Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor

   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #81  
Similar experience when I met the neighbors Siberian husky. Was changing out the blades on my mower. On my back, and noticed some paws come by then a head peaking under the mower at me. I asked her if we were gonna be friends???

Darn dog eventually had me trained to give her a ride home
The first day we took possession of our current house, wife and I were hauling stuff in and out. We were in the dining room and noticed a yellow lab nosing around in our kitchen. Again, I said "Hello." and that dog just stood there wagging her tail at us. She looked like a happy old lady.

The neighbor lady came running in apologizing and covering her eyes saying she was sorry about the dog and didn't want to appear to be nosey. We started laughing. Introduced our selves. Turns out the elderly couple that used to live in the house would let Chelsie (the dog) into the house every morning for breakfast to eat with their labs. 🤣

Told the neighbor that we probably won't be feeding her, but she's welcome to visit any time. :) They were both great neighbors. Both passed away over the years, but we're still friends with her husband, son, and son's dogs (the german shepard and a black lab).
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #83  
The first day we took possession of our current house, wife and I were hauling stuff in and out. We were in the dining room and noticed a yellow lab nosing around in our kitchen. Again, I said "Hello." and that dog just stood there wagging her tail at us. She looked like a happy old lady.

The neighbor lady came running in apologizing and covering her eyes saying she was sorry about the dog and didn't want to appear to be nosey. We started laughing. Introduced our selves. Turns out the elderly couple that used to live in the house would let Chelsie (the dog) into the house every morning for breakfast to eat with their labs. 🤣

Told the neighbor that we probably won't be feeding her, but she's welcome to visit any time. :) They were both great neighbors. Both passed away over the years, but we're still friends with her husband, son, and son's dogs (the german shepard and a black lab).
When I was building here 20 years ago it was bird season and a nice Springer showed up, visiting with my dog. I suspected the owner was standing there watching so didn't do anything. The following year I saw somebody getting ready to hunt the abandoned orchard next door so stopped to introduce myself; he made it clear that he's been hunting there for years and didn't really care who I was.

Not tying his dog the first time I met it was a bit of a struggle for me. Back before cell phones I was driving to work past two RV campers of guys who were rabbit hunting with beagles. Friday morning one was gone, the other was still there. That night he was gone.
The next day I was headed into work and met a big male beagle. When I opened the door he jumped in like he owned the truck. His paws were worn bloody and he had a tag with a phone # but I couldn't afford to take the day off so brought him with me. I thought about tying to the truck but was afraid somebody would think I was trying to steal him :confused: so he followed me into the woods.
It wasn't long before he got on a rabbit track and took off. I heard him baying all day long, and that night as I walked back to the truck after dark I could still hear him. I've always regretted not tying the dog out, or even taking the day off to get him back to his owner.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #84  
The first day we took possession of our current house, wife and I were hauling stuff in and out. We were in the dining room and noticed a yellow lab nosing around in our kitchen. Again, I said "Hello." and that dog just stood there wagging her tail at us. She looked like a happy old lady.

The neighbor lady came running in apologizing and covering her eyes saying she was sorry about the dog and didn't want to appear to be nosey. We started laughing. Introduced our selves. Turns out the elderly couple that used to live in the house would let Chelsie (the dog) into the house every morning for breakfast to eat with their labs.

Told the neighbor that we probably won't be feeding her, but she's welcome to visit any time. :) They were both great neighbors. Both passed away over the years, but we're still friends with her husband, son, and son's dogs (the german shepard and a black lab).
My grandparents would have the neighbors dogs come over for a visit.

I actually have a picture of my grandmother in the process of getting into her car. Back window was down with three dog heads sticking out the window.

Only one of those dogs was hers. The other two belonged to the neighbor. She went to let poncho in and the other two decided they were going for a ride as well

Same thing after a snow storm. Sometimes you would see grandpa plowing with his dog in the truck with him. Sometimes you would see 3 dogs sitting in a line on the bench seat next to him

There dog was a Lab/ springer mix. The neighbors dogs were a Saint Bernard, and a sharpai/corgy mix.

St Bernard (female) would sit right tight to him like she was his girl friend and if he looked at her she would give him a great big slobbery kiss
 
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   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #85  
Seemed about every summer when I was a kid, we'd find some beagle sniffing along through out yard. We'd put them in the fenced yard and call the humane society. They'd pick them up and hope the owners called looking. That's about all you can do. At least now, with microchipping, it's a lot easier to track down a found pet.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #86  
When I was in high school, I found a shepard mix dog, maybe 6 months old. I put him in the yard. But for some reason, I didn't ask the humane society to pick him up. I told them that I had him, but would keep him there until they found the owner. And I made up 'found dog' signs and put them up all over my end of town. And I put an ad in the paper for 2 weeks. No one ever called to even look at him. I had him for 14 years. Great dog.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #87  
A lot will depend on who you get to talk too.
Some NYS Troopers are really good and responsive, others not so much.
The Sheriffs department is likely to be more responsive, and if not you can go to a county board meeting to air your problems.
You could also talk to your Township Supervisor and have him lean on the sherrifs department a bit.

