I’m not really a dog lover, I much prefer cats, and one of
the reasons for this is pretty basic; dogs scare me a little, in fact the big
ones scare me a lot. There I’ve admitted it. I am more than a little nervous
around dogs and will cross the street to avoid even the friendliest of
mongrels. It isn’t a phobia and I’m sure that I’ve never been bitten by a dog -
chased, barked at, worried by, snapped at; but never bitten.
I think my mistrust is probably instinctive. Strange dogs
are just that and, as I’ve never owned a dog of my own, I’ve never bonded with
one. Of course I pretend to enjoy all that jumping up and licking that some of
my friends dogs insist on doing, but really I hate it. It’s all a little too
much for me and I’m always aware that behind that licking tongue is a set of
very sharp teeth and a powerfully determined jaw. Well, they don’t call ‘never
giving in’ dogged for nothing.
Man didn’t domesticate the dog to be a pet. Dogs were
trained to be our weapons and by trained I mean we took their natural killing
instinct and by force used it to our own benefit. We had dogs to protect us and
help us kill things, not to do tricks and wear cute little coats. Corgis,
Terriers, Dachshunds, Jack Russells, all so friendly, all trained to kill for
man. Just why do you think so many garden gates carry the legend ‘Beware of the
dog’?
Of course some breeds are more dangerous than others,
Dobermans, Alsatians, Pit Bulls, to name a few. But even the purely decorative Pekingese
was originally bred to catch rabbits for their Buddhist monk owners, and those
cute Mexican Chihuahuas were used by the Toltecs to keep the rats down.
With the recent spate of dogs killing babies, children, and
even young adults it seems that no matter how they appear dogs remain true to
themselves. Their instinct is to hunt and, where they are able, to hunt in
packs. They aren’t doing anything wrong in their doggy eyes, they are just
being dogs. Sometimes I think that it’s very easy to forget that if we didn’t
feed our pet dogs, they would turn on us as food to survive.
It’s easy to be wise after the event, terrible to spend your
life regretting. If you have a dog, any dog, and
a baby or toddler I think that you should keep them apart. Dogs and babies are
great and most go together just fine. But sometimes they really don't and it
isn't worth taking the chance.
Always remember that dogs bite. It's what they have teeth for.
Fraser Stewart on FB
ReplyDeleteI think I'll settle for a cat.
Fraser Stewart on FB
ReplyDeleteIt's worrying that dogs are Man's best friends. That means they might share the same characteristics.
Andrew Height on FB
ReplyDeleteYes. Dogs and their owners and all that.
Carmel Payne on FB
ReplyDeleteI'll stick to my stuck-up, independent , fat bastard of a cat , who looks at me with what I can only describe as contempt on his face on a daily basis
Fraser Stewart on FB
ReplyDeleteThat's what cats are there for.
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Fraser Stewart on FB
ReplyDeleteYep. Sounds just about right.
Martin A W Holmes on FB
ReplyDeleteWatching the news last night, t'Beloved was saying much the same thing - You can have dogs and young children in the same room, but you shouldn't ever, EVER leave them alone together...
Cloe Fyne on FB
ReplyDeleteAwful isn't it , these kids getting mauled to death
Carmel Payne on FB
ReplyDeleteVery sad
Andrew Height
ReplyDeleteNot great. Don't encourage dogs around kids. It's bad news. Poodles, corgis, beagles were all bred for hunting and have all killed babies and toddlers. Remember, dogs are mainly hungry muscle with sharp teeth. What does anyone expect to happen?
Andrew Height
ReplyDeleteIf you want a pet and a baby then Google 'cat kills baby'. Then decide what animal, if any, you want. By the way goldfish, hamster, rabbit, budgie are all available too.
Kathryn Salthouse on FB
ReplyDeleteI agree no matter how good your dog is you should never let it get anywhere near a baby, they mistake a small child for a toy!
Linda Kemp on FB
ReplyDeletea lady on the radio said the dog thinks a baby crying is an injured animal that needs to be put out of its misery Pure instinct - you can't blame the dog.
Andrew Height on FB
ReplyDeleteAgreed Linda. We bred dogs to hunt and they do what they do because of that. We shouldn't blame the dog. Should we blame the parents though when our society calls dogs man's best friend and idolises puppies? Never leave a dog with a small child and even as adults be wary of them.
Clare Pritchard on FB
ReplyDeleteI dread it every time i take Bella to her dads, absolutely dread it, he has two pumped up dogs, one an american bull dog and another which is a staffie. It isn't those breeds fault for being singled out for looking agressive, but unfortunately knobhead trains them like guard dogs rather than a family pet. When i hear of incidents which have recently happened it makes me really reluctant to take Bella anywhere near her fathers...
Fraser Stewart on FB
ReplyDeleteChildren and animals a re a nervous mix. I can't relax when my boy wants to pat a strange dog. I have to look at the breed, etc. But even then there's no way of know how the dog will react. Even with dogs I know I keep an eye on it when Aaron wants to play with it.
Joan McGee on FB
ReplyDeleteThe majority of us live urban lives and we have forgotten how brutal nature and its animals can be.We treat our pets like cute cuddly toys which they are not.We like to think that our cats and dogs are loyal but if they needed to they would eat us to stay alive.