T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
122.1 | | SARAH::DAHL | Tom Dahl | Tue Aug 05 1986 14:14 | 3 |
| I wholeheartedly agree; I am very pleased to see this note.
-- Tom
|
122.2 | Assault me and you may die! | EUCLID::PAULHUS | | Tue Aug 05 1986 14:40 | 11 |
|
As one who was bit by one of those rotten !@*@! mutts on a century,
in the rain, on a state highway last year, BULL$#!T to having to
get off my bike to assuage the brute's feelings! I have no problem
with dogs guarding their 'territory' when they stay on their owner's
land, but when they attack me on a public way, their lives may be
forfit. I do nothing to provoke them, but when they start nipping
at me, I'll bring whatever I have handy to bear in self defence.
(If I came at a stranger with teeth bared and assaulted them, I
wouldn't bet on my survival. Why should I treat someone's ill-
behaved pet differently?) - Chris
|
122.3 | Spare the rod (pump?) | SSDEVO::HOFFMAN | | Tue Aug 05 1986 14:48 | 25 |
| RE: .0
> o talk to it, scratch ears, etc.
>
As a dog owner who cries during Lassie movies, I believe
it is more humane to give a chasing dog some negative feedback,
rather than be this encouraging. I generally let the dog know
that I have the potential to do him harm if he persists in his
attack by first growling, then raising a hand as though to
throw something at him, and if all that doesn't work and I'm
forced to stop, I will pick up something and actually hurl it.
Flailing pump at a pooch, steering with one hand, is dangerous
to the rider; but once a poodle was yapping at my heel and
I pulled my foot straight back out of my toe clip, heeling him
in the nose and I found that not only was that attack brought
to an immediate halt, but the dog, who lives right down the
street, has given me a wide berth ever since.
I guess the point is, you are doing the dog, the dog's owner,
yourself, and other bikers a service by "training" the dog
that it is dangerous to be in the street chasing things.
I am advocating discipline, not sadism though, and verbal
and body language techniques should procede warfare.
|
122.4 | I agree with .2 | NUWAVE::HATCHER | | Tue Aug 05 1986 16:19 | 19 |
| I agree with .2. I've been chased while running and while biking.
It is unnerving to say the least. Believe it or not biking and
running require some concentration. There is nothing worse than
trudging up a hill and have some dog come out after you. It ruins
your concentration and can be dangerous.
I've found that (while running at least) throwing a rock, or even
pretending to throw one can get the dog to retreat.
I've called the home of offending dog owners and voiced my concern.
I've even called the cops to complain.
A friend recently got $1000 from a dog owner whose dog bit him on
a run.
I love (well trained) dogs.
Bob
|
122.5 | Negative Conditioning | EAGLE7::CAMILLI | | Tue Aug 05 1986 17:03 | 26 |
|
I was bitten by one dog a few years ago, and was saved from
being bitten by another because my companion, lagging a bit,
ran over the dog as it ran into the street. The dog ran away,
but my companion, who flipped over, had bloody elbows and knees
and a bent fork. (The dog was a Doberman, which jumped a high
fence to come at us in the street.) The neighbors came out to
help, mostly from self interest, since they said neighborhood
children had been getting molested by the dogs, and the owners
weren't trying terribly hard to restrain the dogs.
I like cute and adorable doggies, too, but I'd rather have the
mace handy just in case, since there's little time to react
if it's one of those few dogs that actually plans to bite or
pounce. I guess burning eyes can serve as negative conditioning.
If the owners want to do something more subtle, fine. But, if
they fail, their dog might have to get sterner treatment. I'd
prefer the guilt of having maced a dog to a cracked skull.
I trained my parents' dog to never go into the street alone. It
doesn't chase cars or bikes or the mail carrier. It wags its tail
and waits for the person to approach or watches him pass. It's
a shame a poorly trained dog suffers for the incompetence or
lack of concern of his owners, but with our help, he will get
trained one way or another... -Or, he'll get run over.
|
122.6 | I hear you... | SHIVER::JPETERS | John Peters, DTN 266-4391 | Tue Aug 05 1986 17:15 | 13 |
| I guess I have to concur about negative conditioning. I once did
that as the only option with a St. Bernard when I was a kid of the
age as to be at eye level with a mouthful of growling fangs. My
option was punch it in the nose, which I did, which caused doggie
to bark from a respectful distance in subsequent encounters.
There is a place past which I bicycle in my neighborhood with some
serious dogs (3) who always come out, and always lunge and threaten,
and yes, my concentration goes to hell, and my gut says KILL!, but
it ain't necessary.
I guess the thing is to maintain a reasonable balance.
John
|
122.7 | My two cents.. | SUPER::CONNELL | | Tue Aug 05 1986 17:23 | 11 |
|
I have mixed feelings on this...
