T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1417.1 | better 'n a Doggy Bopper | ENGINE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Thu Feb 01 1990 10:36 | 4 |
| The GSW newsletter had a great write-up on the Doggy Dazer by
a Tandem couple. Very funny. This thing sounds like the answer to
many prayers. Probably better than a bullwhip!
-Chris whose elbows are the dog's targets :-(
|
1417.2 | Blast them | FRAGLE::RICHARD | Dave | Thu Feb 01 1990 12:45 | 12 |
|
> The way it works is to emit a high pitched
> sound that they claim causes the dog to freeze
> or run and that it's hardly audible by humans.
But the dog owners can't hear it! I still say use one of the hand
held presurized "boat horns". Its only like $8-9 and it bugs the
hell out of the dog owners too when you blast their 60# puppy!
|
1417.3 | boat horns? | TOOK::R_WOODBURY | don't you know, I'm a 2000 man? | Thu Feb 01 1990 13:47 | 7 |
| I'm not up to date on boat horns -- do they still contain freon? I hope
not, because we'll all be fried due to the depletion of the ozone layer
all that much sooner if they're not. As it is, between the ozone
depletion and the greenhouse effect, we may not have that far to go
anyway!
/rw
|
1417.4 | truely effective? | AD::KREIDER | | Thu Feb 01 1990 13:47 | 11 |
| Sounds interesting ... can anyone elaborate on how effective this
device actually is? I used to cycle in Kentucky now and then.
It seemed like every house had a vicious dog and an owner to match.
Most dogs are scared off by a little yelling or a few squirts of
the water bottle ( at least enough to outrun them ). However, I've
met up with a rare few that are truely blood thirsty...I'm not sure
anything short of a thermonuclear explosion could deter these beasts!
/scott
|
1417.5 | I have one | NOSNOW::PENN | Joe's Bait & Sushi Shop | Thu Feb 01 1990 17:00 | 25 |
|
I got one of these last summer. It is small and it can be clipped to a
belt or to the waist of shorts. When I wear my Digital jersey it fits
nicely in the rear pocket.
Effective? Oh hell yes! Though it dosen't seem to work well on small
dogs. On medium to large dogs it works GREAT. Where I ride there are
three dogs that seem to be a mixture of pit bull and boxer that no
longer bother me because of this device. When the pit/boxers would run
after me and bark there were two chow's that had advance notice and
would wait for me in the road. I can zap these dogs and they plant
their claws into the asphalt to stop. Then they run the other way.
I have used this thing many times with great success. The more
aggressive the dog the better it works!
But on small dogs it dosen't seem to work as well. By small I mean
really small, little lap dogs. Which isn't a problem since they can't
stand to bite and run at the same time.
The dog's owner can't hear the noise but they hear the dog bark and
see it run home.
Also the range is limited to about ten feet which is not a problem, it
works well when you are on a bike.
|
1417.6 | Where do I sign?
| BCSE::DESHARNAIS | | Fri Feb 02 1990 08:47 | 9 |
| If this thing really works, it sounds like the greatest thing
since the clipless pedal! :-)
Jerry, can you tell us where to call or write for the Brookstone
catalog?
Regards,
Denis
|
1417.7 | If there is one near you | NOSNOW::PENN | Joe's Bait & Sushi Shop | Fri Feb 02 1990 10:11 | 5 |
| I bought mine at Sharper Image, it was less than $30.00
|
1417.8 | Their HQ is in NH | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Fri Feb 02 1990 17:49 | 8 |
| Brookstone's mail order number is 603-924-9541.
FAX #603-924-3989
Customer Service 603-924-9511
or you can visit them in person by driving up to
Peterborough, N.H. or one of their outlets in
the Malls.
_Jerry
|
1417.9 | I've met the expert at dealing with dogs! | BALMER::MUDGETT | He's reading notes again Mom | Fri Feb 02 1990 22:52 | 13 |
| Hey, I thought I'd done my time with dogs nipping at my body parts.
Well over the Martin Luther King holiday I went down to Charlotte
North Carolina to ride with John Ellis. During the ride we went
out to what I would discribe as the boondocks and it would appear
that every family in boondockdom has a dog. Some of those suckers
are BIG! John seemed to have them and their reactions to us two
wheeled targets down pat. We'd be going by some house and he'd say
a calm voice, "that dog (a Great Dane or some version of German
Shepard) will stop chasing us at this tree." John has to be an expert
at dealing with our cannaine friends because there are so many of
them down there.
