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Originally Posted by dnslater
(Post 18105017)
Yeah, but I switched to kittens because lassoing squirrels in my yard pre-ride was getting burdensome. I suppose baby bunny rabbits could be a good compromise as they have some speed, are light, and are more easily renewable than kittens.
I tried teacup piglets but after every throw, I'd get sad thinking of all that wasted potential bacon. |
When I say attack I mean we have to get off our bikes and put the dogs between us and the bikes until the owner or one of her kids comes out and retrieves the dogs. The last time it happened I was able to get a pretty good lick on one of the dogs with my bike. I thought it might have done the trick until a few days later when they were back at it again. I really don't want to use my bike a club.
Poon |
Originally Posted by HauntedMyst
(Post 18105158)
I tried teacup piglets but after every throw, I'd get sad thinking of all that wasted potential bacon.
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I am an old dog person; Once bred, trained, worked, and showed Rotts in both AKC and German Klubs. They sell sound devices that affect dogs. The dogs reactions vary from running from the sound to a muting of the prey and territorial drive. The sound device will be effective on nearly all dogs. .....If you get a tone deaf dog, the reaction will vary. The sound device is a good first line defense. Pepper spay is a solid backup! If you are feeling angry and aggressive, or are an insecure fear biter, use pepper spay as the first defense. You are right! It is not the dogs fault. Renters are a problem, because they generally feel insecure and their dogs pick up on their emotions. Pepper spraying the owners would be more just, but.... you know....
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Originally Posted by Poonjabby
(Post 18105204)
When I say attack I mean we have to get off our bikes and put the dogs between us and the bikes until the owner or one of her kids comes out and retrieves the dogs. The last time it happened I was able to get a pretty good lick on one of the dogs with my bike. I thought it might have done the trick until a few days later when they were back at it again. I really don't want to use my bike a club.
Poon |
A biking friend told me a story about a riding friend of his, former Army. Kept getting attacked by the same dog, would yell at the owner and the owner would yell back. At one point, the Army guy shouts "If that dog attacks me again, I'm going to kill it". Apparently, several days later the dog chased and bit him. The guy stops, pulls out his 9mm Beretta, and shoots the dog between the eyes. The owner is freaking out, calls the police. The Army guy makes the weapon safe, puts it in his bike bag, puts the bike against a tree about 30 feet away and then walks back and sits down on the fence and waits. Cop comes. Ex-dog owner (That is, the owner of the ex-dog) is telling the cop to arrest the Army guy. The cop asks the Army guy if he has the weapon, and the Army guy says "Not right now, but an unloaded weapon is in my bike bag over there, along with my concealed carry permit. The cop says "What happened?". "For the 15th time in 30 days, the guys unleashed dog ran out of his yard and chased me. Two days ago, I told the guy that if he did not prevent this, I'd kill his dog. Today the dog chased me, and bit me." Showed the cop the teeth marks and the blood on his leg. The owner is screaming "See! See! Arrest him!". The Army guy says "I checked into the law, and let me be easy on this guy. If he shuts up and promises never to get a dog again, I won't press charges for his dog attacking and maiming me". The cop looks at the owner and asks "Was your dog on a leash?" "Uh, no". "Then I suggest that you take the injured fellow up on his offer".
For a less, err, aggressive approach (not many people want bicycles to become light unarmored mobile forces, including me), perhaps copy the note you sent to the owner of the rental unit, and cc the five most highly advertised tort lawyers in town. Then let the owner know that the forces of the Dark Side are arrayed against him if anything happens. Even less aggressive would be the bacon approach. But then you gotta remember to have bacon bits in your cycle shirt every ride! Pepper spray is a good conditioning approach. It teaches the dog not to bug you, and hopefully other bicyclists. I always worry about a big dog bounding out and scaring a little girl on her bike with training wheels into stearing right in front of a Ford F-350 SuperDuty. I love dogs, but their owners are often idiotic. |
Originally Posted by Jarrett2
(Post 18106411)
Why get off? Just ride by and kick the crap out of it, if needed.
Poon |
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Dogs who chase ,or attack, cyclist deserve one response............Lock & load.:mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:
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Fill your water bottle with 100% lemon juice and spray it in their eyes. they'll learn.
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Originally Posted by hig4s
(Post 18097189)
personally, unless the dogs seemed very mean and aggressive, I would start by trying to walk the bike passed one day and attempting to make friends with the dogs. Leftover bacon works well for that.
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One thing I have done in the past is to do what I was told to do. Use words that the dogs have been trained (typically) to understand and obey. If you see a dog coming at you from a yard yell, "Stay!" You'll be surprised how many dogs are trained to obey that command. I had a dog running full speed at me, I yelled stay and he had his brakes on 20 feet from the edge of the yard. He sat there befuddled and watched me ride by. Use their training against them.
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Originally Posted by Nightshade
(Post 18112891)
Dogs who chase ,or attack, cyclist deserve one response............Lock & load.:mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:
It's the owner that deserves that response. GH |
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