T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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566.1 | Don't bite me, Mr Dog! | AMUN::CRITZ | Pavarotti loses 85 | Tue Mar 08 1988 07:40 | 10 |
| For more dog stories, see the latest "Bicycling." They have
three or four pages dedicated to dog stories. I happened to
read them during the last night of the Winter Olympics while
the women's skating was going on. My wife finally jumped up
and said, "Stop laughing; give me that magazine."
Because I was in no imminent danger (she's half my size), I
just kept laughing.
Scott
|
566.2 | dog preem | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Mar 08 1988 09:43 | 14 |
| A friend of mine broke his toe clip while sprinting from a
doberman. The dobie stopped at the edge of the owner's
property like there had been an invisible wall. To late for
the toe clip though.
Wait til the dog gets right up within a few feet, then spray
with your water bottle, right up the dog's nose. The dog will
stop to sneeze. But this does take good aim and a fairly full
water bottle. In the winter, just hitting any part of the dog
with the cold water will do. After a few friends watched me do
this once, they thought it was so great they went out looking for
dogs to challenge. 8-)
Alan.
|
566.3 | Here's one... | NAC::CAMPBELL | | Tue Mar 08 1988 10:10 | 20 |
|
Here's my "dog storie"... A couple of years ago, a friend of mine
and I were riding our bikes cross country. We were on some back
road God know's where, when this dog suddenly decided that we were
lunch. We had full packs at the time and the road was a slight
incline so sprinting away was out of the question. The dog was
right next to me in a minute, so with nothing left to do I
decided to get off my bike and keep my bike between the dog and
myself. So to get off the bike quick I throw my right leg over
the back of the bike so that both feet should be on the "left"
side of the bike and the dog would be on the right. The only problem
with this is that my left foot got stuck in the toe clip and I
proceded to fall flat on my face, over the bike, right in front
of the dog. This scared the hell out of the dog and he took off
like a shot and we never saw him again.
I took me a while to get up..... I was too busy laughing!!!!!
Stew
|
566.4 | Have dog pump, will travel! | SCOMAN::DESHARNAIS | | Tue Mar 08 1988 12:52 | 11 |
| RE .0
I really think some dogs know what a dog pump is and what it can
be used for. Last summer while riding my bicycle, a dog charged
after me from behind a house. As I usually do in such situations,
I grabbed my pump and prepared to bash the dog with it. As soon
as he saw the pump he put on the brakes by digging his paws in.
The dog must have skidded about three feet on the pavement! He
then turned around and went home.
Regards,
Denis
|
566.5 | Don't damage your dog pump: get Dog Mace! | MOSAIC::WASSER | John A. Wasser | Tue Mar 08 1988 14:57 | 6 |
| > I really think some dogs know what a dog pump is
Same goes for dog mace. I got a little can of Halt! dog
repellant about a year ago and havn't had need to do more
than show it to the dogs. The dogs that looked like they
might want to charge will suddenly back off.
|
566.6 | Not a problem, but a feature! | AKOV11::POLLARD | | Tue Mar 08 1988 16:29 | 2 |
| Most dogs don't have enough motivation to qualify as interval training
coaches, but they're good for improving your jump.
|
566.7 | the silence was golden | MEMV03::FLANNERY | Bob | Tue Mar 08 1988 18:10 | 8 |
| I was touring in Nova Scotia when a couple of behemoths took after
me, on the uphill with full gear. A quick spray with HALT! stopped
them cold (it doesn't harm them). Their looks said, 'hey, wait, uh, that's
not in the script!'
What was the most relief (at the time) was the immediate quiet.
I think a lot of the bravado was in the bark (I DO know about the
'strong, silent' types, too...).
|
566.8 | sick puppy | JETSAM::DRISCOLL | | Tue Mar 08 1988 23:15 | 6 |
| That HALT stuff works great, and so does squirting them with water.
I'm not a very good shot with either but have found that even if
you miss, the dog(s) will usually stop and sniff the goop on the
pavement.
Another trick is to simply yell at them.
|
566.9 | Remote Target Shooter Wanted!! | CIMAMT::CHINNASWAMY | | Wed Mar 09 1988 07:43 | 12 |
| I was out riding a short one last night when in unfamiliar territory a
scrangly BIG mut came after me. Unfortunatly I was in first gear climbing
a short but steep hill. I reached for the pump and in the process drove
myself into the shrubs. The dog stopped at that imaginary fence at the border
of his owners property. I think I would have felt better if the dog came after
me and I could wack him/her in the nose to relieve MY frustration.
