Dolbert wrote: » Don't get me started on the people who completely neglect their pets the minute they have kids...
Dolbert wrote: » Don't get me started on the people who completely neglect their pets the minute they have kids :mad: I understand that you're not gonna have the same amount of time for them as before, but this craic of suddenly putting the dog outside all the time because there's a kid in the house is just cruel.
xxxJennyxxx wrote: » Because people are cúnts who think a dog is just "a dog". People make me sick sometimes. My Labrador (who is a pound rescue) is currently lieing at the end of the bed loving life ... He has a better life that me :rolleyes: little shîte doesn't even have a job :P
Both are tied up at the back of the kitchen / conservatory on a one-metre lead
JaMarcusHustle wrote: » council house-living What is your issue with people that live in council houses? Anyone can use dogs as an accessory not just people in council houses so think about that.
kneemos wrote: » Started a thread on this very topic some time ago in the Pet Forum,I would say the majority of replies felt it was OK to keep your dog locked up.
Rojomcdojo wrote: » I never even knew there was a pet adoption section on Adverts. It's the most enraging thing. "year old lucher greyhound cross good bitch on the lamp reason for getting rid iv no time at the moment." Jesus. You would almost think they would be embarrassed to be so outwardly horrible. "I'm moving from a house to an apartment" How about this for an idea, move somewhere you can bring your dog. Horrible people. And some of them have kids on the way :rolleyes:
DBB wrote: » Not fair kneemos, you're taking that thread out of context here, and misrepresenting what was actually said in it by the majority. Broadly speaking this was that a dog run (as opposed to a crate) is a safe way to contain a dog temporarily whilst you're not at home to supervise, and that the dog should otherwise be spending time out of the run exercising, on walks, interacting with its owners, inside the house, having fun etc etc. To suggest that the users of the Animals and Pets forum condone a dog being "locked up" in the context you're implying is grossly unfair.
The Singing Beard wrote: » And why does my friend insist on pedigree dogs from farms? Is it a fashion thing? Why not a loyal companion from a pound? I hate this pedigree dig snobbery. But that's a different rant, sorry :-p
sonofenoch wrote: » Our next door neighbour (elderly woman and middle age son) have a beautiful German Shepherd....it's fed and watered and that's it, very little human contact and no excercise....spends it's days in a fenced in concrete garden, poor fella hasn't even a bit of grass to defecate in ......I'm often of a mind to jump the wall and bring him to a local park to stretch his legs but hay ho he has food and water, the bare minimum legal requirement for an animal.....what a waste
kneemos wrote: » Might not mind if you wanted to walk the dog?
JaMarcusHustle wrote: » Log on to Adverts or DoneDeal and look at the Pet Adoption sections under dogs. The amount of Huskies / Malamutes / Akitas you see is sickening. These were once something of an exotic breed that were almost exclusively owned and raised by experienced breeders. But somewhere along the line, they became the new Pitbull. .
eisenberg1 wrote: » If you are sure the dog has no food or water, i.e being neglected. then it's time to make a call.................
Bacon and Cabbage wrote: » I 100% agree that animal welfare is important and that people should care for their pets properly, but IMO, people can get a bit crazy sometimes when it comes to animals. I recall a thread on here one time where the question posed was something like "Would you rather see a random human or random animal suffer", and there were seriously people arguing that they would rather see a human suffer
sonofenoch wrote: » No I said it has food and water, there's a dog box and bedding so no grounds for complaint.....just has very little human contact and no excercise, has to **** and piss on hard concrete ground....totally unatural surroundings for a dog
Rojomcdojo wrote: » Here's a shocker - we're animals too. Just when we're being mistreated we can communicate the fact. What makes you think that it's preferable to mistreat an animal over a human? I would say they're equally bad. We all have the same feelings and emotions, the only difference being that humans think they're greeeaaat.
Bacon and Cabbage wrote: » So you would not save a human from suffering before an animal?