On 2018-02-27 13:56, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 2/27/2018 1:59 PM, jbeattie wrote:
I don't see any place for horses on popular public forest trails or
unleashed dogs -- one of which nearly tackled my wife, who is not as
robust as she once was. There are far, far too many dogs in the world.
"A well-trained dog is a joy and a delight. An untrained dog is a damned
nuisance. Most dogs are untrained." - Stewart Brand
Within the last two days:
A) on my mountain bike, I thought I would get run into by a large dog
running illegally off-leash in our local forest preserve. The owner
didn't hear me coming because she was yakking on her cell phone. She
apologized, but continued allowing her dogs to run.
B) Our very nice neighbors' micro-dog has yapped loudly when it saw me
outside. It also yapped loudly when it didn't see me outside, because it
yaps incredibly loudly any time anything catches its attention. That's
true even at 7 AM.
C) I spent some time with a very sweet, intelligent Golden Retriever at
a friend's house. But that young dog is still too excitable to be
trusted not to jump on guests. Hopefully it will calm down as it matures.
I've known a very few very nice dogs. I've known a few tolerable dogs.
I've known or encountered hundreds of obnoxious dogs. Unless a person
lives in the country and hunts, farms or runs a ranch, I don't see the
attraction.
Join us and our two Labradors who are trained therapy dogs on a visit to
an Alzheimer's place. Dogs can open peoples minds there like no human
ever can. On of our dogs was guiding a blind woman for a while. In San
Francisco, not on a ranch. How do you suppose that should be done
without a dog?
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/