Teach the waggy thing
The other day Patti Jo tookBooker, our Welshie, and his adopted
cousin Danny to the dog park, and as occasionally happens, there was
one dog that attacked another dog while its owner stood by.
Most pups play-fight, of course, but there’s a sound a dog makes
when it’s out to make a puncture which goes beyond sport, and this
one was making that sound, so in a friendly way, Patti Jo suggested
to its owner that maybe he should do something about his pet’s
aggressiveness.
He shrugged and said, “Ahh, it’s just a dominance thing.”
Well, he had her there. It o7isf7 a dominance thing. So is 75%
of the stuff that makes the papers. The question is whether you want
that attitude prevailing.
This has always been the one small cloud over the dog park. It’s
an ideal playground, but now and then it comes with a bully.
It’s actually easier to protect your pup from bullies on the
street. When we meet a new dog on evening walks with Booker we call
out, “Is your dog friendly?” and if the answer is a growl from either
dog or owner we pass them by.
But at the dog park everyone’s in the soup, and if an unleashed
stranger wants to assert his dominance, he just goes ahead and does
it. And if he asserts it on your dog, then you’ve got to go up
against the strange dog and his owner, and the next thing you know
there’s shock and awe all over the place.
It’s particularly irritating for those who’ve gone to the trouble
of training their dogs to be civilized.
My mother-in-law, Carol Reynolds, adopted Danny, and we aren’t
positive about his breeding, but recently received opinion holds that
he’s a Catahoula leopard dog, a breed from Louisiana which has not
yet made the American Kennel Club registry.
We’re told that Catahoula leopard dogs were brought here by
colonial Spaniards to hunt wild boar, and were apparently feral for
awhile. The people who identified him for us seemed to feel that
Danny was an especially handsome example, a kind of Catahoula Brad
Pitt.
Given his heredity, Danny would appear to have all kinds of bully
potential. Yet Carol’s raising a sweetie who threatens no one. And
that’s as it should be, because life in Laguna Beach doesn’t require
ferocity unless you’re in real estate.
I’ll conclude today’s sermon by referring you to the fourth, ninth
and 10th Dog Park Commandments, which you’ll find posted at the
entrance.
They apply to dog but they’re addressed to man, and boiled down
they say lose the dominance thing or get lost yourself. Virtually all
dogs are trainable. The city offers canine kindergarten classes.
Teach them the waggy thing instead.
* SHERWOOD KIRALY is a Laguna Beach resident. He has written four
novels.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.