A dog running out at me on my bike is dangerous and threatening,
and I feel justified in reacting strongly. (If the dog ran at another
animal, the dog would not be treated with understanding.)
On the other hand, the real culprit is the owner. But they aren't
usually around to yell at.
Chuck
|
122.8 | Shaggy dog stories | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Engineer on the Train of Thought | Tue Aug 05 1986 17:50 | 16 |
| I've never met a dog who could catch me (from behind), so I've never had to
thump one of the little tikes. I did meet two who just stood out in the road
(like East German Border Police). So I stopped, tried the scratch ears, etc.
Worked great; til I tried to leave, then it was bare fangs again. I was there
for a VERY long time.
BTW, a testimonial from a friend who accidentally got sprayed with HALT
(dog mace). She mentions that it should be EXCEEDINGLY effective, as she
was incredibly miserable for quite a while, no permanent effects tho. Main
ingred. is red pepper oils....
Dogs aren't safe running after bikes, either. Friend of mine hit two
German shepherds that ran out; besides injuring himself/bike, killed one
of the dogs and badly damaged the other.
ken
|
122.9 | Dogs, do not assault me!! | GENRAL::WOESTEHOFF | It's the singer, not the song | Tue Aug 05 1986 18:08 | 19 |
| The title of this note is "Do NOT assault dogs" but I would say "Dogs,
do not assault me". I have been chased, attacked by german shepards and
even packs of 3 dogs and believe me, the last thing on my mind is:
> o talk to it, scratch ears, etc.
I am literally scared to death and am fearing for my life. In the case of
the pack of 3, I was lucky enough to outrun them. But most of the time,
I'll do this:
First I'll yell very firmly "NOOOO". Most of the time that works.
If the dog still comes, I'll get off the bike as fast as possible, grab the
pump, hold it over my head in a treatening position and continue to yell
"NO". To date this has always worked. If the dog attacks, the pump is so
flimsy that it wouldn't do any good and survival instincts would take over.
I love dogs and never want to hurt one, but believe me, this is no game.
Keith
|
122.10 | But if it bites - | FRSBEE::FARRINGTON | a Nuclear wonderland ! | Wed Aug 06 1986 13:39 | 23 |
| I am of the opinion that mistreating an animal should be punishable
by the unspeakable. However...
As with a number of previous replies, who the h*ll has time
to decide if the dog(s) is only 'bluffing' ?
A big dog, Doberman or German shepard, can cause damage without
using the fangs; mass x velocity...
Also, given that you encounter that fiesty neighborhood stray
who does give you a lil' nip, then disappears into the bush
(lot'sa that in New England), what do you tell the doctor.
I assume you would at least entertain the thought of rabies.
Those shots are painful, I'm told. And with all the little
rodent type varments floating around to impart it to an
injudicious dog...
Lots of good reasons to use extraordinary measures to squelch
a charging dog in it's tracks. And whether afoot or on a bike,
_I_ am incapable of out distancing a dog.
Dwight
|
122.11 | If the owner cared, the dog would be leashed. | BANZAI::FISHER | | Wed Aug 06 1986 13:45 | 10 |
| This is worth yet another comment.
I have never, yet, hit a dog that chased me. Going faster is more fun.
(Recall "Eddie" from American Flyer?) Eventually, there must be an
equalizing hill that gives some dog an advantage, though.
As for concern for the dog's welfare, New Hampshire has a statewide leash
law and I figure that any unleashed doggie does not have an owner who
cares about it's well-being and is fair game. Even the local dog officers
just say, "shoot it," when you complain.
|
122.12 | Befriend a dog today | EUREKA::REG_B | The micro_wave popcorn gourmet | Wed Aug 06 1986 14:08 | 20 |
| re .0 I see there are nine replies already, but I will enter
mine before reading them, just to make it an individual contribution
and not just regurgitate (does that mean "sick-up") everyone else's
rhetoric.
Yup, doggies are usually *NOT* looking for a bash with the old
air stick. However, they often appear to be playing property defender
role without a clear understanding of where the defended property
ends, I think this is what arouses the anger of most cyclists and
leads to the violence (some real, some dreamed of).
I agree that there are a lot of friendly dogs and a lot of the
rest of them can be made friends with, it takes a bit of initiative
from the rider though. I find that seeing the dog first is key,
then I do what a lot of folks regard as THE stupidist thing the've
ever seen. I call to them, or whistle, it seems to work, even if
they start barking, they often come around after a couple of calls.
Reg
|
122.13 | Catch the wave | HARDY::NUZZO | | Wed Aug 06 1986 15:03 | 45 |
|
re: 1
> The average mutt who comes rarfing out wants its ears scratched.