Fred Mudgett
|
1417.10 | I've seen those dogs | QUICKR::FISHER | Pat Pending | Sun Feb 04 1990 02:06 | 4 |
| If the dog's within 100 miles of Charlotte, John passes it every week.
:-)
ed
|
1417.11 | dogs of the Piedmont... | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sun Feb 04 1990 07:55 | 5 |
| Hee, hee ... maybe that's why they have such a look of
anticipation when I come by - kind of like a can of Alpo
on wheels! Glad to bring some entertainment into their lives. :-)
-j
|
1417.12 | I like DOGS !!! ??? | UJEST::POST | | Fri Mar 16 1990 11:36 | 21 |
| NOW NOW PEOPLE Remember that dogs are our friends if not for
companionship at least it could be for pure sprinting workouts!!
I try to make a game out of it providing that there not bigger
than me. For example take the harmless tandem that a few of us
pass when we ride from TTB & ZKO. They have perfected the art
of teamwork and if it weren't for there age I would have to say
they would be quite a problem. It goes something like this...
the black lab is the sprinter and tries to cut you down near
the front of the property (which could be from any side of the
road) while the other endurance partner quitely persues you at
an angle a geometry student would be proud of. He/She will at
times make the cutoff (I gotta work on those intervals) then you
must hit the brakes let him pass and really HAMMER out a sprint
that Major Thomas would be proud of.
So if you people want to take the "fun" out of your your (and the
dogs) lives go ahead I'll just KEEP ON SPRINTING ;-)
huffing & puffing
ERIC
|
1417.13 | | JUPTR::CRITZ | Who'll win the TdF in 1990? | Fri Mar 16 1990 12:50 | 5 |
| Eric,
Major Thomas? Did you mean Major Taylor?
Scott
|
1417.14 | | SMAUG::LINDQUIST | | Wed Mar 28 1990 10:43 | 4 |
| I was in Brookstone last night (Mall of New Hampshire in
Manchester), and they have the DOG DAZER on sale for $25.99
- Lee
|
1417.15 | It does seem to work... | CLYPPR::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Wed Mar 28 1990 10:53 | 11 |
| At a recent GSW meeting, we had a fellow describe using a dog dazer in
his neighborhood. He walked around the neighborhood trying not to make
it obvious that he was seeking d-o-g-s. One of his "favorites" bounded
toward him. He subtly secured his weapon, he activated it kinda close
in so that no observers would think that he was doing anything
suspicious, the dog still ran BUT in the opposite direction. Satisfied
that there was an effect he returned home. On the way he noticed a cat
minding its own business. Being curious, he again activated the
weapon. The cat immediately sought a new place to mind its own business.
ed
|
1417.16 | Not for Cats!! | KOOZEE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Wed Mar 28 1990 11:06 | 6 |
| Augggghhhhhh! Using a Doggy Dazer on a poor harmless little kitty
cat!! Kitty cats don't chase bikes. Or bite bike riders (when riding,
that is - at home may be different). Please don't use this new
toy/weapon on the nation's # 1 pet. Save it for the dogs!
- Chris, who shares residence with Maine Coon cats (you can't
really say you 'own' a cat)
|
1417.17 | I wouldn't use such a thing on a kit. | BANZAI::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Wed Mar 28 1990 12:05 | 10 |
| I didn't say that "I" used it, only that someone else had. However,
they are not all THAT innocent. We actually had a club member injured
because a cat had decided to run across the road at the instant that
the rider was coming along. That's got to be a 1/1000000 occurrence
compared to dogs though.
I do worry about my Calvin, she's just not afraid of bikes and will
readily approach a rider.
ed
|
1417.18 | More cat damage!
| BCSE::KLASMAN | Boston-Montreal-Boston 1990 | Wed Mar 28 1990 13:40 | 7 |
| I believe a black cat ran in front of the 7-11 team time trialling in the Giro
last year, taking out several of the riders and ruining Hampsten's chances for
repeat win.
I never did like cats! (tho Ed's are nice 8^)... hi prez)
Kevin
|
1417.19 | beat dogs, lost to insect | FRAGLE::IDE | now it can be told | Thu Jun 27 1991 14:05 | 12 |
| I'm surprised I had to look this far back to find a "dog" note.
Anyway, last night I was out for an evening ride and there were a
couple of dogs running loose which were usually chained. They were
being pretty belligerent, so I stopped to see what they'd do.
Apparently their owner called them so they backed off a bit, and I
took off. I was on a slight downhill so they couldn't catch me, but
just as I started to celebrate my victory over them I was stung by a
bee! It left its stinger, and a bit of yellow bee fluff, just above my
knee. Somedays you just can't win!
