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> Who if not the police or the dog warden is it up to top make sure that this dog is not allowed to do this again to another dog or maybe a child
> but the Rottie has a tendancy to run across the park towards other dogs, not in an agressive manor.
> However the yorkie it attacked had horrific injuries and was being walked by a teenager who is traumatised.
> just because a large dog has killed a small dog does not make the large dog dog-agressive, the mere size difference can be the difference between a warning snap and the death of the other dog.
> if any of my dogs ever caused serious injury to another dog and had I couldn't control then enough to stop them running up to other dogs then my dog would be muzzled without a shadow of a doubt.
>
(he is is kept on lead/long-line around all dogs anyway, simply because it's far to easy for his size to cause injury accidently, despite him being very friendly and non-confrontational),
(the same way he does to my cat, completely harmless, but as he's so big people think it looks savage).
To a lot of people that would look like Buster had attacked the puppy and savaged it, afterall, the pup would have died from serious injury and the story would be passed around that 'mastiff killed miniture puppy and traumatised owner witnessed the 'attack', there would be no mention of 'accidentally' in the story atall.(I have rarely met anyone who thinks Buster play-bow is a friendly signal).
The Rottie could have ignored re-calls, singled out the little yorkie and savaged him to death. Or, the yorkie could have run up to the rottie, rottie starts to play, sizes aren't compatible and poor little dog gets killed. Or, the 2 dogs could have run up to each other, a spat breaks out and again, size difference turns a squabble into a tragedy. The only thing we do know is the rottie has not attacked any other dog and does not appear aggresive to other dogs. (Buster is kept on lead around all dogs, simply because it's far to easy for his size to cause injury accidently, he is very friendly and non-confrontational),
but wheather the rottie should be muzzled and permenantly on a lead and kept away from other dogs really should depend on facts we don't have.
> Dogs are dogs and many will have the odd scuffle, sadly, due to the vast difference in sizes of dogs, tiny dogs disagreeing with huge dogs is highly likely to end badly, but this does not mean that either of the dogs involved are 'aggresive', they are just dogs.
> Just to verify that the Rottie came across the park to the yorkie, the yorkie layed straight down onto the ground in submission and the rottie picked the dog up in its mouth and ran off with it.....The owner of the rottie has no recall with this dog.
(as you can see from my earlier posts, I do not have any axe to grind with rotties either).
> I hope that from my post you can see that i do not have any sort of grudge on Rottie's but in my opinion this dog should be kept on a lead for safety's sake more than anything.
> The yorkie was 10 years old. It died of horrific injuries and would never have survived.
> f the teenager felt frightened or in danger him/herself at the Rottie's behaviour, this is enough to charge under DDA section 3, 'out of control dogs' regardless of what happened to the Yorkie. Even a dog on lead barking or frightening someone is technically in breach of Section 3.
> As the owner of a big dog who is always on lead in public places I do have a dread of little dogs coming up and picking a fight.
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