> Take the time to scratch. Even the crazies can be dealt with without
> hitting or chemicals or other obscenities by which bicyclists attempt
> to create dogs that are actually dangerous>
I concede that it may be the case that the "average mutt" who runs into
the roadway to intercept a bicyclist may only want its ears scratched.
Since the roadway is not the appropriate place for a pooch I am not
going to reinforce the dogs behavior by stopping and paying his toll -
scratching its ears.
Dogs in the road are dangerous to both bicyclist and animal (I seem to
recall LAW reporting 3-5 bicyclist's deaths per year as a result of
collisions with dogs). I would suggest it is to the dog's and rider's
advantage to "train" the dog to avoid the roadway, at least running at
or after bicyclists. For the bicyclist the easiest way to "train" the
approaching dog is by presenting an aversive stimulus.
I typical use a loud "NO" or return a "growl" (which has worked on
occasion by getting the owners attention who then decide to control
their dog). If this fails then I present a physical aversive stimulus -
not tire pump upon skull, or mace in the face, but a squirt from the
water bottle.
Squirting can be accomplished from the saddle (takes a bit of practice)
or on foot with the bicycle placed between as a barrier. To date,
this method has at least stop the approaching dog long enough to make a
clean and SAFE get away; typically the dog retreats a bit bewildered.
As a "training" method it seems to work; I've seldom had a dog approach
more than twice to receive the same treatment ... hopefully the
training has generalized to other bicyclist.
This method is flawed since it requires sufficient water in the water
bottle to work ... which may be a problem near the end of a ride. This
method also fails to work with the "crazies" or "kamikaze" dog attacks
- one in which there is not time for the bicyclist to prepare to
counter. Instead the bicyclist must react, which typically means
swerving to avoid a collision with the K-9, and then sprint to avoid
further strafing attempts. These dogs are rare but do exist.
jbn
|
122.14 | Rabies | EAGLE7::CAMILLI | | Wed Aug 06 1986 15:19 | 18 |
|
Just a note on rabies. Rodents aren't known to carry them.
They're usually carried by things like skunks. (And bats aren't
rodents.) There are two questionable cases (both in California,
from the 70's, I think) of squirrels possibly giving rabies
to humans, but the details weren't conclusive.
And the only cases I remember hearing about of human rabies in
recent years were research people who had accidents in the lab.
It's still worth worrying about, though, since the consequences
of the rare case are pretty nasty. (Sounds like nuclear power,
doesn't it?) So, give the doggie a rap on the side of the
head just to get its attention. And grab the skunk by its tail
and keep its feet off the ground. (It's supposed to keep them
from spraying; beats me how you keep them from biting/scratching.)
-LC
|
122.15 | HISTORY | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | | Wed Aug 06 1986 20:41 | 12 |
| My two cents worth.
I was bitten several years ago while running this dog bite resulted
in 14 day stay in the hospital(from a poddle),rabies series shots
(yes they are as bad as they say they are)and a skin graft.
If a dog comes within range of my pump history will be written
I refuse to take chances with the dog wanting his ears scrached
if the first swing hits the ears so be it....
It is the owners job to take care of keeping the dog in the yard
as well as scratching ears,ect.
-A DOG LOVER,BUT...
|
122.16 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | | Thu Aug 07 1986 09:16 | 21 |
|
good low flames.
I love dogs too, but there is a limit. I have been able to outsprint
most dogs but there's always an occasional large Dobie or pith bull
that can run 40 mph. In that case my strategy is:
scream while reaching for bottle
squirt bottle right at dog's eyes
if this fails out comes the pump. I've also found that whacking
isn't as effective as poking in the nose with the Campy two-pronged
metal head. A couple of good prods will usually work. If he/she
bites the end so be it.
The more you provoke the dog the worse chances you have in court.
CdH
|
122.17 | Rabies | SUPER::CONNELL | | Thu Aug 07 1986 09:58 | 11 |
| RE .15 and others..
There is currently a rabies epidemic among wild animals (skunks,
racoons, squirels). It is still rare among dogs however, but is
more likely when other animals have it.
I would be very careful about picking up a wild animal by any method
by any part of their body.
Chuck
|
122.18 | Another War Story | LSMVAX::MILLER | Fidem Scit | Thu Aug 07 1986 11:38 | 18 |
| re: -2
> scream while reaching for bottle
> squirt bottle right at dog's eyes
This was my policy until.....
Ridind up Harvard Rd hill in Bolton, near the top (puff puff), out came
"Major", a mixed breed (part Pit Bull, part Doberman and part Greyhound).
I screamed, and reached for the Halts (tm).
And the owner shouted from his front porch, "Leave him alone! He won't bother
you!".
My reply was a squirt of HALTS in the Major's eyes, and a "He *IS* bothering
me!!!" to the dog lover on the porch.
