(First published in Stuff regional papers and on stuff.co.nz, August 22.)
My wife and I moved to a different part of town about 18
months ago. Since then I’ve been acquainting myself with the dogs in our new
neighbourhood.
There’s a black and white one, possibly part-dalmatian, that
barks menacingly from behind a high wooden fence on my approach, but then jumps
up and whimpers with gratitude when I reach through a gap to pat it.
There’s a big, sad-looking black fellow of indeterminate
breed with a deformed paw, an eager young chocolate-brown lab that bounds up to
greet me, and a couple of St Bernards whose basso-profundo woofing must almost
register on the Richter scale.
Then there are the two dogs just around the corner that I
regularly encounter on my walks.
The first is a ghastly little creature that seems to spend
its day waiting to ambush passers-by. At the sound of approaching footsteps it
rushes out, yapping furiously from behind a gate.
It darts back and forth in a frenzy as if wanting to tear me
from limb to limb, but I suspect that if I opened the gate, it wouldn't know what to do. It would be like
the dog that chases a car but loses all interest when the vehicle stops.
I reckon there’s a good case for treating dogs like this – ones that noisily harass people exercising their right to use the footpath –
as a public nuisance, and penalising their owners accordingly. Not only do
their pets disturb the peace, but their habit of rushing out unexpectedly (the dogs, I mean, not the owners) could
pose a risk to elderly pedestrians who are frail or have a weak heart.
Some barks are easy on the ear, but the shrill yapping of
angry little dogs seems calibrated to cause maximum annoyance.
I love dogs, but I would happily administer a sharp kick to
this one. The howl of pain and shock as
it scuttled indoors would give me immense satisfaction.
But of course we shouldn’t blame dogs for the failings of
the people in charge of them. The kick should more correctly be directed at the
animal’s unseen owner, who does nothing to discourage the demented yapping.
For all I know the owner may smile indulgently when little
Honey or Treasure or whatever it’s called rushes out as if to defend its
property from orcs and goblins.
Doggy people can be strange like that. Behaviour that other
people regard as infuriating may be seen by a dog’s doting owner as cute and
endearing. Such people can be completely insensitive to other people’s feelings
about their beloved pets.
There’s another reason why kicking the dog would be unfair.
The animal displays aggression to passers-by not only because it’s allowed to
get away with it, but because it’s almost certainly bored and neurotic and
consequently bad-tempered.
You can usually tell at a glance whether a dog’s happy, and
they’re generally happiest when they’ve got something useful to do.
The domestic dog wasn’t bred to sit around being fussed
over, but to be of assistance to humans – to hunt, to herd or to guard against
wild animals. But now we have an infinite variety of small dogs that were bred
to look cute and keep human beings company.
I understand their appeal – they don’t eat a lot or take up
a lot of space, they don’t need much exercise and they’re often affectionate,
loyal and highly intelligent – but some of their owners are blind to the
irritation they cause to others if they’re poorly controlled.
And since I’m writing about the irritating habits of
over-indulgent owners, I should also mention the vile, anti-social offence of
not cleaning up after dogs that defecate in public places. Some deluded owners
seem to assume that treading in the occasional dog turd is a price the
community is happy to pay for the sheer joy of having dogs around. Well, it’s
not.
At this point, you’re possibly thinking: hang on, I
mentioned two dogs around the corner, but told you about only one. What about
the other?
Well, he’s very big and shaggy and I suspect quite old, and
I always stop and talk to him.
Alerted to my approach by the furious yapping of the little dog
I mentioned earlier, which lives next door to him, he pokes his great, hairy
head over the fence and waits to be patted. I rub his ears and talk to him in
dog language, in which I’m quite fluent, and when I go to leave he gently takes
my hand in his enormous mouth as if imploring me to stay a bit longer.
If he could talk back, I’m sure he’d apologise for the
appalling behaviour of his canine neighbour and explain that not all dogs are
like that. And I’d assure him that I know that.
FOOTNOTE: At some risk to my reputation (such as it is), I have posted this column as it appeared in print. I have retained the paragraph in which I fantasise about kicking the noisy little dog around the corner, which provoked some flak from dog-lovers in the Stuff comments section. For the record, I should state that I wouldn't kick a small dog, no matter how irritating it was, although I admit the thought - just the thought, no more - sometimes appeals to me. When I read it now, I see why people took offence. Obviously I should have made it clear that the paragraph contained an element of journalistic hyperbole.
5 comments:
As the owner of a 4 month-old pup I'm trying to socialise and discipline, I relate - on either side of the fence.
The big problem (analogous of the way society increasingly conducts itself) is unsympathetic intolerance or arrogance on either side.
How did we get here?
The Warwick Roger obit today is a first class piece of writing - well done Karl
Thank you Dean.
I agree with Dean, and the piece is an example of what I requested a fortnight ago, ie. what constitutes genuine journalism. Congratulations Mr du Fresne.
Ooooh I know, as Sybil Fawlty would have drawled. I had cause to make up an amusing sign for our front lawn/garden recently, to warn passing dog-walkers of our low tolerance for 'tresspooping', as it had become an intermittent issue. Left it in place for 10 days so regulars got a shifty then removed it. Seems to have worked. Happily no barkers in our new subdivision & our neighbours' new labradoodle is the quiestest dog I've ever struck...as it were.
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