bigbarnett 33 Posted November 6, 2011 Report Share Posted November 6, 2011 my mum had a problem with my house dog (refuses to walk the terreirs or lurcher) and was met buy a fat bloke with a staffy of lead onj a road and his dog tried attacking mine and said he was reporting her, me and my dad met him again with the usual dog off lead both of mine were on leads so it gos for em and its but straight on its back so claims hes reporting us, so my dad showed him his warrent card and explained but he hadago at me other day. Bollocks to people like him, ignore himi he wont do out and even if he does tell him to get f**ked and explain what happend Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Fabapocalypse 35 Posted November 6, 2011 Report Share Posted November 6, 2011 Our local district council has a byelaw saying you can only walk a maximum of five dogs at one time on their land - so if you're not on their land you're okay. Brought in after a number of incidents with "professional" dog walkers turning up with vans full and tipping loads of dogs out onto the parks, I believe. I get a lot of hassle with dogs approaching mine; he wasn't socialised as a pup and after a number of incidents where he's been "bounced" by aggressive, unrestrained dogs, freaks himself out if I can't introduce him to strange dogs properly. I'm forever getting people saying "he's alright, he only wants to say hello" as their dog gets right up in mine's face... holding onto four and a bit stone of bull cross is no joke when he's flipping out. He's developed a deafening roar-with-a-pounce which scares off most owners if not their dogs, but it's tiresome. For some reason people seem to think it's okay to ignore you, or even laugh at you, when you ask them to get their dog off, or put it on a lead. And I'm astonished by the number who don't realise they're setting up their dog for conflict by coming head-on at you in narrow pathways or tight spaces, or throwing treats about. Sadly mine would be fine with nine out of ten of these dogs if only their owners were more sensible. I have far more issues with black labs, german shepherds and spaniels than I do with staffs though. I'm hoping that's not famous last words. But each time it happens it makes it more likely to happen again; my poor beggar never gets to relax. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
blan89 159 Posted November 6, 2011 Report Share Posted November 6, 2011 On 01/11/2011 at 16:49, sallie said: Being a female dont think i would have had the strength but i would have loved to. thanks for the thought. If it's your land tell him to leave and not come back,if he comes back after that he's trespassing. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.