quidni wrote:Personally, I'm still wondering why the dog was wearing his CCW.My Dog attacked by Pitbull while wearing my CCW


Return to “My Dog attacked by Pitbull while wearing my CCW”
quidni wrote:Personally, I'm still wondering why the dog was wearing his CCW.My Dog attacked by Pitbull while wearing my CCW
Had a padded and reinforced neck collar and hood. I could not feel any pressure at all. The Dane's have fairly strong jaws, but not as strong as a Shepard. Having play wrestled with him and having him 'bite' and mouth be before, I was not too concerned about being injured with the suit. But it WAS done in my younger more stupid days.tfrazier wrote:Very dangerous, especially with a dog that large if he gets your neck. The suits are great for stopping puncture wounds, but don't do a lot to eliminate the pressure that could break bones. You could have ended up with a broken neck. I've never seen a bite suit with a collar, so I'm not sure how your neck was covered, but it's been a good 20 years since I've worn one.Keith B wrote:...stopped me about half-way in the door, mouth on my neck. He was not biting, but all 175 lbs was on me (I weighed about 140 at that time) and I was pinned to the ground. When I called his name, he backed off a little and I could peek out from under the hood. He saw me and immediately backed on down with his tail wagging. My sister and I both felt a lot more comfortable with her living alone after that!
Nobody else should ever try this even if they have access to a $2,500 bite suit unless they have some good training and experience as an agitator, and you should always have an experienced handler present when doing bite work.
Yeah, smart dog. There is no reason to jump out of a perfectly good aircraft.frazzled wrote:I think that would be a common reaction from most people as well, including me. "You want me to do what?" CHOMP!My own dog bit me once when he decided it was unreasonable for me to force him out of a perfectly good hovering helicopter on a rope harness.
I was going to stay out of the discussion, but have to enter in.Doug.38PR wrote:I guess we live in different kinds of neighborhoods. Where I come from, having your dog come into contact and reach another is considered fun, frisky and playful. People around here commonly do it. In fact, like I said, those guys did it with their Pit Bulls until this incident anyway. I even came into contact with them once before. They showed no agressive behavior...that time...but they WERE in full contact and could easily have snatched my dog by the neck or any other dog being walked out there.p.s. I consider people letting their dog get within leash reach of my dog when they're both on a walk as being extremely inconsiderate and troublesome. There is no need for that and I wouldn't tolerate it. You might be unlucky enough to run into other weird/rude dog owners like myself. If you've noticed, if dogs never get within reach of each other, they NEVER get hold of each other's throats and try to kill one another.