Sentences with phrase «chained dogs often»

Outdoor chained dogs often live a very poor quality of life - lacking freedom to roam and exercise, while being exposed to harsh weather extremes.

Not exact matches

Caged, chained or cornered dogs often bite out of fear.
Stock techniques we use with «normal» dogs — operant or classical conditioning, shaping, chainingoften fail to get through to these dogs.
Regardless of how the owners feel about their dogs, Lytle calls it a «disconnect» that enables people to live inside a home while a dependent animal is chained outside in extreme weather, often hungry and always in filth.
Owners often keep resident dogs isolated on chains or in junk - yards, or allow their dogs to roam unattended.
An otherwise friendly and happy dog, when kept continually chained and isolated, often becomes neurotic, unhappy, anxious, and aggressive.
My study of dog bite - related fatalities occurring over the past five decades has identified the poor ownership / management practices involved in the overwhelming majority of these incidents: owners obtaining dogs, and maintaining them as resident dogs outside of regular, positive human interaction, often for negative functions (i.e. guarding / protection, fighting, intimidation / status); owners failing to humanely contain, control and maintain their dogs (chained dogs, loose roaming dogs, cases of abuse / neglect); owners failing to knowledgably supervise interaction between children and dogs; and owners failing to spay or neuter dogs not used for competition, show, or in a responsible breeding program.
Dogs that have been chained for several years often lose portions of their ears, as more tissue is lost each summer from fly bites.
Their case files are filled with examples of dogs chained outside in the blistering heat and the frigid cold, of dogs on miserably short chains, of dogs who have hanged themselves, and most often of terribly despondent dogs deprived of social contact and the ability to carry out their instinctual desires.
People chain these youngsters, and as the dogs grow, the chains have been known to cut right into their necks, causing infections and damaged muscles.taken them to veterinarians to have the chains surgically removed.Humane workers have witnessed dogs that forgot they were chained, then jumped a fence and hanged themselves.Research indicates that chained dogs bite more often and more viciously.
Often chains break.aggressive and unsocialized dogs running loose.
What's more, because their often neurotic behavior makes them difficult to approach, chained dogs are rarely given even minimal affection.
From Dog Welfare Campaign «Quite often, for example, dogs will associate the pressure from a choke chain with the word «heel», but not with their pulling.
Worse than that, according to the American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior, are punishment - based «training collars» (i.e., choke chains, electronic and pinch collars, etc.), which are used by people who are often looking for a quick or «easy» way to modify the behavior of their dog.
Freedom Fences begins by identifying dogs living outside on short or encumbered chains, often with inadequate shelter or food.
An otherwise friendly and docile dog, when kept continuously chained, becomes neurotic, unhappy, anxious, and often aggressive.
The dogs we rescue were previously neglected, living on the end of a chain, outside in a pen, neglected and abused, without love, care, and very often lacking even the basic essentials of shelter and nourishment.
Compare to conventional dog foods which often contain very little meat, and seldom from the human consumption chain.
Another common fix is lining a chain link fence with aluminum siding, which prevents small dogs from slipping out and getting into the street (where they are often hit by a car or attacked by larger dogs.)
The Humane Society of the United States advises that «An otherwise friendly and docile dog, when kept continuously chained, becomes neurotic, unhappy, anxious and often aggressive.»
Some restrictions that various versions of BSL impose are: - muzzling and leashing in public - muzzling and leashing in cars - extra-short leash lengths - automatic dangerous or vicious dog designation, without any bite history - banning from city parks and beaches where other breeds are allowed - banning from leash - free parks where other breeds are allowed - banning completely from jurisdiction (although sometimes existing dogs are allowed to stay)- special (i.e., more expensive) licensing and jurisdiction - wide registry - special tags identifying the dog as a restricted dog - mandatory microchipping and photograph - mandatory insurance (often one million dollars) for each individual dog on the premises - mandatory signage indicating the presence of the dog on the owner's property - mandatory secure enclosures (in some cases, mandatory chaining)- mandatory spay / neuter (to eventually eliminate the breed entirely)- higher fines and / or jail time if a restricted breed bites or menaces - fines and / or jail time for any infraction of any provision regarding restricted breeds - age limit for walking the dog in public - persons with criminal records not allowed to own a restricted breed - ability of law enforcement to stop owners on the street just to check the dog's status - ability of law enforcement to seize dogs without proof of wrongdoing - ability of law enforcement to enter an owner's home, with or without a warrant, to investigate and / or seize a dog
Thanks to people like you, these dogs have been rescued from a life of misery, on a chain or in a pen, neglected and often abused.
Prong collars used smooth - side - in are often more effective on these dogs than chain collars.
It is dangerous, and often illegal, to tie your dog out in a yard (tethered or chained dogs feel trapped and cornered, so are more likely to attack; they can also become entangled and die a horrible death; and they can't protect themselves from intruders and they «know» it).
It is one of the enduring myths that only the most contemptible and boasting toughs strut around with these «dangerous» dogs or, more often, keep them as chained up, captive prisoners.
This dog was chained and left to get loose, which she did often.
In an abusive situation, the dog is often confined to a cage or small area, or kept on a chain so there's no option to run away.
Not spaying and neutering, and raising dogs for breeding rather than as family pets (dogs used for breeding are often penned, chained, and neglected), is one of the largest factors associated with dog aggression.
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