Major doesn't bother me any more. Neither does the porch sitter.
and Harvard Rd continues to be one of my favorite killer hills to ride.
|
122.19 | Patter, patter...THUMP! | SHIVER::JPETERS | John Peters, DTN 266-4391 | Thu Aug 07 1986 13:38 | 16 |
| Riding at night in upstate New York some years back, a dog came
out; eerie, no barking, just doggie footsteps at full gallop.
My sister and I accelerated hard, doggie footsteps continued,
then an incredible thump as the dog ran into (a fire hydrant?);
we continued on...
I rethought my position; I agree that any means of defending
yourself when being assaulted is OK.
I object seriously to establishing mental habits like dog = evil
creature to be beaten or bicycle pump = weapon with which to beat
evil creatures, a lot of which surround me.
The pump's for filling tires. If anybody or anything is attempting
to amputate your foot at the ankle, then other uses for water bottles
or tyre pumps or whatever become justified.
John
|
122.20 | Rabies, again | EAGLE7::CAMILLI | | Thu Aug 07 1986 16:56 | 3 |
|
I'd double-check on squirrels... Don't give them a bad
name unless you're sure things have changed recently.
|
122.21 | beagle tales | GAUSS::LAWRENCE | | Fri Aug 08 1986 16:33 | 25 |
| re.18, exactly that same dog came after me one sunday morning, and
the owners were out in the yard: "He's OK, he doesn't bite"...well,
major kept on coming and clamped his teeth around my leg. I bellowed
some choice words at the dog and he let go; then at the owners:
"This #!% dog just bit me!". Leg however showed no blood, and I
was having such a good time going up that hill that I didn't want
to stop, kept going. In recent year the animal seems to stay in
his yard, and I may have other riders to thank for that.
One other dog story: On route 62 just west of Gleasondale there
is a beagle that loves to chase bikes, but usually stays on the
edge of yard. Well one day he took off after me and I could tell
he wasn't dangerous, just cruised along ahead of me. He was
yelping his fool head off and trying to keep up with me and clean
forgot about the utility pole at the end of his yard...WHACK.
One severe headache for beagle; I noticed MUCH less enthusiasm for
the chase the next time around.
Well, maybe just one more: white German shepard used to chase me
every morning on commute from Hudson to LMO4. Looked fierce and
all that, but I did the routine like Reg describes, act friendly
and whistle and talk to him etc, and after a few days dog decided
I wasn't dangerous, was just passing through. BUT he didn't stop
running with me - this dog loved to race! so we'd do the half mile
sprint every morning, dog running alongside for the fun of it.
|
122.22 | Semi-related story | SUPER::CONNELL | | Fri Aug 08 1986 17:44 | 13 |
|
This is not a dog story, but relates to .21.
I had a regular running route in Newton last winter. I noticed
on some occasions that I would pass a rabbit in this one spot.
Then I noticed that he would run along side of me. So it got to
be a regular thing. Everytime I went by this one house, their
rabbit would take up the pace, stride for stride, next to me until
I got to the end of the yard. Very cute.
No more bunny though, I looked for him last week....
Chuck
|
122.23 | | APOLLO::DEHAHN | | Mon Aug 11 1986 17:56 | 9 |
|
Chuck, rabbit stew???
I know that beagle in Gleasondale, house is right before the Hudson
town line sign. Never nipped at me, just ran and barked.
CdH
|
122.24 | Beagle turns into Chicken on Rte #62 in Gleasondale | EUREKA::REG_B | Bicycle break-dancer | Tue Aug 12 1986 12:46 | 9 |
|
I think the Gleasondale beagle is either dead, disinterested,
or scared of me. I havn't seen him in a long time, though I suspect
that he hides behind the twitching curtain as I approach. I have
a major advantage over most of you in that my body naturally secretes
obnoxious substance, he licked me once and threw up.
Reg
|
122.25 | Halt! | RENKO::BLESSLEY | Live from Marlboro, MA, USA | Thu Aug 14 1986 14:03 | 25 |
| Heck, what's one more response. I could relate to pretty-much everybody's
position. I love dogs; I didn't cry thru Lassie, but did thru "Old Yaller".
I've used my Zefal to threaten, don't think I've ever actually clobbered a dog
with it tho.
I carry and use Halt now, for the following reasons:
1) It is effective. I have NEVER had a dog persist after a well placed
application. In most cases a "near miss" will suffice.
2) It convinces repeat offenders that chasing a bicycling is not so much fun
after all, rather than simply pissing them off as a bop over the head is
likely to do
3) No permanent damage
4) Doesn't imbalance me like extending and swinging a pump does
5) Use does not preclude re-use (the case of denting your pump)
6) Dogs REMEMBER. I had one stubborn critter on the last up-hill on the
way home (right in my neighborhood). Sent me veering into the path
of an oncoming car. Next time, I blasted him. The next time, he got
within about 20 fit. I remove the Halt from its carrier. The dog turned
round, ran the other way. No more problem.