Tale of the Story: All the prevention you bring with you can't help if you
can't reach it!!!!!
mano_who_wishes_he_took_his_bike_out_and_not_his_brothers 8-).
|
566.10 | Target Shooter Found!!! | CIMAMT::CHINNASWAMY | | Fri Mar 11 1988 07:38 | 11 |
| I found one!! On advice from a coworker I get a water pistol and using some
small pieces of velcro adhesive I attach the gun to my top tube. There it
is easy to get to and FAST! Now I fill the gun with a mixture of water and
a small amount of amonia (sp?). Now I can grab the gun in an instant and
have a reasonable amount of accuracy. It is also safe for the dog if you
just use a little amonia. I think I may try that same route again real soon!
Good Luck
mano
|
566.11 | Cajun spiced dog... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Got any ICE you need climbed? | Fri Mar 11 1988 09:07 | 9 |
| A number of years back, a woman I met said that her husband had
accidentally sprayed her with HALT! and that based on that, she felt it
would be real effective on dogs/anything. Last I heard, the two were
seeing a marriage counselor, presumably about something else :-).
The effective ingredient in HALT! is a derivative of cayenne pepper
(basically the concentrated active ingredient).
ken
|
566.12 | Cajun, Cayenne, or barbequed how hot do you want the d | MENTOR::REG | Keep Right, ACcept being passed | Fri Mar 11 1988 09:35 | 10 |
|
I gotta 12 guage flare gun that I'm REQUIRED to carry on the
boat. I s'pose a coupla velcro pads on the side of the top tube and
corresponding pads on the gun would give me quick draw capability,
wouldn't attract too much attention from the awefowities either,
"Oh, just another bikie with an ammonia squirt gun, they're all whackie,
think they can hit dogs in the eyes or something."
Reg
|
566.13 | Was that Clint Eastwood back there on that bike? | CIMNET::MJOHNSON | Matt Johnson | Fri Mar 11 1988 10:39 | 4 |
| That flare gun could come in handy the next time you get side-swiped
by a pickup truck.
MATT
|
566.14 | A different viewpoint - low riding | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO 8-3/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Fri Mar 11 1988 11:20 | 17 |
| Riding a recumbent, my encounters with dogs tends to be more
'on their level' than the rest of you tall bike riders. My one
dog bite (not a nip, a broke the skin - worry about rabies bite)
was on my elbow, not my legs. When you are looking eye-to-eye with
a large doberman, it's a bit more scary.
I can testify that Halt is not 100% effective. A German Shepard
in Goffstown took a full blast up the snout, sniffed, and continued
chasing me up a hill (they don't have a chance on downhills). I
use the waterbottle squirt now. [Reminds me of a ride at GEAR
International in '86. A couple of kids were water pistol squirting
riders as they would go by. A following pack got out their water
bottles and doused the kids. SURPRISE! ]
I seriously am looking for a short bull whip that I could carry
coiled under my (large, since it's a recumbent) seat. I think the
noise would keep 'em away. Has anyone found a source for those
impact caps that go POW when you throw them against pavement. I'd
like to try them too. - Chris
|
566.15 | One for the DOGS ... | USMRM2::MREID | | Fri Mar 11 1988 13:41 | 41 |
| I remember it as if it were only yesterday ...
It was a warm summer day, breeze blowing thru my hair, on a liesurely
ride thru the beautiful countryside of Harvard, Mass. My brother
and I came to a familiar stretch of road we had fondly nicknamed
"chihuahua pass", and as always, the growling, snarling, 8 inch
high chihuahua came tearing after us! We continued along, laughing
hysterically at the dog's "attack", since of course, the only thing
within reach of it's vicious (ha, ha!) jaws was my dangling toe
strap! The chihuahua kept chasing and barking, but alas, it's 4
inch legs were no match for finely tuned machines, like me & my
brother...and we left it in the dust. But... a few seconds later
we heard an unfamiliar petrifying WOOOOOOOFFFFffff, WOOOOOOOOFFFff
and we spotted the huge german shepard that the #!@z&*! chihuahua's
barking had alerted. AAAArrrrgghhhh, I started sprinting (luckily
the road was flat), dropped into my 52x13, and dropped both my brother
and the german shepard! ... so I thought ... The barking ceased,
and I slowed a little, but I could still hear footsteps over the
pounding of my heart. I turned around to look for my brother;
he was about 100 feet back, but the german shepard was 5 feet behind
MY rear wheel, and closing! I turned around, and started sprinting
as if my life depended on it. The beast kept coming up on my right,
facing straight ahead, never barking or growling; it was racing me!
I kept sprinting, my lungs bursting, but it kept gaining, and gaining,
until ... it passed me! Just then, it looked up & back at me, then
veered RIGHT IN FRONT OF MY FRONT WHEEL, and STOPPED running! SLAM-
I crashed into the animal, went sailing over the handlebars, and
scraped along the pavement. As I lay dazed on my back in the middle of
the street (with my twisted smashed bicycle on top of me), the german
shepard came over, sniffed me, then calmly walked (unhurt) away!
