Jump to content

sausy.dog

  • Posts

    734
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by sausy.dog

  1. Torque my kelpie has a naturally fearful nature and is often insecure around men and will stick her tail between her legs and run if they look at her the wrong way. It's quite frustrating constantly explaining that she hasn't been abused all the time. I need to get a coat that says "I'm not an abuse case just a headcase"

    Great idea! :)

    I know a kelpie who if she gets put on a leash to stop her going with her owner around the farm while he drives off yelps like she has been beaten.

  2. What a great idea. I walk 3 dogs at a time and I love that other people are interested in talking to me about my dogs but they always want to pat the Dachshund who is the one who really just wants to be left alone. Maybe a "No kids" one would be good too. :)

  3. I have had 4 bitches and a cat speyed in the last 10 years. Only one dog needed a collar as she had ripped her bandage off and had started on the stitches as soon as she woke up from surgery. My other 3 were ok, although my BCx did start to lick hers after around a week. Chloe dachie wouldn't even look at her wound and Rubi, our cocker didn't worry hers either. Both of them complained bitterly for around 3 days following their ops though compared to the BCx who basically, once she got over the anesthetic, was no different to normal. Actually keeping her still was an issue. Our cat did pull one of her stitches out at around day 7, which was a bit of an eek but she didn't touch them again.

    Sounds like you have the ideal situation being home. I always try and pick a day that somebody will be home for at least 4-5 days following one of our pets being desexed.

  4. Next thing the dog will be charging at a child walking past, or a young person walking with their own dog.

    Actually a freind of mine was charged by council a couple of years ago when her Golden Retriever a lovely but silly dog with not much training knocked a kid over when off leash where it shouldn't have been......kid bumped his head on the bitumen from the fall and grazed his forehead, my friend was devistated given her dog is a friendly and gentle dog, but boisterous and she learned quickly what can happen with lack of off lash control where especially kids are involved.

    Wow, what a terribly hard way to learn a lesson.

    Recently I was walking with one of my teenage children and usually I walk all three of my dogs but I gave him the cocker to walk. He was just in front of me and they were passing a lady and her husband looking in a shop window who didn't realise he was behind them and as he went past them our cocker jumped up on the back of the lady's legs. The lady got such a fright she nearly fell over. Luckily she was very understanding but if she wasn't or had actually fallen it might have been a different story.

    I do tend to avoid problem dogs but really shouldn't have to and we have so many people in our town who either let dogs into front yards with either no gate or unsuitable dog fencing there is no way I can walk without passing some of these dogs. Crossing the street sure, but many of them just run across the street!

  5. I was warned off pet insurance unless the dog is worth mega money as all the people I've spoken to have gone through similar things.

    I don't really understand this logic. A freebie mutt will cost just as much to treat as a dog worth mega money if its poisoned or hit by a car or gets a paralysis tick or some other disaster. And I don't think most normal people's desire to do anything they can to get treatment for their pet correlates with how much it is worth.

  6. Jeepers if our dachie went into rescue I hate to think about the impression she might give. She carries on everytime she sees another dog even though she has never had a negative experience, she thinks the vacuum cleaner is evil (regardless that she has never been beaten with it)and when we are out walking if the texture of the path changes she freaks out and tries to avoid or jump over it (ie council have inserted some decking over a tree root for a couple of metres and she also hates metal covers). Our other dachie had a real issue with small children - anything smaller than our youngest child was a cause for great suspicion and she never had any reason for this but if she had ever been adopted it would have been very easy to presume that she had had a bad experience with children.

    I can understand speculating but I am also convinced in a lot of cases that speculation is anywhere near close to the mark. It is human nature to want to understand and I agree that it feeds our need to give a 'better' life to a dog than the people in its past did and the satisfaction that comes with that.

  7. I walk past one our local pubs quite often and walking three at a time I often get comments from people standing out the front having a smoke, generally I am listening to a book, so I don't really hear but smile and nod. Tonight from a lady was "oh you walking the dogs". Errr, *smiles nicely and nodding away*, thinking WTF do you think I am doing, mowing the lawn?!

    I also like it when people say hi, and often stop for a chat. But occassionally I am slightly perplexed.

  8. I walk past one our local pubs quite often and walking three at a time I often get comments from people standing out the front having a smoke, generally I am listening to a book, so I don't really hear but smile and nod. Tonight from a lady was "oh you walking the dogs". Errr, *smiles nicely and nodding away*, thinking WTF do you think I am doing, mowing the lawn?!

    I also like it when people say hi, and often stop for a chat. But occassionally I am slightly perplexed.

  9. I am another one that grew up on a property with only working dogs. All kelpies actually. Quite a few years ago now we worked on a property and one our neighbours had a litter of BCx puppies and I wanted to have a go at training a sheep dog from the time it was a puppy. We only lasted a couple of years on the farm but she has stayed with us and adapted to life as a pet in a town.

    Growing up we had relatives with dachshunds and I had always wanted one.

    The cocker spaniel is a bit out of left field. Although I had always thought they were beautiful dogs I had never thought of owning one. Just a lovely natured little soul. So glad we decided to get one.

    All very different but so much fun in their own way. BCx is very tolerant and a bit crazy. Dach is the needy one and the CS is just cruisy and laid back (although she is still very young so we don't really know her too well yet).

  10. 2 is my max solo but if i was in a relationship i'd consider more!

    What's a relationship got to do with it? :confused: I'm single, have two greyhounds, would love a few more but I rent so can't have anymore as it's hard enough to rent with two dogs.

    Because you'd have the extra person to share the costs and work of any extra dogs. 2 is my max for myself as a singular, but if I were in a couple or married then I would happily entertain the idea of more dogs as it would be more practical between 2 people to have 2 or more dogs.

    Well I hope you don't end up with someone like my OH then. Although he likes our dogs he doesn't lift a finger to help out. :)

    I currently have 3 dogs, that is enough for us. If we ever get organised and build a house on our block we may get another one.

  11. I cannot understand why someone who knows their dog will bite has their yard so easy to access. Ok, the friends are idiots but what if somebody opened the gate, left and the dog got out on the street and bit someone. Tell them to secure their yard asap, no excuses for a gate so easy to access.

    Why would the padlocks keep getting cut off??? Some people have all the bad luck. :confused:

  12. I agree. If they grew up together it is likely that one (probably the kelpie) was born like it and the other learned the behaviour. Growing up we had lots of kelpies and some were not overly friendly.

    :confused: That's an odd generalisation. Your experience growing doesn't mean that the breed is more likely to be aggressive or unfriendly. I was bitten by a GSD as a child and chased by a few others - doesn't mean I think that the breed tend to be like that generally.

    As people have pointed out, it's possible that the dogs just weren't socialised with dogs outside of their pack. In any case, there's nothing wrong or strange about a responsible owner taking his dogs (over which he has control) for a walk and preferring that strangers do not interact with them except on his terms. It's possible that in a play setting or in his home they are friendly but perhaps they have reason to be wary of strangers while on a walk. I don't think it has anything to do with breed and I certainly don't think it's 'odd'. What would be odd was if the dogs looked fine but then attacked people for no reason.

    Well it wasn't meant how you read it. The generalisation is more that a lot of people seem to think that all kelpies are happy, people friendly dogs. My point was that is not always the case. Read it how you want.

×
×
  • Create New...