- Apr 9, 2011
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I watched this on the news the other day. Wasn't there a third attack befor these two...but it did not get the media attention? Did they catch the dogs yet? We had a pack come through our property, here 10 years ago, killed all our chickens (most) and DH pet turkey. We staked the turkey out and waited. 1 shotgun shot (buck shot) killed 4 husky mixes and a stock tank. Later found out that they had been causing lots of trouble in the area - attacked a tied up dog and mauled it pretty good, getting into garbage, person and his little foo-foo dog got cornered by them when owner went to let little dog out to go potty (no one hurt). These dogs were not cornered when DH shot them. They stood their ground and growled at him. AND....they were nto willd or strarving. They had collars on (no tags) and were in good flesh. They were just out to kill. Dogs do this when they get running in packs.
I hope they find out whose dogs they aree (in Tum Tum) and charge them for all the damage - although I saw the little girls on the news taking care of the baby goats...how many of their pets were killed. What a horrible way to have to "learn about death". Those poor animals and those poor children.
Every time we've had damage to cattle and hogs it's been from pet dogs that were let run: once it was a pair of Yorkies who found that they could make the cows run by barking, and stampeded a year's weanlings through two fences. I had a cow down with a displaced pubic symphesis (which cured itself when she went into labor; she went on to have three heifers, all part of my current herd) who lost part of her ears and ended up with a big scar over her tailhead from a friendly, licensed, professionally groomed pair of Golden Retrievers- she was traumatized and when I went out to take care of her she beat the heck out of me with her head, dislocating my knee; later, when she was up, she threw me into an oak tree and wrecked my costal cartilage. My sister lost a cow to a pair of microchipped Red Huskies, one of which turned and attacked my BIL and ended up with a spading fork through its chest. A pitbull grump and her two eight-week-old puppies chewed up a protective cow and ran her 700 pound steer calf through a fence, where he got hit by a guy on a motorcycle.
And a friendly, kid safe Rottweiler killed a dozen of Mom's banties and then jumped into my kids' wading pool to cool off, tongue lolling from his smiling mouth. That one's human victim was the newly transferred, newly divorced SP4 who had to put his only family down because the dog wouldn't stay confined; he chewed through a garage door the second time he got out and came to Mom's house.
We've had so much trouble with the neighbor's dogs that our cows are all dog-sour, and we can't use herding dogs any more. We've thought about LGDs but they are problematic in suburbia, to say the least, and guard llamas didn't help the neighbors.
I watched this on the news the other day. Wasn't there a third attack befor these two...but it did not get the media attention? Did they catch the dogs yet? We had a pack come through our property, here 10 years ago, killed all our chickens (most) and DH pet turkey. We staked the turkey out and waited. 1 shotgun shot (buck shot) killed 4 husky mixes and a stock tank. Later found out that they had been causing lots of trouble in the area - attacked a tied up dog and mauled it pretty good, getting into garbage, person and his little foo-foo dog got cornered by them when owner went to let little dog out to go potty (no one hurt). These dogs were not cornered when DH shot them. They stood their ground and growled at him. AND....they were nto willd or strarving. They had collars on (no tags) and were in good flesh. They were just out to kill. Dogs do this when they get running in packs.
I hope they find out whose dogs they aree (in Tum Tum) and charge them for all the damage - although I saw the little girls on the news taking care of the baby goats...how many of their pets were killed. What a horrible way to have to "learn about death". Those poor animals and those poor children.
Every time we've had damage to cattle and hogs it's been from pet dogs that were let run: once it was a pair of Yorkies who found that they could make the cows run by barking, and stampeded a year's weanlings through two fences. I had a cow down with a displaced pubic symphesis (which cured itself when she went into labor; she went on to have three heifers, all part of my current herd) who lost part of her ears and ended up with a big scar over her tailhead from a friendly, licensed, professionally groomed pair of Golden Retrievers- she was traumatized and when I went out to take care of her she beat the heck out of me with her head, dislocating my knee; later, when she was up, she threw me into an oak tree and wrecked my costal cartilage. My sister lost a cow to a pair of microchipped Red Huskies, one of which turned and attacked my BIL and ended up with a spading fork through its chest. A pitbull grump and her two eight-week-old puppies chewed up a protective cow and ran her 700 pound steer calf through a fence, where he got hit by a guy on a motorcycle.
And a friendly, kid safe Rottweiler killed a dozen of Mom's banties and then jumped into my kids' wading pool to cool off, tongue lolling from his smiling mouth. That one's human victim was the newly transferred, newly divorced SP4 who had to put his only family down because the dog wouldn't stay confined; he chewed through a garage door the second time he got out and came to Mom's house.
We've had so much trouble with the neighbor's dogs that our cows are all dog-sour, and we can't use herding dogs any more. We've thought about LGDs but they are problematic in suburbia, to say the least, and guard llamas didn't help the neighbors.