Jamie
|
1417.20 | HIS CAREER IS OVER... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Jun 27 1991 14:16 | 6 |
| Just live with the satisfaction that it was the bee's last
desperate act on the face of this earth :-)...
Small comfort, I know...
Chip
|
1417.21 | Maybe he didn't want to? | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Jun 27 1991 15:07 | 3 |
| Could it be the the bee was running away and got caught from behind?
ed
|
1417.22 | one way to go anaerobic I suppose | WUMBCK::FOX | | Thu Jun 27 1991 15:18 | 6 |
| > being pretty belligerent, so I stopped to see what they'd do.
Considering you stopped for a pair of belligerent dogs, I'd feel
lucky riding away with just a bee sting!
John
|
1417.23 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Thu Jun 27 1991 16:50 | 4 |
| How do you know when you're riding slow?
When the bugs are stuck to the back of your jersey and not
the front.
|
1417.24 | brushes with nature | FRAGLE::IDE | now it can be told | Thu Jun 27 1991 17:19 | 23 |
| The dogs just barked, but I didn't know them and was wary of tangling
with strange dogs. At the top of this same hill lives an old dog
that's never leashed and apparently deaf because it never takes notice
of me 'til I'm almost by it. Except for one day. I was coming up the
hill and it strode out into the middle of the road and staked its turf.
I got to the top, and it started nipping at my heels, so I pedaled
faster and shook it. I've ridden past it a hundred times and only that
once has it done more than raised its head. Even the gentlest family
pet will run deer in the spring, and even the quietest lap dog will
come after you when you least expect it.
The bee sting surprised me more than anything -- I was doing about 25
mph and our paths just happened to cross. The dogs and bee just made
me mad, so I finished my ride anyway. The last bee sting I got was
even more surprising -- it was 2 AM and I was standing around a fire at
a campground in Maryland, unwinding after a Grateful Dead concert. The
person next to me had swatted at a "bug" and re-directed it right into
my gut, where it got me. I unwound a lot, but it still hurt the next
day.
Time to venture out into the blast furnace for the ride home . . .
Jamie
|
1417.25 | Gives me an idea.... | DEBUG::SCHULDT | I'm Occupant! | Thu Jun 27 1991 17:30 | 3 |
| Gee, maybe we could have a couple more Spike Bike stories...
How about _Spike Bike Meets Cujo_ or _Spike Bike vs. the Killer Bees_?
|
1417.26 | Me - 1, dog - 0 | RUTILE::MACFADYEN | That's not supposed to happen! | Fri Jun 28 1991 06:03 | 21 |
| I had a dog experience recently, and now seems a good time to mention
it. This happened a couple of weeks ago when I ventured out for a
pre-work cycle.
Climbing a long hill, I hear a faint yapping from the back of a house
I'm passing. Amazing how sensitive to bikes even far-away dogs are, I
think. Then the barking gets louder. Then I hear paws on tarmac, so I
look round, and there's this brute lolloping up the road towards me.
Dammit! It comes up beside me, barking and growling. Only one thing to
do: still cycling, I unclip the pump from the frame, hold the handle,
and, not quite sure exactly where the dog is, take an experimental
swipe round behind me. Whack! There's a satisfying impact of pump on
dog, the barking changes to a surprised yelp and the brute turns round
and scuttles off. What a victory! I even managed to get the pump back
onto the frame without stopping, falling off or cycling into oncoming
traffic.
Then the heavens opened and I got soaked.
Rod
|
1417.27 | | FILMS::WIDDOWSON | | Fri Jun 28 1991 08:08 | 8 |
| I actually got bitten by a dog a year or so back - gave me a hell of a
shock since they normally just chase and nowadays I find a squirt of
water from your bottle is very effective.
(works on kids too - I had one jump out into the street and fire a
water pistol at me a cupla days back).
rod
|
1417.28 | Water pistol filled with ammonia | COMET::PAPA | NEVER let anyone stop you from singing | Mon Jul 01 1991 17:26 | 3 |
| I use a battery powered water pistol filled with household ammonia.
those electric water pistols will really lay down a stream. A dog
with ammonia in his eyes and nose loses interest in you quickly.
|
1417.29 | Hi-tech anti-dog missile | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Wed Jul 03 1991 18:00 | 23 |
| A few years ago I occasionally road with a guy who was a chemical
engineer at Sandia Labs.
He had rigged up a system on his handlebars that would dispense
a large white pellet out the open end of the right bar.
The pellet was of his own concoction and he absolutely refused to
give details of its make up except to say it was "a nitroglycerin
compound".