I think the stuff is great, and I haven't thought of any detriments to it.
-Scott
|
122.26 | Is .0 on drugs? | VIKING::BROWN | | Fri Jul 17 1987 11:43 | 13 |
| After having a large dog cut in front of me Monday on my commute,
sending me to Emerson with a broken collar bone, I have to express
an unmitigated "BULLSHIT!!!" to .0 and .1
Fortunately, witnesses and the owner saw it (after originally lying about
it not being her dog) and is finding out to the tune of $250+ in
medical bills and bike damage why Littleton has a leash law.
P.S. Since I was going about 25 mph and landed on my head and shoulder,
had I not been wearing a helmet...
Kratz Brown
|
122.27 | Dog 1 Rider 0 | ULTRA::SEIDEN | 2 outs, 2 strikes, 2 run lead... | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:22 | 19 |
| re -.1:
What would you have done differently to avoid the accident?
Did the dog knock you over or did you lose control of the bike
while focusing on the dog.
One of the problems I have found in combatting canines
is that your attention becomes focused on the dog and you can
easily lose track of where you're headed. This is worsened by
the fact that dogs tend to attack from the rear. And, if you're
right-handed you'll instinctively reach for your weapon, be it
pepper spray or frame pump (if someone could only figure out a way
to have it double as a cattle-prod), with your right hand. That
leaves the left hand and front brake to control the bike. Look
out.
Reclaiming medical costs is nice, but a preventive strategy is required,
because in spite of leash laws, it WILL happen again.
|
122.28 | Re: .26 Absolutely! | STAR::TEAGUE | I'm not a doctor,but I play one on TV... | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:35 | 21 |
|
Re: .26
BRAVO!!! Responsible dog owners fence, leash or otherwise restrain their
dogs for the benefit of the dog, others, and themselves ($$$).
If my dog gets out and hurts someone, that is MY fault. It is not the
fault of the bicyclist, runner, or whatever. If I were the dog owner in
.26, I'd consider myself lucky to get off with only $250. It is my
responsibility to restrain my animal...it is not a bicyclist's
responsibility to stop and pet my dog.
I read about one case (Bicycling magazine, I think) where a "harmless"
dog ran in front of a cyclist and the guy is now either massively paralyzed
or a vegetable. The settlement in this case was several orders of
magnitude above $250.
.jim
(Dog owner/lover, contributor to CANINE notesfile, bicyclist, runner)
|
122.29 | Worst part: the dog is fine. | VIKING::BROWN | | Fri Jul 17 1987 14:43 | 14 |
| re .27
I'm not sure I could have done anything different. I came around
a turn and was going downhill. The dog was on the edge of the other
(left) side of the road, it saw me, started to run at an intersecting
angle, and then just cut in front of my path. I hit it totally
broadsides and it literally stopped the front wheel (80 pound dog),
launching me. It all happened in a flash.
Kudos to Officer John Kelly of the Littleton Police Department
for his helpfulness following up the accident, talking to the owner
and supplying me with name and address. He must have said something
to the owner that sunk in, because the next day she was all too
cooperative to pay for my bills.
|
122.30 | My last accident | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Delta Long = -d(sin A/cos Lat) | Fri Jul 17 1987 15:09 | 17 |
| Reminds me of my last accident. About 10 years ago I was
accelerating away from a light on a quiet residential street.
I noticed the car parked by the side of the road, and checked
that no one was inside, so the door wouldn't open as I went
by. I didn't notice the dog in the back seat, which jumped
out the back window!! By the time he landed I was about 6"
away from him and didn't have time to react. I hit him
broadside, throwing me off the bike with a few bruises and
scratches. He sort of limped away while the owners
apologized. Since I wasn't hurt, and they had taken
reasonable precautions nothing more came of it. I've
occasionally thought how unfair it was: I'm prepared for car
doors to open, and I'm prepared for dogs, but the combination
just isn't quite cricket.
--David
|
122.31 | Did the pavement crack? | AMUN::CRITZ | Ya know what I mean, Vern | Mon Jul 20 1987 11:02 | 19 |
| RE: .26
The staff of Emerson Hospital wishes to thank Kratz
Brown for his ongoing support of their fine institution.
Shrtly after my friend Bill crashed and broke his ribs and arm,
his son broke his arm in a fight. Son goes to St. Joseph's
Hospital in Nashua. Doctor says, "I thought I just put a cast
on the right are of one of the Dobbs!" Wife/Mother, "You did
put a cast on my husband's are a couple of weeks ago. This is
my son."
