marmalade76
Well-Known Member
My first dog wouldn't poo if anyone was looking at her, you had to turn around and wait until she was finished.
Mine is the same.
My first dog wouldn't poo if anyone was looking at her, you had to turn around and wait until she was finished.
Mine is the same.
But the dogs all watch me!I mean I probably wouldn't like it if someone watched me taking a dump either![]()
Also...I try not to stare at dogs generally, especially ones I don't know or ones that I know can be edgy. Quick glances to read body language and looking past them usually does the job. I know someone who stares into dog's eyes when she passes and wonders why they often pop off at her.
If you think about it from the dog's point of view.
They're a lot lower than us and some punter is starting down right at them and then extends a tentacle right down towards their head/face.
I also don't want owners to look at me when I am explaining something, I want them to listen to me and observe what their dog is doing. People are so conditioned into being polite that they miss really important stuff.
This is absolutely heartbreaking and those poor kids are likely to carry trauma for the rest of their lives. One of the people involved posted about it on FB in the week - the dog owner was abusive and rude and left the scene, so it's not known who he was. His action killed a horse, wrote off a car, and traumatized several people, just because he was a total entitled @rse and not even enough of a man to take responsibility.![]()
Horse chased on to road by loose dog ‘shattered all four legs’: heartbroken owners speak out
The heartbroken owners of a horse who suffered horrific fatal injuries after he was chased by a loose dog and ran into the road said they will campaign for law changes to protect animals and people. Loki, an eight-year-old Welsh section C, suffered four “shattered” legs in a collision with a...www.horseandhound.co.uk
Also...I try not to stare at dogs generally
Also...I try not to stare at dogs generally, especially ones I don't know or ones that I know can be edgy. Quick glances to read body language and looking past them usually does the job. I know someone who stares into dog's eyes when she passes and wonders why they often pop off at her.
If you think about it from the dog's point of view.
They're a lot lower than us and some punter is starting down right at them and then extends a tentacle right down towards their head/face.
I also don't want owners to look at me when I am explaining something, I want them to listen to me and observe what their dog is doing. People are so conditioned into being polite that they miss really important stuff.
Yet mine stares at me all the time, like when I'm mucking out and there's only a crack in the door (have to keep it shut to keep the hens out) she's peering at me through the crack like some weird peeping Tom stalker! Double standards!
It would have done if more dogs were willing to maul their owners.I thought the survival of the fittest theory was supposed to have weeded out these sorts of stupid.
There are worse things than death. That life. That life sounds it for that dog.It would have done if more dogs were willing to maul their owners.
We’ve an overseas getting training for its phobia of any sort of confinement. Can’t handle restraint, can’t handle having a door shut on it. Has had to be drugged to be manageable at home. And yet will spend the rest of its life in a tiny London flat because its owners just had to ‘rescue’ a dog.
If it did an XL Bully and killed them, at least its misery would finally be over.
We’ve an overseas getting training for its phobia of any sort of confinement. Can’t handle restraint, can’t handle having a door shut on it. Has had to be drugged to be manageable at home. And yet will spend the rest of its life in a tiny London flat because its owners just had to ‘rescue’ a dog.
Stood next to me at the station today was a sort of giant pocket bully (giant in the sense taller than your average pocket bully, but literally as wide as it was tall, horrific conformation, and cropped ears and an ill-fitting harness to match the look). Dog's very over-aroused, breathing’s a mess, and it’s barking incessantly, trying to drag its owner closer to the edge of the platform for whatever reason.
*knocking on wood* All the dog walkers in Mugdock for the last few weeks have been incredibly well-behaved. When will we exit this parallel universe? I don't want to.
To be honest, the number of dog incidents has significantly reduced since the park installed signs *everywhere* saying basically, "these are multi-use trails" and the signs have graphics of dogs, children, and, importantly, ***horses***. I had been pleading for signs for ages, and people were like, "but no one will pay attention to signs." I disagree. I think people are morons but most want to follow rules. So if there are signs (many!) saying there are horses around, they will keep an eye and put dogs on leads. Before the park installed the signs, I had far more frequent dog debacles, and the owners acting extremely mortified, saying,"I didn't expect to see a horse." But since the park put up the signs, most dog owners are far more switched on. They don't see the hoof prints and horse shite on the trail, but they see signs! Yeah, you'll get the odd entitled douchebag who doesn't care, but if the signs make the far larger numbers of clueless but well meaning idiots keep their dogs under control, then I'm happy.