Kato
Well-known member
Poison is just as bad as a snare. And a really dirty thing to do to a dog when someone knows it's owned by a kid.
But then again, I guess a personality that thinks cockfights are OK is pretty bent to begin with. Not a person anyone would want for a neighbour, that's for sure.
Peg, I'm not sure what her bloodlines were. I know her mother came from a breeder who sells dogs to the RCMP, and her daddy was a show dog. That's all I know. I saw her mother, and she had a really good strong hind end which I was looking for. So many Shepherds have hip trouble when they get older, and I was trying to avoid that. I never thought she wouldn't "get older" though.
I'm not sure what's going to happen here when the nieghbour is gone. I guess the first couple of winters will be tough for everyone. The deer, and our hay yard both. There's no shortage of hunters around here though, and this herd has produced more than one big buck trophy, so I guess they will reduce the size over time.
He's still planning on shooting the coyotes though, and that has me worried. This particular pack leave cattle alone completely, and if he gets rid of them the deer herd is bound to attract another batch that just may not be so well behaved around cattle. Just a few miles south of us there are some problem coyote packs that have developed a taste for calf, and I'm not looking forward to them moving north. It'll keep the donkeys busy until they get them trained to stay out of our yard. :shock: The current pack knows exactly where the fence line is, and they stay on their side of it.

Peg, I'm not sure what her bloodlines were. I know her mother came from a breeder who sells dogs to the RCMP, and her daddy was a show dog. That's all I know. I saw her mother, and she had a really good strong hind end which I was looking for. So many Shepherds have hip trouble when they get older, and I was trying to avoid that. I never thought she wouldn't "get older" though.
I'm not sure what's going to happen here when the nieghbour is gone. I guess the first couple of winters will be tough for everyone. The deer, and our hay yard both. There's no shortage of hunters around here though, and this herd has produced more than one big buck trophy, so I guess they will reduce the size over time.
He's still planning on shooting the coyotes though, and that has me worried. This particular pack leave cattle alone completely, and if he gets rid of them the deer herd is bound to attract another batch that just may not be so well behaved around cattle. Just a few miles south of us there are some problem coyote packs that have developed a taste for calf, and I'm not looking forward to them moving north. It'll keep the donkeys busy until they get them trained to stay out of our yard. :shock: The current pack knows exactly where the fence line is, and they stay on their side of it.