"We thank you for your support." (And I'm not talking about
Bartles and Jaymes)
RE: Helmet
Knowing how hard headed you are, Kratz, I'm not sure
you need a helmet. (Lots of smileys)
|
122.32 | | AQUA::OCONNOR | Allergic to Mondays | Mon Jul 20 1987 14:44 | 31 |
| Hi,
I have been seing replies to this note for a while. I've been a
serious bicyclist for 15 years and a dog owner since I was 2. I've
one very serious accident where a dog jumped a fence and I ran into
him. I found the best way, at least in Massachusetts, to get the
owner to pay up is to remind him/her that you have a write to kill
a dog which attacks you while you are peacefully operating your
bicycle on a public street. Also I've had many dogs try to take
a piece out of me as I rode by.
I don't carry HALT, I don't hit dogs with pumps, water, rocks or
anything else. The reason I do this is I know that dogs are afraid
of and want to obey humans, they just dont understand bicycles.
Unless you're "jumped" the best way is to leave the dog's territory,
if you can't leave the territory, then shouting "go home" has worked
most of the time, on those rare occasions when it has failed then
dismounting and holding the bike between you and the dog and repeating
the command has always worked. This technique was publicizied by
Tom Cuthbertson in his Bike Tripping book.
Joe
PS I often take my dog, large mixed breed, out with me when I ride
my mountain-bike offroad so if you see large dog right after you
see a mountain bike please don't spray him or hit him, he's just
trying to keep up with me :-)
PPS If you want to talk about the real animals oon the road, lets
talk about those creatures behind the wheel of a car, who always
say after they hit you "I didn't notice you".
|
122.33 | | STRATA::DESHARNAIS | | Thu Jul 30 1987 15:11 | 23 |
| I'd like to throw my two cents on this one.
I feel any dog that is not properly controlled by its owner is fair
game for a dog pump. I will freely nail any dog that appears vicious
and is chasing me. I've tried the dog spray called HALT, but it
does not seem that effective. A pump works much better.
Last month, I was riding with my two year old son in the child carrier.
We were climbing a steep hill in Ashburnham, and while I was passing
in front of a very dumpy looking house, a growling dog leaped from
the bushes. I was caught totally off guard. My first reaction
was to jump off the bike and swing my arm in front of my son, who
was looking a little surprised by all this. The owner, who was
standing on the front lawn, started laughing. I was so angry, I
wanted to strangle BOTH the dog and its owner.
I'm sorry, but I have absolutely no sympathy for uncontrolled dogs.
It's too bad that the dog has to be punished because of its owners
ignorance, but that's the way it is.
Regards,
Denis
|
122.34 | Cap gun might work at a distance... | MOSAIC::WASSER | John A. Wasser | Mon Aug 03 1987 12:55 | 12 |
| There was a recent mention in Bicycling about using "Snappers"
(small paper wads that go off like a cap gun when thrown on
the pavement) to warn off dogs. If this works, a cap gun
might also do the trick. I recommend the kind that takes the
caps that look like small red plastic thimbles. They are
very loud and can usualy be loaded with a continuous strip
or wheel for multiple shots.
If this upsets the owner you can always point out that you
have the right to shoot his dog dead if it attacks you on a
public road or sue his pants off if you had not forestalled
an attack.
|
122.35 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Mon Aug 03 1987 21:53 | 2 |
| I belive Mass dosent allow cap guns.
|
122.36 | I'd ask questions later | WONDER::OUELLETTE | Motorhead in Training | Tue Aug 04 1987 11:14 | 1 |
| And some one (like a cop) might mistake it for a real one...
|
122.37 | a wish or a product...? | RANCHO::HOLT | Don't see any points on those ears.. | Wed Oct 14 1987 23:29 | 2 |
|
What is a 'dog pump'?
|
122.38 | What is a 'dog pump'? | ENGINE::ROTH | May you live in interesting times | Thu Oct 15 1987 06:10 | 4 |
| The heavy duty black Zefal is one of the best dual purpose pumps on the
market, as it's reusable.
- Jim
|
122.39 | Whip? | ENGINE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO8-3/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Tue Oct 11 1988 14:38 | 8 |
| I recently heard that Dan Henry (the Roller Stripper, AKA Arrow
inventor, AKA sling seat inventor, etc) carries a small whip under
his seat for dogs. I tried to buy a small training whip a few years
ago, but it wasn't suitable. Anyone know where I can get a small
(say total length of 6 - 8 feet) version of a bull whip? Something
that would make a whipcrack noise (primary function) and also inflict
a sting (backup function) if needed? - Chris who doesn't mind
dogs that stay in their yard.
|
122.40 | WHIP & CHAIN | FRAGLE::RICHARD | | Tue Oct 11 1988 17:42 | 7 |
|
Maybe you could get a chain also. Then you could hook up, lay back
in your recumbrent, crack the whip and let the dog pull you up the hill!