Riding with him was a real blast (in more ways than one!)
At the first sight of a dog, we would clear off his right side and
wait for the fun. As the dog closed in, he would trigger off a pellet.
It exploded on impact with the ground with the report of a .22 cal,
and plenty of acrid white smoke. Most dogs would literally flip
upside down in shock and fall over themselves while beating a hasty
retreat.
He said on his regular commuting routes, all the dogs would slink
away, merely at the sound of his bike.
Terry
|
1417.30 | | RUTILE::MACFADYEN | Let's go out and have some fun | Thu Jul 04 1991 03:48 | 10 |
| Re .29: Must have been satisfying to have repeated victories over the
great doggy enemy, but it's not new. The May/June issue of New Cyclist,
a British magazine, carries an article that looks at cyclists v dogs
through history. One of the items mentioned is a thing like a blank
cartridge that was thrown at the ground and exploded on impact to give
the effect on dogs that you so nicely describe. The article did seem to
think this method had been consigned to history though...
Rod
|
1417.31 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Mon Jul 08 1991 10:07 | 14 |
| Well, here we are, pacing John Ellis on June 1st somewhere
north of Charlotte. It's afternoon, it's comfortable (for us,
we've got the cooler in the car), it's beautiful out. John's
doing his thing when, all of a sudden, a scurvy mongrel comes
screaming out, wanting to make John his next tasty morsel.
John doesn't do anything. The dog gets his muzzle to the
right side of the right chain stay just as John brings his
right foot up in his pedal stroke. Caught the dog flush on
the muzzle. He does a flip, he gets up, he's gone. The three
of us in the car erupt with wonder and applause.
What a life.
Scott
|
1417.32 | "amazing coordination" | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Mon Jul 08 1991 11:17 | 4 |
|
Now of course I could claim that I *planned* it that way... :-)
-john
|
1417.33 | People are as bad as dogs | FSTTOO::HANAUER | Mike...~Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Mon Jul 08 1991 17:22 | 13 |
| I was riding through Wellesley (MA) Square the other day.
Four different car doors opened as I approached within 2 minutes of
each other.
In the last case, I yelled LOOK at the top of my lungs as a women
got out of the car. She jumped 9 inches in the air in surprise
(which made me feel great).
Getting some great dog ideas which could be applied to people who
open car doors as well!
~Mike
|
1417.34 | They chase you..you chase 'em back! | TUNER::BEAUDET | | Mon Jul 08 1991 17:49 | 29 |
| Someone told me that they used to just turn around and chase the dog!
I thought this sounded kind of neat and I had a certain mutt in mind..not
to big and always waiting for me at his house on a hill...of course it's the
up-hill side..why ask?
I've encountered him twice on my 10 speed which at the time was operating
without the advantage of the bottom gear...makes hills tough!
This last week I was doing the same hill on my hybrid...it's got a really low
bottom gear.
As I approached the house I saw the beast...he saw me...he started his run
completely around the house, though a small fenced area and came over a stone
wall with a great bound just opposite me. Now I had plenty of time to plan
my retaliation so I did it...I popped into that bottom gear and headed
straight at him yelling at the top of my lungs!
He headed right back into his yard with me on HIS heels! I chased him right
into his back yard screaming all the way. When I stopped, he kept going 'till
he was behind a barn where he stayed while I turned and went on my merry way,
:-):-):-):-) I little winded but happy that I won that time.
Now I wonder what he'll do next time I show up? I also wonder what his owners
though of this 190lb mad man chasing their "best friend" around their yard on
a bicycle?!?!
/tb/
|
1417.35 | A suggestion from somewhere that worked for me | NCADC1::PEREZ | Just one of the 3 remaining samurai! | Tue Jul 09 1991 00:21 | 27 |
| I haven't looked through the old replies, but I think the suggestion
was in here somewhere:
As the dog approaches you, or even better while still on its own
property, point at the dog and in a loud, commanding voice yell "NO"!
This weekend I went to Indiana for a family reunion. Several of my
relatives and I rode in the mornings, around the northwest Indiana farm
country. I quickly found out that there are a LOT of dogs that aren't
tied, aren't used to bicycles, and just LOVE to come out in packs and
chase while barking and growling.
I used the above pointing and yelling, and was amazed that it worked
EVERY TIME. Now I'm sure a dozen people in here will tell me of the
Cujo-like dog they encountered on which this didn't work, but it even
worked for my wife when she did it. In every case but one the dog(s)
got this amazed look on their faces and stopped. In the one exception
it was because my IDIOT brother-in-law was having fun with two medium
sized dogs that came after the two of us on the flats - he'd accelerate
just enough to stay ahead of the dogs and shout canine scatological
comments about their habits, parentage, and stamina to the dogs (put in
your own doggie insults)... I have to admit it was hilarious watching
him (from safely well ahead) staying just ahead of the dogs and yelling
at them - but stupid none-the-less.
