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What would you do if....

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35 comments

  • dcon12

    What dog? Don

    9
  • Lady Rae
    dcon12: 29723154828443/comments/29723154906139

    What dog? Don

    This

    0
  • William81

    The three S's come to mind, but that might not be realistic. Animal control is the next best move and perhaps a letter from your attorney….

    6
  • montanajoe
    • Community moderator

    Glad Mrs., and your dog are ok. I'd be pretty mad and the neighbor would damn sure know it. Animal control is a good move. Get your wife a small can of pepper spray.

    12
  • jimdeere

    Pe0per spray for the owner. 5

    6
  • Grasshopper

    Tread carefully, absolutely get it reported and make contact with the “ neighbor.” YOU could be the one in trouble without the above steps if “ something” happens to the pooch, just saying. Bear spray would be a must . IMO only

    6
  • KL

    Totally agree, @Grasshopper . Not gonna do anything rash.

    0
  • KL

    I have a call in to county animal control. My dog is limping around now and that plus the witnessing neighbor should be enough to get the menace and its owners into the system.

    6
  • William81

    Take your dog to the vet….. send the bill to the other dog's owner.

    12
  • montanajoe
    • Community moderator

    Oh no. Yep, to the vet ASAP

    3
  • William81

    I hope the other dog is up to date on his shots etc……

    0
  • Mobuck

    "A neighbor dog got out, jumped my dogs and my wife,"

    Got out of what? Was the enclosure an adequate structure? What are the local regulations about 'dangerous animals'? On whose property did the 'attack' occur?

    0
  • KL
    Mobuck: 29723154828443/comments/29723179135515

    "A neighbor dog got out, jumped my dogs and my wife,"

    Got out of what? Was the enclosure an adequate structure? What are the local regulations about 'dangerous animals'? On whose property did the 'attack' occur?

    Ran thru an open gate and onto the sidewalk where the event took place. Not really a fair fight with my 35 pound guy on a leash and a 120 pound flabrador off leash.

    Process dictates that I report the incident which I did but as it was kinda late, I will need to follow up in the morning. After that, who knows. If there have been other reports, by legislation the attacking dog could be terminated and the owners fined. But like I said: who knows.

    0
  • He Dog

    Despite what you might like, shooting the dogs will only make things worse.

    Shoot the jerk owners instead.

    6
  • Brookwood

    Since I do not have a dog in this fight (I've always wanted to say that) , I would do just what you are doing Kevin.

    Looking out for others down the road so it will never happen again is a very good thing!

    9
  • austin20

    Sorry for your family, pepper spray for sure. Vet visit if warranted.

    0
  • Bubba Jr.

    Next time carry a pistol loaded with blanks, and fire off a couple of rounds. That should scare it away, and I can't imagine that would be illegal.

    Joe

    0
  • Gregor62

    It's unfortunate that you, your wife, and pets are dealing with something that is controllable. Another sad example of the brain dead me-ism society we share.

    3
  • KL

    My dog seems OK this morning. No limp, no nothing.

    Still gonna talk with animal control , though. When I or my wife no longer feel safe walking in our neighborhood without some sort of defense in hand, time to escalate.

    6
  • jltrent

    I would get a bigger dog and when the dog came out sic him on.

    3
  • Frogdog

    Similar situation happened to my girls a while back. We contacted animal control, they visited the dog’s owner and presented a formal warning. Owner improved their fence and gate immediately. Best case scenario. I would try the same. Problem is…. most owners will not be responsible as in my case. It will just keep happening. As such, make sure to prepare for next time. Pepper spray is a good bet. That said, I think you can pretty much defend any way you please against an attacking dog. Just don’t go over there now and shoot him in his yard. 😁

    3
  • Locust Fork

    I'm too protective of mine to let them out of our fence. If something ever gets in and harms our dog that is where their life will end. I don't live in an area that anyone would want to walk, so I do not have the enticement of putting my animals on a leash and roaming around with them. It seems that the judge judy show is filled with this problem….someone with a dog, came across another dog, things went very wrong…..no matter what fault it is it seems having your dog out in the world is a bad idea.