My sympathetic brother braked to a stop beside me, and after he
caught his breath from laughing so hard, and cleared the tears of
laughter from his eyes, he let me know that it was the funniest
and best crash he had ever seen!
As I attempted to make my bike ridable again, I could hear the 'bark'
'bark bark', 'ggrrrrr' of the chihuahua coming down the street towards
me. I pedaled away, with the chihuahua at my feet, not laughing
at all this time...
Mark Reid
|
566.16 | Not really a Dog story | JETSAM::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Tue Mar 15 1988 12:05 | 31 |
| OK, Just to let you know that I do have some sense of humor (see
note 575), I'll enter my ditty here.
It was GEAR-UP '82 in Shippensburg PA, my first bicycle rally. A
lot of fun in a beautiful farming area. (A CRW member even got
married there with 2000 cyclists at the wedding, but that's another
story).
It was the nice sunny day, I was on my bike on one of the arrowed
rides admiring the farm scenery. I heard a strange noise and
glanced to my right, slightly behind. It was catching up to me
running along the shoulder of the road. It had 4 legs and BIG
horns. It weighed about 2 tons more than I did. It was a very fast
bull. Yes, a bull!
The adrenaline flowed, but I just couldn't outride it. I was sure I
was dead meat. How can an such a big animal run so fast? What can
I do, do I have to just surrender and become part of a steak?
Then, in an instant, the bull was gone.
[Turns out, it was on a chain, and the bull came to the end of its
length and suddenly (very suddenly) came to a halt.]
The whole episode probably only took 10 seconds, but it felt like a
lifetime.
And yes, I swear, it really did happen.
~Mike
|
566.17 | That musta been some chain | AMUN::CRITZ | Pavarotti loses 85 | Tue Mar 15 1988 12:09 | 5 |
| Sounds mighty similar to the letter in the last
BICYCLING. Maybe bulls are attracted to moving
objects (as opposed to red)
Scott
|
566.18 | Halt - sometimes it don't work... | SCOMAN::DESHARNAIS | | Tue Mar 15 1988 12:11 | 19 |
| RE .14
I know what you mean about the Halt sometimes not being effective.
While riding with my wife on a half metric, a big brown mutt came
chasing after me. I was up front and my wife about 75 feet behind.
I reacted to the mutt by blasting him with some Halt. This seemed
to surprise the dog, but otherwise didn't seem to bother him.
Now comes my wife. The dog starts chasing after her, too. She
breaks out her halt and really soaked the dogs head with it. Now
the dog looks *REALLY* mad. His hair was standing straight up on
his back!
At that point, I turned around to help my wife. I grabbed my pump
and got ready to nail that dog like never before! Fortunately,
the dog decided he wasn't having any fun and ran off. Whew!
Regards,
Denis
|
566.19 | Does HALT work on hawks? :-) | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Got any ICE you need climbed? | Tue Mar 15 1988 13:58 | 6 |
| For odd incidents, a chap I once met touring across country was attacked
in western North Dakota by a HAWK. He said he felt this WHAP on his
helmet and saw a hawk circling with clenched talons. It hit his head
several more times - finally the guy noticed that the hawk had
UNclenched his talons and they were now fully extended - he immediately
flagged down a pickup and got a ride to the next county...
|
566.20 | Dog <> chasing <> Cyclist | MENTOR::REG | Keep Right, ACcept being passed | Thu Mar 17 1988 09:51 | 25 |
|
< ^ Bi directional titles for replies ^ >
"ONLY LAST NIGHT", I left work a little early (well, I deserved
it and dec kinda owes me lotsa time) and took the Marlborough to
Hudson via the loop around Wachusett reservoir route home. As I
was climbing out of Clinton on 62 going up toward the dam, I saw
a dog in the road ahead of me. Since I wasn't sure if he had seen
or heard me I called out, didn't want the mutt getting startled
at the last moment and doing something stupid like sticking his
head in my front wheel. He looked but didn't move, since I was
climbing I was reluctant to slow down and lose momentum, so I called
again. This time he decided he disliked me, but since I was bearing
down on HIM, he ran. I chased, and chased, and chased... I caught
him right near the top of the hill and he yelped as I passed, then
he decided to tag along, but I had some spin going by then and there
was no way he could keep up on that gentle down grade.
Yeah, I know, I shouldn't have. THAT dog wasn't to blame for
the dogs that have chased ME, but the role reversal was fun and
the training benefit had to do me some good.
