo and heaved the dog across the water. Togo landed on the ice and sensing what Seppala intended, the dog began pulling with all his might, narrowing the gap between the two ice floes. Then the lead rope snapped. Seppala thought he was a dead man. Then Togo, showing himself to be possessed of more intelligence and resourcefulness than most men could expect from even their lead dogs, leaped into the water and grabbed the broken end of the lead rope in his jaws. He clambered back onto the ice and continued pulling until he had narrowed the gap enough for Seppala and the sled to cross safely.”



As it was with Seppala’s Siberian dogs, so it is today with our Siberian Huskies. No matter how well trained your Sibe is, there is always a part of his/her mind that, when he/she hears an instruction thinks, "Is it a good idea to follow that order?" and also, "What's in it for me?" - When you combine that independence of thought and keen intelligence with the high prey drive, you can see that obedience when offlead is a very dodgy prospect indeed.



Huskies don’t help themselves in this regard. It is often found that husky puppies will act in extremely obedient ways for the first few months of their lives. I have lost count of the number of owners who have told me their Sibe is the exception that proves the rule and is ultra-obedient. Upon further discussion, it almost always transpires that the dog is a puppy – 4 or 5 months old! Sibe puppies can lull you into a false sense of security - then puberty hits, they realise that they don’t need you, and all bets are off!!!



We have been interested in Siberians for 20 years and have owned them for 17+. During that time we have personally come across at least one owner each year whose “highly trained” Sibe has "gone deaf" for the first and last time and ended up dead under a car, shot by a farmer for savaging livestock or having caused a major traffic accident. The common theme is that all these owners quite genuinely believed that they could train this trait out of their dogs; that their relationship with their dogs was so good that their dogs would always respond to the recall command; and that the recommendation of every husky related organisation IN THE WORLD was nonsense and that they and their dog were somehow special. Unfortunately, these owners learned the hard way with tragic consequences for themselves and their dogs. The plaintive, “He/She’s always come back before” is a common refrain in these tragic cases.



This is exactly the naive "I know better than every Siberian Husky organisation in the world" attitude which unfortunately leads to the deaths of too many Siberians each year. My wife is an expert dog trainer. I have seen her achieve things with Sibes (and other dogs) that I would have thought pretty near impossible. All our adult dogs have excellent recall and obedience and are often a source of amazement to people who regard sibes as untrainable. Yet neither she nor I would ever let our dogs off lead in an unsafe/unenclosed area because we know that their recall can never be 100% and they are much too precious for us to risk.
 
Having said all that, we believe strongly that all Siberian Husky owners should train their dogs in recall. We always recommend that people train their Siberians to recall IN SAFE ENCLOSED AREAS to as high a level as possible. Even in the best regulated worlds accidents sometimes happen – dogs slip their collars, snap their leads, escape from cages etc etc – and if you have trained your dog to recall, at least you have a chance of getting it back. Such training cannot be guaranteed, but at least it’s a form of insurance.





Talking about insurance – a message to all those who, despite all the evidence and arguments, still insist on letting their dogs go offlead in unenclosed areas – get some public liability insurance. If your dog goes offlead and causes an accident or kills livestock – YOU are liable. On second thoughts, maybe it’s not worth it! The fact that every single Siberian Husky organisation in the world advises against letting them off lead, the owner whose dog caused the crash or killed the livestock could be liable for huge damages, as in legal terms, it could be argued that by acting against such universal informed advice, they had been incredibly negligent in letting their dog off lead in an unenclosed area and that this obvious negligence would invalidate their insurance.

Just a thought!





Mick Brent

Dreamcatcher Siberian Huskies

The Siberian Husky Welfare Association (UK)


Sorry, had to do it in two posts - too many words :D
 
MisterJay I can not tell you how interesting that was to read!! Thank you so much for posting, as a 'normal/pet' dog owner it is easy to pooh pooh the idea that someone 'can't' let their dog off the lead but I am now much better informed so thank you :)

Really stunningly informative, may well mean I will forever be a distant husky admirer rather than owner :o they are definitely an undertaking aren't they even more so the general responsibility of having another breed of dog...
 
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