(I still like the handheld boat horn....when a dog comes after me
it gives me great pleasure to not only scare him off but to also
disrupt the entire neighborhood!)
|
122.41 | | PICV01::CANELLA | | Wed Oct 12 1988 13:34 | 18 |
| Gee, fellas, I always thought that dogs-a-chasin' were a good time
to do some sprint training. Thank goodness most dogs don't have
the killer instincts that cats have. Dogs usually make a lot of
noise while they're coming on to you. Can you imagine how it be
to ride, say in India, and have a leopard jump ya?
My response has always been to out-run them. If that doesn't work,
give them the ol' Toshiro Mifune death stare with accompanying loud
war cry. I've never had to revert to Plan C - the ol' bottle squirt
or Plan D - the surface to surface missile. I still keep both handy
though.
BTW, I have a friend who was a serious racer despite getting nauseous
at high speeds. He told me how he once puked on a dog who just
happened to chase him at the wrong time. I wonder what the owner
thought when he saw the spectacle!
ALfonso
|
122.42 | INTELLECT WILLS OUT - AND ITS RIGHT! | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Dec 01 1988 08:06 | 16 |
| A real rasberry to the jokers who want to hurt an animal. The issue
is the owner/legislation or both! If you need to fill a macho desire
to reach a power plane go and buy yourself a gun and a hunting license.
The problem is the animal owner not the animal!! If the issue really
bothers you, do the right thing, not the brutal thing. I have war
stories during cycling and have also experienced the grave misfortune
of hitting a dog on my motorcycle - killing it and almost me. Damn
the owner (there is a leash law where I live) and I was heartsick
about the animal. I agree that outrunning is preferrable and most
time a dog is only good for a short distance anyway. It is very
rare that a dog will be vicious enough to attack you if you stop
and make friends. Again, if the owner is an idiot (and probably
is) REPORT HIM! The owner is also putting grave risk to the animal
as well (motor vehicle traffic). Intellect wins out. Try it!
Chip
|
122.43 | Wake up! | NAC::CAMPBELL | | Thu Dec 01 1988 08:58 | 11 |
|
What's this crap about Macho desire, and power planes???? We're
talking about a dog attacking a person, and that person defending
him/herself!!!!!!!! Pure and simple.
First I'll take care of the dog, by getting away from him anyway
I can even if that means giving him a shot in the head! THEN I'll
go looking for the owner!!!
First things first
|
122.44 | WIDE AWAKE | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Dec 01 1988 11:46 | 6 |
| First, let's take a look at the tone. Second, there's attack and then
there's chase. Aside from some people's fear of animals the right
thing is the right thing. Self defense from personal injury is fine.
How many times have YOU reported incidents, or just live with them!
CHIP
|
122.45 | Why shoot Bambi's Ma & Pa ? | MENTOR::REG | Let's invent self referential image enhancing software | Thu Dec 01 1988 13:50 | 7 |
| re .42 If you're SO hung up about attacks on animals why do
recommend people go get a hunting licence ? I have NEVER been chased
by a deer, either while riding a bicycle or any other time, so I
feel it would be unfair to shoot at them, that WOULD BE an unprovoked
attack. I feel differently about dogs however...
R
|
122.46 | ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ | NAC::CAMPBELL | | Fri Dec 02 1988 09:23 | 13 |
|
When I see a Doberman heading at me full steam I don't have time
to decide with this is an attack or a chase! I'll do what is
necessary at the time! As for ME reporting incidents... I guess
I've been lucky, and haven't been bitten, or had a Dog CAUSE an
accident. If I had I would certainly report it!
As for TONE, didn't you start by saying we're all on MACHO trips
and looking for power planes (or something like that)??? Well,
I think that's approaching an insult!!
Stew
|
122.47 | dogs are essentially canine... | CASEE::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Dec 02 1988 11:00 | 38 |
| Self-preservation instincts can tend to make us conservative
in taking risks with what looks like a mauling-in-the-making.
Certainly certain classes of dogs (Dobermans ... Dobermen?
do come to mind) look from their conformance and gait that
they can only mean to inflict severe bodily harm.
But, true, in most cases I've found dogs to be either very
friendly once you adopt an amicable (in dog terms) attitude,
or just automatically defending their turf in dog fashion
(which means running up and barking). In both those cases,
where the dog hasn't been *trained* to attack, there's virtually
no risk (he said...). Most dogs just like to chase things -
and, face it, you may be the high point of their day... especially
if you stop and pet. From my side, it's sometimes been the most
social and humane encounter of the whole day (in contrast to
pickup-trucks, say).
