by TWilliam » Wed 24 Jun 2009, 13:12:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WildRose', 'U')mm...okay. I believe in the situation I described above, my dog was following her instincts, which told her to RUN! I don't know the other dog's history at all, but it was loose and as soon as it saw us turn the corner in the alley, it ran like a bullet for a few hundred feet and was all over my dog. Could be the breed, could be the dog's temperament, could be the way it has been treated. Some dogs just don't like other dogs, TWilliam. If you talk to people who work in an animal shelter or who foster dogs for rescue societies, they will tell you that some dogs have to be an only dog in a family, whereas other dogs thrive on being one or two or three adopted by a family.
I used to train dogs, WildRose. What the shelter folks say is correct to a point, but it is only part of the story. It's a matter of how the animal is socialized, which again is a function of human input. For example, animals raised as guard/protection dogs are selected early and raised with minimal 'friendly' interaction with both dogs and other humans, apart from their initial handler. Please don't misunderstand: they're not abused, simply restricted. This capitalizes on their natural protective instincts. However, it does not make them 'vicious'. They are taught to distinguish threatening from non-threatening human action and to adjust their response accordingly, being only as aggressive as necessary to neutralize the threat. They will also desist once that threat
is neutralized.
Some breeds, such as the pit you mentioned, have been bred to accentuate their aggressive traits. Pits as a breed were of course developed as fighters, but while that tendency can be brought to the fore, it can also be suppressed, again depending on how an individual animal is raised. I've known several folks with pits that were perfectly docile and friendly with strange dogs.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') believe dogs need to run freely sometimes. I have always jogged and walked with my dogs on leash, and they all enjoyed that, but they still need to run freely - which is why I would be an advocate of letting dogs off leash in any situation that I deemed safe for them, as long as I felt quite sure that the dog would not harm any person or other animal, of course.
endanger another person or animal. Well-and-properly-trained animals are
responsive to their owner/handler, on or off leash. Sadly, few owners nowadays invest in such training.