Photog
Member
Several years ago, my daughter was about 5 at the time, I came home from a shooting session. I had a Marlin 45-70 in the back seat of my car. I live on a cul de sac and directly across it were some renters. One had a pitbull. My daughter was in the front yard playing and laughing. The dog looked over at her and started staring. Then it started to walk across their front lawn towards the street, picking up speed as it went. I watched the dog zero in on my daughter. I reached into the back seat, picked up the Marlin, found a couple of rounds, loaded it and racked one in the chamber. (Amazing how you can do things quickly when necessary).
By this time, the dog was about 3/4 across the cul de sac. I started walking towards my daughter, she was still oblivious, and aimed at the dog. If he got all four paws on my lawn, he was a dead dog. The owner across the street freaked out and started yelling and running towards my house. He caught the dog just as it got to the sidewalk. He started cussing me out saying his dog was gentle, raised right and great around kids, never having hurt anyone. I told him if the dog was ever on my property again, it would be dead and that I had a good lawyer.
He still tried to explain how since the dog was "raised" right it was harmless. I then asked him one question, which I have asked several pitbull owners since. Pitbulls were raised and bred to be vicious, it is instinct now. The question I ask anyone who states that it is how you raise an animal that makes them vicious or non vicious, is, if you get a tiger cub and raise it properly, does that mean it will be a harmless 600 pound house cat when it grows up? Would you trust your life to that, or your kids life? Most get a bit peeved and don't answer.
If I would have been you, the minute that dog was on my land, it would have left this earth.
By this time, the dog was about 3/4 across the cul de sac. I started walking towards my daughter, she was still oblivious, and aimed at the dog. If he got all four paws on my lawn, he was a dead dog. The owner across the street freaked out and started yelling and running towards my house. He caught the dog just as it got to the sidewalk. He started cussing me out saying his dog was gentle, raised right and great around kids, never having hurt anyone. I told him if the dog was ever on my property again, it would be dead and that I had a good lawyer.
He still tried to explain how since the dog was "raised" right it was harmless. I then asked him one question, which I have asked several pitbull owners since. Pitbulls were raised and bred to be vicious, it is instinct now. The question I ask anyone who states that it is how you raise an animal that makes them vicious or non vicious, is, if you get a tiger cub and raise it properly, does that mean it will be a harmless 600 pound house cat when it grows up? Would you trust your life to that, or your kids life? Most get a bit peeved and don't answer.
If I would have been you, the minute that dog was on my land, it would have left this earth.