Anyway, most dogs' territorial automatic behavior is engaged
as you move onto their turf, and heightened as you continue
*moving* in it... but these behavioral automata tend to be
thrown for a loop if you calmly slow down or stop - it's
hard to chase someone who's just standing there. And besides,
the dogs who are a real threat will easily be able to catch
you if you try hightailing it - Dobermen again come to mind.
I feel very vulnerable with my back turned on a vehicle that
is inherently able to tip over at any moment... standing or
walking slowly is a much more defensible position... so I stop.
"Mean dog quotient" varies with the neighborhood and the macro-
and micro-culture. Lots of problems in backwoods US (NC, SC,
MD, NH...) - virtually none with any breed of dog in Europe,
for example - as others have said, this reflects human- not
canine-culture of the region.
Gotta go...
-john
|
122.48 | | TALOS4::JD | JD Doyle | Fri Dec 02 1988 11:02 | 12 |
|
If you see NAC::CAMPBELL's Rottweiller coming after you, you better
has a 25lb bag of Eukanuba on the back of your bike if you plan
on making friends. If you plan on "assaulting" it, I hope you have
a cast Iron frame pump. She picks her teeth with Zefal's.
He's really a dog lover, but he does carry 2 pumps on his training
bike.
;^) throughout...
JD
|
122.49 | LET'S WORK TOGETHER TO SOLVE THIS PROBLEM | AKOV11::FULLER | | Fri Dec 02 1988 15:27 | 13 |
| Injury to people and dogs don't generally happen by getting bitten
but by running over the dog and meeting the pavement. I know multiple
cases of people getting broken bones because of this. A cyclist
must keep the dog away from the bike, whatever way is possible.
I know myself I have threatened to call the police/dog officer after
being chasen, but I calm down after the endomorphins kick in at
the end of a ride. The most effective way to solve this potentially
dangerous problem for all riders is for every cyclist to contact
the local police and place a complaint. Besides, guns are too heavy
to carry.
steve
|
122.50 | re .42..can I borrow your soapbox? | 28883::HOOD_DO | | Wed Dec 07 1988 09:11 | 20 |
| re .42..... I really don't care who the dog's owner is or what the
particular laws are in the city/county/state I'm in, if the dog
comes after, I am going to do something about it. It has nothing
to do with macho attitudes, it has nothing to do with wanting to
harm animals. What it does have to do with is me, the dog, and the
10 to 60 seconds it takes to pass him. If he has the jump on me,
and violence is appropriate, then the dog will get a mount full,
gut full and face full of violence. You are extremely naiive if
you think that owners give a rats a** about bicyclists. There opinion
is that a guy on a bicycle will be there for 10 seconds, and Rover
will be caught half-a-sleep and will never know when he went by.
These people "could not bear" to fence rover in or put him on a
leash for a bicyclist. I have ALWAYS lived in an area with leash
laws, and I ALWAYS see them broken. When the dog comes after you,
it is irrelevent where the police are, where the owner is, where
the town is or where the country is: It's between you and the dog.
It's got nothing to do with macho, its got nothing to do with kicks,
its got nothing to do with strength, and its got nothing to do with
guns or the law. When it's me or the dog, I have to choose me.
|
122.51 | Metal pump head works great | CSC32::T_DAWSON | Leave only footprints...... | Wed Dec 07 1988 11:23 | 11 |
| One comment: I now of situation were a dog run out, over shot, got
in front of the bike, rider flipped over the dog, broke his back,
now all he can ride is a wheel chair.
Personally, I have a silca pump with a metal campy head. I know
its not the dogs fault. (I should use the pump on the owner) However,
I want to teach the dog to NOT chase bikes. One shot of the pump
to the nose and the dog never chases me again.
About stopping... When you are out on a hard training ride it is
not in the plan to stop and say hi to each dog.
|
122.52 | R.I.P. | 29169::J_BUSH | | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:34 | 4 |
| It seems as though 51 opinions should do it. Shouldn't it?
Jonathan
|
122.53 | | CTCADM::ROTH | If you plant ice you'll harvest wind | Thu Dec 08 1988 06:51 | 7 |
| It's been my experience that a good crack on the head will *sometimes*
teach a dog not to chase. Usually just sprinting away suffices though.
Agreed that dogs are just following their instincts. And I as a cyclist
will follow mine...
- Jim
|
122.54 | Training Coach | MCIS2::DELORIEA | | Thu Dec 08 1988 09:32 | 10 |
| Well, I can finally reply to this note. This past Saturday I got
chased by a junkyard Doberman. It was after doing a 20 mile training
ride and I was on my way back home, going up hill. My legs were
burnt. Then MR. TEETH started after me. I don't know were the energy
came from but I out sprinted him, going up hill. Maybe I should
hire him as a coach;-)
That was the first time I got chased and I put 2,000 plus on this
year. It must be during the summer they can smell me coming and
they think NA TOO SMELLY TO CHASE.
|