Stray dogs?

Yeah, if you drive a coon far enough that it can't find its way back, it either becomes someone else's problem or it dies of starvation because it doesn't know the area. It's just kinder to shoot or drown it.

Yes... but feral/stray dogs are a whole different ballgame! We have problems with them on some of our aboriginal reservations here sometimes, not where I live now but I have seen it in places I have lived. 3-6 “pets” that aren’t trained, confined, neutered, or fed properly can fast turn into packs of feral dogs running rampant.
 
Yes... but feral/stray dogs are a whole different ballgame! We have problems with them on some of our aboriginal reservations here sometimes, not where I live now but I have seen it in places I have lived. 3-6 “pets” that aren’t trained, confined, neutered, or fed properly can fast turn into packs of feral dogs running rampant.
Oh no doubt. Feral dog packs are a real safety problem.
 
Please do not relocate feral children... they’ll just become someone else’s problem. ;)

I will take them in free of charge! Many enrichment activities here... lots of digging, weeding, feeding, & hay related chores... uh, I mean activities! Fun activities... hours of “outdoor learning experiences”. Anything over the age of 7 or able to lift at least 25lbs is preferred, (keeps the feed conversion ratio in check!) plus we all know that this is the age at which feral children become the most dangerous! ;)
 
In my county Animal Control will not come unless you have the animal in question already confined. See if Animal Control will loan you a live animal trap/cage. If not buy one and make it a goal to rid the country side of stray dogs.

Read a true story. Chicken owner borrowed a live trap from his local animal control. He'd catch a coon, drive it the few blocks to the animal control (for relocation) and exchange for another trap. He was catching coons left and right. Until one day the animal control parking lot was full so he parked behind the building. He took the coon in the front, got a empty trap, walked around to the rear of the building. As he was putting the trap in his car's trunk he saw the rear door of the building open, a animal control employee releasing the coon. Chicken Owner came to the conclusion he's been trapping the same coon over and over.
×2 on seeing if animal control will let you borrow a live trap! That's what I've had to do before where I live. There is no real animal control here just city employees. . but city will let me use their trap and take a problem dog to the pound If I catch it on my property.
I have a gun but can't legally discharge it in town where I live.
I have also had help from conservation relocating foxes out of town.. And I've often wondered if the same one ends up coming back. :rolleyes:
 
I will take them in free of charge! Many enrichment activities here... lots of digging, weeding, feeding, & hay related chores... uh, I mean activities! Fun activities... hours of “outdoor learning experiences”. Anything over the age of 7 or able to lift at least 25lbs is preferred, (keeps the feed conversion ratio in check!) plus we all know that this is the age at which feral children become the most dangerous! ;)
Ya but what do you do with them when they turned into...TEENAGERS!?
 

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