Reg
BTW, record time ride for that route last night.
|
566.21 | Bull stuff | TETLEY::BRUNELL | Darth Ada | Tue Mar 29 1988 13:58 | 6 |
| re: .17
I know this isn't a dog story. Bulls are attracted by motion.
The red capes are for the dumb humans. Bulls are color blind.
Dave
|
566.22 | | WITNES::MACONE | Has anyone seen my Pocket Protector? | Tue Aug 30 1988 11:00 | 15 |
| Last weekend I was on one of my typical "Where does this back road
lead to" weekend rides. We had just crested a hill, and were starting
on a slight decline. These 2 dogs were sitting in front of there
house, and the house was on a slight uphill from the road. The
edge of the yard was covered with a little bit of brush and last
year's leaves. These 2 dogs decided that they wanted to chase us.
The larger sized dog runs down the slight hill, hurdles all the
crap on the edge of the yard, and went straight for my riding
companion, who promptly pulled out his pump, making the dog turn
and run home. The other dog was one of those daschound things.
This dog slipped on the edge of the yard, and landed on his face
in the road. It was the funniest sight. Needless to say, he decided
not to chase us.
|
566.23 | PCV excellant dog trainer | DPDMAI::CHURN | | Mon Oct 24 1988 16:20 | 6 |
| A two foot section of PCV (plastic pipe) does a great job on dogs.
It's kind of like polo. You can tape it on with masking tape to
the frame. That way it breaks away easily when needed to adjust
a dogs attitude.
d.c.
|
566.24 | big dog story | TFH::DONNELLY | Take my advice- Don't listen to me | Mon Oct 23 1989 00:03 | 53 |
| here's a bicycle/dog situation to mull over; i'll try to present both sides
equally.
i'm riding a bike and have a confrontation with a rottwieler. it's a
country road with houses, i'm going uphill (equals slow), feet tied in with
toe clips and slotted shoes - suddenly i'm approched from the front by a
good sized rotty (probably 100 lbs). the dog is obviously interested in
ME. he is not running but trotting, is not barking, but is coming straight
at me with no apparent nervousness and looks VERY serious.
at this point i'm nervous. now don't get the wrong idea, i know dogs
fairly well, i've got a husky, i just avoided another dog 5 minutes
earlier. i usually do pretty well with the standard dog evasion technique;
act submissive, move latterally, look sideways often, move a constant
speed, and in general act like you're just moving on.
mr. rott is still advancing and this is all at time = 2 seconds. so i
stop/start/stop (feet straped in) trying to get my foot on his side out so
i can get on my side of the bike. this spooks him and he starts acting
worse, now he's barking and growling at me. i start acting worse. in my
panic of getting my foot out i fall down, to the side away from him. he
immediately starts lungeing at me, in and out. i am only keeping him from
me by lunging back with the bike. realize, i am feeling pretty vulnerable,
on my butt with the bike still tied to my feet.
so, i get my feet out and we've got a mexican standoff. me standing with
a bike for defense, and mr. rott barking, growling, and acting for all the
world like a serious threat. we are now at time = maybe 20 seconds. seems
like 20 minutes.
i start yelling for help. i'm serious, HELP..HELP, as loud as i can
yell. to my surprise this startles him and he scoots back a good 20 feet.
then he keeps checking me as he keeps going, to his house. (i remember
now, yelling is what you are supposed to do next.)
i'm happy to be here. after a minute or two i get going and in a few
minutes am getting madder and madder. i go home, get the car, and go back.
i drive right up to the house and beep. a nice lady comes out and i ask
her, "has your dog ever bitten anyone BEFORE?". clever huh? she is
noticably shaken. well he hasn't. i tell what happened as she apologizes
profusely and assures me he will be tied up from now on. i won't ride that
road again, she doesn't seem to have to have a really good feel for wether
the dog would actually bite or not. i finish by telling her that i was
going to continue to the police unless she acted decently, which she did.
so have a nice day, i'm going home.
with complete 20/20 hindsite i believe the dog would have let me pass
without incident, but i don't know how i could have known that then. it
was ridge road, off upton road, westboro; or westboro road, upton (the same
road either way).
there is no real reason for writing this, it makes me feel better.
everyone who reads 'dogs', hopefully, is a better owner. everyone who
reads 'bikes' will understand. so either way, as a warning, or for
discussion, here it is. and i'm getting tired of crossing roads off my map
because of loose, bad, dogs.
craig
posted in both in dogs and bikes.
|
566.25 | ONLY IN AMERICA... | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Oct 25 1996 07:02 | 8 |
566.26 | where theres a will... | BRAT::WENSING | | Fri Oct 25 1996 09:36 | 18 |
566.27 | That reminds me of... | ROCKS::ROBINSON | Seasonally adjusted | Mon Oct 28 1996 13:52 | 5
|