KenLee
WKR
The three "S" ruleSituation like that. I'm not calling anybody. The issue was handled, and the less people involved the better IMO
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The three "S" ruleSituation like that. I'm not calling anybody. The issue was handled, and the less people involved the better IMO
Back in the mid-1990s, my father was attacked by a bear dog that had run down and killed a deer.
He was out hunting with an antique Martini-action rifle in a now-obsolete cartridge (.41 Swiss) with hand loaded ammunition formed from .348 Winchester brass. He found a deer carcass. While he was examining it, a bear dog came up on him. When he extended his hand towards the dog, it bit his hand and arm. He attempted to shoot the dog, but the rifle misfired. He attempted to fend the dog off with the rifle barrel while frantically trying to recock the rifle and fire the round. Despite repeated attempts, the round would not fire. Because the custom ammunition was very tight, the dud round would not eject (the ejector was not strong enough to eject unfired rounds). His folding knife was in a sheath and he could not reach it while holding the rifle with both hands.
A second dog came up and began fighting with the first one. This gave him enough of a respite to use the wooden ramrod to eject the dud round. The first dog ran off the second dog and then attacked him again. He shot the dog.
He reported the incident to animal control. Animal control told him to go get his wounds checked out and bring in the dog’s head for rabies testing. He did both these things.
The dog’s owner followed the tracking collar onto our farm, where he found the headless dog and the deer carcass. He promptly called his friend/cousin in the DA’s office. The DA charged my dad with malicious wounding of an animal. His first lawyer tried to get him to take a plea deal that would have resulted in “only” 30 days in jail. he had to hire a second lawyer to get someone who cared more about his clients than his relationship with the DA. The judge eventually dismissed the criminal case for lack of evidence.
We went through three years of criminal and civil litigation before the matter was settled. I’ve known self-defense homicide cases wrapped up more quickly and with less trouble.
There’s a lot of local backstory to the whole mess, stuff going back to business dealings between my grandfather and the dog owner’s grandfather, previous disputes over poaching, people being members of different political parties, people “not being from around here” despite having been there since 1965, etc.
On a side note, in Virginia, if you own sheep, you can shoot stray dogs on your land with impunity. Growing up on the farm, we had a small pack of outdoor basset hound mixes that kept wandering and going missing. I later learned that a kid I used to ride the school bus with had shot at least twenty of our dogs over the course of a decade. His family owned a few sheep, so there was no legal recourse.
Things get crazy where dogs are concerned.
And I carry my P226 whenever I am on the farm.
I'd definitely say more common in the east just due to the fragmentation and mix of residential and hunting properties. I hunt a National Forest that's over 100k acres, but there's private chunks mixed all through it and on the edges and most of the residents in those rural areas let their dogs run free. When I ran cams, I had dogs on them all the time. It's not uncommon to be sitting a piece of public in MS and be in earshot of dogs, atv's, etc.Really surprised by the number of accounts guys are sharing of coming across wild dogs in the woods. I have to worry more about feral horses than feral dogs. Can't recall ever coming across one in Nevada. Is this more common east of the Mississippi, or is it happening in places like Montana and Idaho too?
The ones I'm seeing are usually just loose, mostly on purpose, but maybe occasionally on accident.Also - are these straight up feral dogs, as in born feral, vs runaways, vs just got loose?
Sir move on if my posts offend you,it's a free forum.Those dogs are used in law enforcement any problems with that?What value are you adding to the original poster question talking about your trained attack dogs?
This thread isn’t about you, or your completely un related comments.
You’re just looking to try and make yourself feel cool by interjecting about your trained attack dogs.
No body cares bro, it’s a hunting forum. And mals are culls imo
They add zero value to my life
I just don’t understand how you feel you are contributing to the original posters with all your attack dogs talk that has nothing to do with anything.Sir move on if my posts offend you,it's a free forum.Those dogs are used in law enforcement any problems with that?
Sir you're from Oregon that's part of your problem, identifying with real people., and the differences within each, by the way I'd love to hear about your poodles.I just don’t understand how you feel you are contributing to the original posters with all your attack dogs talk that has nothing to do with anything.
You you just like to interject it on any topic concerning dogs to make yourself feel awesome because it’s you entire identity?
If I came into a thread about attack dogs and said poodles make great pets how would that be helpful?
You seem to not have the ability to answer a question.Sir you're from Oregon that's part of your problem, identifying with real people., and the differences within each, by the way I'd love to hear about your poodles.