Feb-21-2019 08:59 AM
Feb-22-2019 12:31 PM
Feb-22-2019 12:09 PM
Feb-22-2019 11:57 AM
Feb-22-2019 11:18 AM
BCSnob wrote:
The pig was not trained to herd; the sheep were trained to perform.
I’d place genetics at 80% and nurture at only 20% based upon my experience with border collies and the behaviors in 18 generations of sheep.
Feb-22-2019 11:10 AM
Pawz4me wrote:toedtoes wrote:
I suspect in 98 percent of those instances that was a lie.
Or the person not being fluent in dog body language. Or being fluent but still missing the signs immediately before a bite occurs. It happens.
Feb-22-2019 11:09 AM
westernrvparkowner wrote:toedtoes wrote:This thread is about parks allowing in certain breeds of dogs. If you have a screening protocol that could be used to exclude bad pet owners, I would be happy to consider implementing it and allow those dangerous breeds, irrespective of the insurance guidelines. But we all know that is impossible without either infringing people's rights and privacy or running afoul of numerous anti discrimination laws.
It wasn't the breed that was going to make the dog dangerous, it was the owner.
As long as we allow people to use the excuse "it's the breed", we will always have these problems. Instead, we need to focus on the individual parings of dog and owner.
Until it becomes possible to judge the owners, we are left with making judgments on the dogs. That means the large and sometimes aggressive breeds will be singled out for exclusion. Deciding between the benefits of allowing an owner of a breed excluded from insurance coverage to stay against the potential of the business to lose huge amounts of money in an uninsured loss is an easy decision to make.
Feb-22-2019 11:08 AM
toedtoes wrote:
I suspect in 98 percent of those instances that was a lie.
Feb-22-2019 11:07 AM
Feb-22-2019 10:59 AM
Pawz4me wrote:toedtoes wrote:
Pawz4me - as I mentioned above, the dog's purpose accounts for a majority of that difference. Shepherds, rotties, and even pits are brought home to "protect" and "guard". As such, they are put in a backyard and left. Unsocialized, uncontrolled, and often illtreated. To blame the breed in those cases when it is the owner who is failing is wrong. But that's what happens.
I don't disagree with what you posted, especially the shamefulness of keeping a dog as a glorified yard ornament. But the second study BCSnob posted contradicts the belief that bites from protective breeds are more common. According to it dogs who were obtained for "companionship and other reasons excepting protection" were 2.21 times more likely to bite than dogs obtained for "protection and other reasons excepting companionship."
I suspect that's related to the amount of time the dogs spent interacting with humans. Less time equals less chance of a bite occurring. Dogs who are kept in a backyard often get little/no human interaction, which limits the chance of a bite occurring.
The study goes on to state that dogs who spent 13-24 hours a day inside were about twice as likely to bite as those that spent 1-13 hours a day inside,and that both groups of dogs were at higher risk of biting than dogs who weren't allowed inside at all. Again, more time for interaction=more chance of a bite occurring.
(Sorry for not quoting directly from the study. I tried many times and different ways but the system kept saying the formatting was invalid, no matter what I did.)
Feb-22-2019 10:53 AM
BCSnob wrote:
Do breeds have the genetics for certain behaviors (pointing, herding, guarding livestock, aggression, etc) or don’t they? If they don’t then any breed should be trainable to perform and function; a basset can be trained to herd. A greyhound could be trained to retrieve a shot duck.
Feb-22-2019 09:47 AM
toedtoes wrote:
Pawz4me - as I mentioned above, the dog's purpose accounts for a majority of that difference. Shepherds, rotties, and even pits are brought home to "protect" and "guard". As such, they are put in a backyard and left. Unsocialized, uncontrolled, and often illtreated. To blame the breed in those cases when it is the owner who is failing is wrong. But that's what happens.
Feb-22-2019 09:37 AM
Feb-22-2019 09:02 AM
toedtoes wrote:This thread is about parks allowing in certain breeds of dogs. If you have a screening protocol that could be used to exclude bad pet owners, I would be happy to consider implementing it and allow those dangerous breeds, irrespective of the insurance guidelines. But we all know that is impossible without either infringing people's rights and privacy or running afoul of numerous anti discrimination laws.
It wasn't the breed that was going to make the dog dangerous, it was the owner.
As long as we allow people to use the excuse "it's the breed", we will always have these problems. Instead, we need to focus on the individual parings of dog and owner.
Feb-22-2019 08:54 AM
Feb-22-2019 08:17 AM
BCSnob wrote:
So what is your analysis of the second report I provided?