[ SHOWGSD-L ] Invisible Fence - PLEASE READ

  • From: "Ginger Cleary" <cleary1414@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Showgsd-L@Freelists. Org" <showgsd-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2008 11:09:29 -0400

The below tragedy is exactly why I will never sell a puppy/dog to anyone
planning to use one of these things.
Ginger Cleary
"... The system of private property is the most important guaranty of
freedom, not only for those who own property, but scarcely less for those
who do not.."-- Fredrich v Hayek
My Ebay site
Rome, GA http://www.rihadin.com/
  -----Original Message-----



  Permission to Cross Post granted and encouraged!!


  I have never been a big fan of Invisible Fencing, but today I am sick at
  heart. Images of a young girl with blood dripping from her face, of
another
  young girl opening her front door to discover the body of her dog laying
on
  her front yard as well as the sound of the shot from the police revolver
that
  killed the dog haunt me.
  Like many of the homes in our area, our neighbors had decided to use
  invisible fencing. The boundary ran nearly to the sidewalk on one side and
the
  road on the other side of the home. The owners had very carefully trained
  their dog to respect the boundary and although we no longer used the
sidewalk
  when walking our own dogs past the house, we never saw the dog cross the
  boundaries - only bark and charge up and down the length of the yard.
  Unfortunately, Invisible Fencing doesn't prevent anyone - human or
  animal - from crossing into a yard so protected. A child might think twice
about
  opening a gate to enter a yard fenced by "visible" material, but most
won't
  think at all before stepping a few feet onto someone's grass. Most folks
  might think twice about crossing a whole lawn to enter someone's backyard,
but
  who thinks about stepping one or two feet off a sidewalk?
  So yesterday afternoon, on the way home from school, one of the children
  in the neighborhood who knew the dog well stopped to say 'hello'. He
walked
  onto the grass to greet the dog. He was accompanied by a girl who adores
  dogs and she, too, walked into the yard to greet the dog. Then, the girl
bent
  down to kiss the dog. And the dog bit her, tearing her lip badly.
  The girl's mother called the police and an ambulance. One of the
  policeman saw the girl covered in blood while her mother screamed "That
dog tore
  her face off". The police then went to the house where the dog lived. The
  dog was protective of his property, knew he had done something wrong and
also
  knew the police were acting in a threatening manner. He growled and
  menacingly charged the police; but never ever crossed the boundary of his
yard.
  He was standing in the middle of the yard when the policeman shot him.
  Shortly after, the young teenaged girl who lived there realized something
was
  going on and opened her front door only to find the dog's body with police
  cars in the street and police standing in the road.
  You could say that no one should ever approach a dog they don't
  know. That no one should ever put their face close to a dog they don't
know
  well. That no one should ever enter another person's yard without their
express
  permission and in the owner's presence.
  You can argue that the police should have waited for Animal Control.
  You can argue that the dog was a Mastiff mix, that the police considered
it a
  bulldog and dangerous. You can argue, as do the neighbors who knew the dog
  well, that the dog was actually just a big loveable teddy bear of a dog.
You
  could argue that the dog was large, looked mean and threatening, as large
dogs
  frequently do. You could even argue that Invisible Fences don't always
work
  - as the police believe happened in this case. However, my husband was
  working outside and saw the children inside the yard.
  Each of those arguments have some truth to them. But what you can't
  argue with is that Invisible Fencing is basically no protection at all,
  especially when it is run up to your property lines. It doesn't protect
your dog
  from animals entering the yard. It doesn't protect your dog from humans
  entering the yard. It leaves your dog to do the protecting. And while that
little
  girl, now awaiting plastic surgery, might have petted a dog through a
"real"
  fence and still been bitten, it is doubtful that it would have been her
face
  that was damaged. It is also doubtful that the police would have felt they
  needed to shoot the dog on the spot if it had been contained by a
"visible"
  fence.
  I am writing about this tragedy primarily for the rescue community. I
  give all of you permission to print it and put it into the packages you
give
  your adopters, to warn them that Invisible Fencing may be cheaper than
  'visible' fencing but it might not be so cheap in the long run!! To beg
them that,
  if they must use it, to at least limit the area to just their backyards,
not
  to run it to their property lines.
  Samantha DiMaio-Leach, Jacksonville FL Sheltie Rescue, Canine Cushing's
  Auto-Immune Care,
  Orange Park FL

  **************


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