    The only time I've taken them anywhere is to the vet or a groomer appointment. I don't think you can fix someone's stupidity. No matter what you do to these people it seems like a dangerous situation to risk taking your dog out and hoping it doesn't happen again.

    0
  • KL
    Frogdog: 29723154828443/comments/29723143628443

    Similar situation happened to my girls a while back. We contacted animal control, they visited the dog’s owner and presented a formal warning. Owner improved their fence and gate immediately. Best case scenario. I would try the same. Problem is…. most owners will not be responsible as in my case. It will just keep happening. As such, make sure to prepare for next time. Pepper spray is a good bet. That said, I think you can pretty much defend any way you please against an attacking dog. Just don’t go over there now and shoot him in his yard. 😁

    That's the outcome I'm looking for. The owners were apparently very apologetic and even offered to cover any vet bills when they were talking to my wife. I was too amped last night to care.

    Carrying as I walk my dogs is simply not an option. If that's the way I have to behave in my own neighborhood, I'll pack up and find a new place to live. Better to find an additional form of protection to augment the stun gun that I carry (and my wife forgot to grab yesterday evening). Something with a bit more reach.

    0
  • Frogdog
    KL: 29723154828443/comments/29723143762459

    https://forums.gunbroker.com/discussion/comment/11447602#Comment_11447602

    That's the outcome I'm looking for. The owners were apparently very apologetic and even offered to cover any vet bills when they were talking to my wife. I was too amped last night to care.

    Carrying as I walk my dogs is simply not an option. If that's the way I have to behave in my own neighborhood, I'll pack up and find a new place to live. Better to find an additional form of protection to augment the stun gun that I carry (and my wife forgot to grab yesterday evening). Something with a bit more reach.

    My wife walks with an expandable baton. I’ve seen her open it at a dog, and the “clack” alone definitely gives your average dog a moment of pause. Like you, I can’t always carry when I walk my own neighborhood. I do often carry my “killing stick” though. Just a comfortable mahogany walking stick, but I drilled one end and fitted it with a hefty 2-blade broadhead and capped it with a foam ball. A very discreet and legal “smack it or stick it” option.

    0
  • notnow

    Squirt gun with ammonia and a little bit of dish soap.

    0
  • hillbille

    I carry a big 5 foot walking stick, keeps the stray dogs and stray people away………..

    3
  • scooterdriver

    Sorry your wife had to experience this. I’d take a deep breath, be thankful the damage was minimal, and proceed with logic not emotion.

    Apologetic, offering to cover vet bills, etc…sounds like responsible pet owners. Perhaps this was the one and only time the dog wasn’t properly contained? Perhaps something your dogs did set it off? Perhaps it’s a dangerous menace? Too many unknowns for us to give a well-thought out answer.

    You gotta live there. Safety matters, but so does working things out with your neighbors.

    9
  • Ruger4me

    Good thoughts @scooterdriver I agree completely not enough info to make much of a comment imho. You get a promote for that.

    6
  • KL
    scooterdriver: 29723154828443/comments/29723149844379

    Sorry your wife had to experience this. I’d take a deep breath, be thankful the damage was minimal, and proceed with logic not emotion.

    Apologetic, offering to cover vet bills, etc…sounds like responsible pet owners. Perhaps this was the one and only time the dog wasn’t properly contained? Perhaps something your dogs did set it off? Perhaps it’s a dangerous menace? Too many unknowns for us to give a well-thought out answer.

    You gotta live there. Safety matters, but so does working things out with your neighbors.

    Yep. Totally agree and that's the course I took. I talked to animal control and they asked if I wanted to press charges. I said "no, just talk to the owners and that'll be enough".

    Rational decisions are best.

    9
  • William81

    Happy to hear you have settled this situation…. Issues like this sure can eat at you until they get settled ! Hopefully the other party in this situation appreciates your grace in how it is being handled..

    3

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