06-09-2011, 07:06 PM
Btw, once a dog breaks training and actually starts attacking something, it is extremely dangerous to try to separate the animal from it's target. Not to mention that scaring it off wouldn't have worked. They get rather one sided on what they are doing once the blood gets flowing.
Edit:
And yes, I am a hunter. From bear to moose to caribou to wolves. If I were back home, this would have been solved with a suppressed rifle. Animals attacking livestock is not to be allowed. In nearly every state, the dogs owner would be criminally and civilly liable for damages.
Either way, it's amazing how your distinctions qualify dogs as a higher value pet then the sheep. Monetarily, the sheep has easily 3-4x the value of your average dog. Sheep also make good pets, plus they mow your lawn.
Would you have been happier of the guy sat there and watched his sheep die painfully from disembowelment? That's usually how the canine family works. Not to mention, the sheeps owner would end up in jail for cruelty.
Edit:
And yes, I am a hunter. From bear to moose to caribou to wolves. If I were back home, this would have been solved with a suppressed rifle. Animals attacking livestock is not to be allowed. In nearly every state, the dogs owner would be criminally and civilly liable for damages.
Either way, it's amazing how your distinctions qualify dogs as a higher value pet then the sheep. Monetarily, the sheep has easily 3-4x the value of your average dog. Sheep also make good pets, plus they mow your lawn.
Would you have been happier of the guy sat there and watched his sheep die painfully from disembowelment? That's usually how the canine family works. Not to mention, the sheeps owner would end up in jail for cruelty.