I'd much rather shout at the dog than hit it with my pump, but would do
that too if I had to.
|
1417.36 | COMMANDS DO WORK! | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Tue Jul 09 1991 07:29 | 4 |
| Re; .35... I agree. I use the COMMAND mode often and works well for
me. Either yell NO! Or GO HOME!.
Chip
|
1417.37 | Doggone Fuzzy Set Logic... | CGHUB::PENNEY_W | Baffled by Bureaucracy | Thu Aug 20 1992 12:18 | 65 |
| There's a number of topics in this conference dealing with dogs.
I love dogs; my family would be lost without our dog. She's a
full-fledged family member. [How do I know? She's always at the table
while we eat! :-) ] I wouldn't hesitate to put her down if she bit
someone. My son was attacked by not one, not two, but three of my
aunt's Saint Bernards when he was about 8 or so. They had him down on
the ground and were biting his back. He still bears the scars.
ANother story tho...
But...
If a dog attacks me while riding, I wouldn't hesitate to use deadly
force, if it did physical harm. As a last resort. I guess what I got
out of all the replies are a fuzzy set of rules for dealing with dogs.
My approach is that I'm entitled to use of a public way over an animal.
And that a dog must be under control by the owner at all times. Also,
that an ounce of prevention, ie an ounce of squirtgun-powered ammonia
water, MACE, or HALT II, is worth a pound of lawyers, police,
small-claims courts & medical bills.
My wife & I took our ATBs to New Boston recently, for a ride along the
rural roads.... What we encountered were DOGS! One was a real
junkyard type. It started after me at the top of a steep hill. The
hair was raised all along its back. I stopped, & turned around.
The next was a golden lab, but I was scared s______s, because there
were two others right behind it, from the same house, one a big
shepard.
I can understand why folks on a rural dirt road in New Boston would let
their dogs run. But... not at me, please. Next time I go there, I'll
be prepared per below. And, I won't hesitate to use the stuff. Of
course, in Merrimack, where there are leash laws, I had a lovely brute
nipping at my heels for about 1/4 mile. Sure gave me a good aerobic
workout that trip!
I guess the fuzzy set rules are something like:
1. Passive acts, such as boat horns, high frequency whistles,
turning around, etc. These intend no harm whatsoever to the
animal.
2. Threatening behavior, such as arms raised, "NOOOO", grabbing
your air pump, running at the dog, etc. Again, no harm, unless
escalated to #3.
3. Active acts, such as kicking, striking blows with inanamite
[sp] objects, HALT II, MACE, ammonia squirt guns, etc. Here, the
appraoch is to "discourage" further agression on the part of the
dog.
4. Deadly force, if 1-3 don't do it. I don't see this happening,
unless there's a wolf pack at your heels. If used, it would
elimate the immediate threat, but may cause the pound, er ton of
cure mentioned previously. Assuming you're legal to be carrying a
concealed weapon, and that you can prove your life was endangered,
you may get roughed up in other ways, such as discharge of
firearm, noise, reckless use of deadly force, reckless
endangerment, and all the other BS that "civilized" society would
lay at your feet. I don't recommend this one, but there's always
exceptions...
After reading most of the replies to the varous topics, I'm signing up
for MACE or HALT II...
|
1417.38 | | COOKIE::MUNNS | | Thu May 04 1995 13:11 | 19 |
| When I lived in the flatlands of Florida, I used to take all day bike
rides on the rural roads around Gainesville. On one particular ride,
a pack of mangy, very wild-looking dogs came after me. My
adrenalin-induced acceleration saved me from being torn to shreds.
Ever hear of "snap-n-pops" ? In the spirit of the reply on the
Sandia Labs rider who used explosive projectiles, these over-the-counter
toys, when thrown by the handful have a miraculous effect on charging
dogs. They turn tail and run the other way at top speed.
I have had many encounters with dogs while running, on a daily basis
on runs in Madison, Alabama. I had a cache of tree branches which I
would use and discard at strategic locations.
Even the parks in Colorado Springs are filled with dogs, sans leash,
and their wicked aromatic byproducts. I try to ignore the curious
beasts, and they tend to ignore me. When they do get within 10 feet
and act aggressive, a loud shout to "get back on your leash" usually
gets their owners attention.
|