Yes. County sheriff is the one to handle these type complaints. The State Police are primarily traffic control on state highways, not rural roads. County Sheriff is the highest ranking official in any county and can tell the state police where to get off. I was dispatcher for awhile and had to get in the middle of one of those disputes, Sheriff won.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #89  
I've use a Daisy BB gun to run off dogs that kept coming over. Stings them but doesn't draw blood.
I don't have dogs, don't want dogs, and generally find that most dog owners I've encountered were irresponsible.
The reason I moved from the city to the country was to get away from the incessant barking.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #90  
I live 4 miles out of town. 5 dogs have appeared over the years, seems 4 miles is a convenient dumping spot for unwanted pets. I usually don't interfere, just let them roam.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #91  
I live 4 miles out of town. 5 dogs have appeared over the years, seems 4 miles is a convenient dumping spot for unwanted pets. I usually don't interfere, just let them roam.
The property I owned previously for 41 years seemed to be a dump site. At one time I had 5 dogs. Only one was originally mine. Of the 15-20 dogs I had over the years I never could figure out why they got dumped. I never got a bad one. One of my two current dogs was dumped here at the farm where I live now. He was maybe a year old when he got dumped. That was 11 years ago. He's a great dog. Hi name is Willard.





20161210_093828.jpg
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #92  
The property I owned previously for 41 years seemed to be a dump site. At one time I had 5 dogs. Only one was originally mine. Of the 15-20 dogs I had over the years I never could figure out why they got dumped. I never got a bad one. One of my two current dogs was dumped here at the farm where I live now. He was maybe a year old when he got dumped. That was 11 years ago. He's a great dog. Hi name is Willard.





View attachment 738531
Nice looking pup great smile..:D
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #93  
Shooting a dog is a felony in most states.

Bring a gun is almost always a bad idea.
In NY you can be arrested for thinking about a gun!
Yep. Bringing a gun into a situation where you anticipate getting into a conflict, and where you are on public record as having a dispute, and where you could have chosen to avoid the conflict entirely, is a really, really, bad idea. The kind of bad idea that often lands people in prison.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #94  
I live 4 miles out of town. 5 dogs have appeared over the years, seems 4 miles is a convenient dumping spot for unwanted pets. I usually don't interfere, just let them roam.
My wife and I walk a mile every 20 minutes. We frequently walk for 3 hours on weekends, so about 9 miles. No reason a dog couldn't walk 4 miles in around 1 hour.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #95  
When I was building here 20 years ago it was bird season and a nice Springer showed up, visiting with my dog. I suspected the owner was standing there watching so didn't do anything. The following year I saw somebody getting ready to hunt the abandoned orchard next door so stopped to introduce myself; he made it clear that he's been hunting there for years and didn't really care who I was.
A non-resident hunter who resents being respectfully approached by a neighbor, that's the kind of guy you call the sheriff and the game warden about. Just, "Hey, I'm uncomfortable, please check this guy out." Too many situations where somebody's dad, uncle, buddy at work, knew the owners 30 years ago and was once given permission to hunt and takes it as a lifetime right. "I've always hunted here" doesn't cut it. That's the guy that's liable to take a bad shot and but a bullet through your living room wall.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #96  
From my experience, Postal Inspector won't do much other than large amounts of mail theft and mail fraud along with investigating their employees. Had a case once where a couple stole mail from about 20 mailboxes and immediately forged a check from the stolen mail to buy a pizza. I arrested them later that day. Postal inspector just wanted my report after my investigation was completed. We prosecuted locally because the feds wouldn't do anything. Postal inspector's office was about 60 miles away. That might have had something to do with it.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #97  
Shooting a dog is a felony in most states.

Bring a gun is almost always a bad idea.
In NY you can be arrested for thinking about a gun!
If you and a strange dog are on public property, and the dog is acting aggressive to the point that you are in fear for your life, if you could post the laws that don't allow you to defend yourself I'd love to see them.

As far as NY, I use to live there. Don't anymore, never will. Enough said;)
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #99  
A non-resident hunter who resents being respectfully approached by a neighbor, that's the kind of guy you call the sheriff and the game warden about. Just, "Hey, I'm uncomfortable, please check this guy out." Too many situations where somebody's dad, uncle, buddy at work, knew the owners 30 years ago and was once given permission to hunt and takes it as a lifetime right. "I've always hunted here" doesn't cut it. That's the guy that's liable to take a bad shot and but a bullet through your living room wall.
He was from 2 towns away and wasn't hunting on my land. I was just trying to be friendly. He wasn't.
 
   / Bad Dogs Bad Neighbor #100  
And I made up 'found dog' signs and put them up all over my end of town. And I put an ad in the paper for 2 weeks. No one ever called to even look at him. I had him for 14 years. Great dog.
You probably did, but most people don't...

NEVER post a pic of the dog, but write a general description, and leave key information out about the dog that ONLY the owner of that dog would know about.

I've found through personal experience that there are a lot of crazy people in animal rescue work, but by the same token, there are actually a lot of crazy people looking for "lost pets".

You just want to ensure that the "lost" animal (pet) is given back to the rightful owner.
 

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