Irresponsible Owners

I took poorly socialised puppy to the beach today. It was an all round positive experience. Thank fully no one had an off lead dog that was rude and I used leads/ whistle/ treats as needed to keep her from getting emotional. By the end we were walking past dogs off lead, very chilled out.
I suppose I could stick to my usual strategy of never going out in public, but she needs to be on the shooting field next year.
 
There are (off lead, allowed-to-run-up-to-whatever-they-like) dogs everywhere. You can't even avoid them by road walking or sticking to residential streets.
This. Mine is scared/reactive too. I don't have the luxury of living in splendid isolation, but try my hardest to walk in places with a low dog count. And even then we can't always avoid the oblivious idiots.
 
My neighbours again. Their eldest child aged 15 has acquired a young lurcher, aged about 5 months now. So far in the month of having it I do not think that it has even had a collar on, let alone a lead. He was telling another neighbour that he fancied hare coursing with it, as it was a natural. My sheep are due to start lambing in 5 weeks time.

At least the ridgebacks seem to have been kept away from trouble after another neighbour really laid into the father about his irresponsible attitude to them running about out of control.

I hope you get lucky and the lurcher is like my working bred dog. He has zero interest in sheep. Couldnt care less. Rabbits/hares/foxes/squirrels and deer are another matter, but his interest in sheep is less than zero. Quite a lot of the drivey working lurcher types are only interested in specific things and given an outlet wont be an issue with livestock. Doesnt mitigate all the other issues or the legality or morality of it, but would mean your sheep are safe so fingers crossed for you.
 
There is a strand of electric to prevent the equines from reaching over the fence. I am not putting any lower strands for baby lambs to get caught up in. If the dog jumps the net and top rail it will miss the electric wire which is on our side of the fence.
 
You’ll have to make the fencing between yourself and your neighbours fully agile dog proof from their side, just like we made our joint boundary sheep proof, even though it’s not us that has the sheep.

We have, from our side, post and rail fencing with off set insulators for the horses, a 6’ tall hawthorn hedge which we planted ourselves from whips, and then sheep netting on the actual boundary. All put in by ourselves.
 
Probably not the best place to post but i could do with some advice, please !

I have a small terrasse and my 9 years old female Basset can see other dogs walking past all the time.

She is good most of the time but she really goes mad for a male dog going past around 8 times a day...

I am not sure why she hate him that much, he simply walks past and doesn't care about her. He is a castrated amstaff cross, quiet big.

The lady is nice and walks quickly but i wonder if i could do something to get her to stop barking at him ?

When, i meet her during a walk, she goes for him too, barking and showing agressive behavior, he is the only one she hates, all the others, she will ignore.

When, meeting on a walk, we stay on the other side of the road, the lady walks away and i do the same, ignoring Nouille and not making a big drama of it,

I wonder what i could do to makes things easier for both of us, as we are likely to meet daily.

Any suggestions welcome, thank you,
 
Don't let her see other dogs walking past is the simplest solution/block her view. At her age and with so many repetitions of successful behaviour then it will take a long time to untrain, if at all, unless you want to do one big correction, unfortunately. And you would have to be there beside her and know exactly what time they were coming, every single time to untrain it. And at this stage she can probably smell the dog before you can even see or hear it, which is too late for you to do much.
 
You’ll have to make the fencing between yourself and your neighbours fully agile dog proof from their side, just like we made our joint boundary sheep proof, even though it’s not us that has the sheep.

We have, from our side, post and rail fencing with off set insulators for the horses, a 6’ tall hawthorn hedge which we planted ourselves from whips, and then sheep netting on the actual boundary. All put in by ourselves.
In theory the fence belongs to the neighbours. They have a scrawny beech hedge their side and we put up the sheep netting on ours. A previous dog did not do the hedge any favours chasing a ball about round the base of the plants. Further along there is a good beech hedge where the sheep netting is set into the hedge. The donkeys and sheep keep the hedge from encroaching far into our side.

Janique we put some light stokboard along our garden fence line to stop our dog and the neighbours dogs eyeballing each other when they were in their kennels.
 
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