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Re: Dog-lead vs. free-dog

by <DelusionalDimensionsRecoveryDDR@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 2, 2008 at 01:00 PM

HOWEDY Running Wolf,

"Running Wolf" <pavolc@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message 
news:5764419b-00bc-4fb8-ae5a-126fa299b390@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Jun 1, 8:22 pm, Janet Boss <ja...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> wrote:
>
>> Not IMO. What would you suggest?
>
>> --
>> Janet Bosswww.bestfriendsdogobedience.com
>
> Depends on how the situation arised.

HOWE abHOWET if it was a dog in janet's PROFESSIONAL
OBEDIENCE CLASS who ATTACKED a innocent defenseless
puppy dog on accHOWENTA janet was jerkin an chokin IT on
her custom made pronged spiked pinch choke collar?

                             LIKE THIS:

 Here's janet's CUSTOME MADE pronged spiked pinch choke collar:

                       http://tinyurl.com/5m6ppt

    "Loop the lead (it's basically a GIANT nylon or leather
    choke collar) over his snarly little head, and give him a
    stern correction" --Janet Boss

"J1Boss" <j1b...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:20040324071828.07753.00000001@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 He was next to me and I could see his neck
 muscles pulsing.  He didn't even blink an eye.
 Janet Boss

"sionnach" <rhyfe...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:c3qi15$2biuoh$1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "J1Boss" <j1b...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:20040323173916.10096.00001938@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >  I can't imagine needing anything higher
> >  than a 5 with it, even with an insensitive
> > dog like a Lab.

An INSENSITIVE DOG???

> > I can't remember what model of Innotek I have, but
> > I had a pointer ignore a neck-muscle-pulsing 9.

Do you think the citronella collar is CRUEL
cause the SMELL LINGERS after the dog's
 been sprayed in the face and the dog won't
know HOWE COME IT was MACED?

janet CONtinues:
> > My dogs are not human children wearing fur- they are DOGS.
> > I don't have anything against electronic bark collars, but they
> > should be used in conjunction with actually working at training
> > your dog(s).

They're DUMB ANIMALS these MENTALLY ILL LYING
DOG ABUSERS HURT INTIMIDATE and MURDER.

                           ------------------- 

                             LIKE THIS:

Subject: Muttley: Now a question of Life or Death
"Paul E. Schoen" <pst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote

It is a shame that Muttley will probably be put
down (his appointment is next Wednesday),

Subject: Muttley: Now a question of Life or Death

"Paul E. Schoen" <pst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote

Hello everyone:

If you have followed some of my posts, you know
something about the ongoing story of Muttley, the
large GSD/Chow dog I have been trying to adopt
or place in a better home.

I will add a bit more history later in this post.

Last Tuesday, toward the end of Janet's obedience
class, Muttley and I had just finished fairly successfully
performing a sit/stay/come routine, and then he was
sitting by my side.

The final routine was to be a "down", which Muttley
 has had some difficulty with, and frankly I have not
 had the time to work with him much on that.

I was kneeling at his side, trying to hold his collar
while pu****ng his front legs down to the position,
while he resisted. Suddenly he lunged, knocking
me over onto the parking lot, and I lost grip of the
leash as I reflexively broke my fall.

Muttley took the op****tunity to attack a young black
 male Lab to my left, and it was a very brutal attack.
Janet and the instructors tried to gain control, and as
soon as I could get to my feet I grabbed the leash and
pulled him off.

That was  the end of the class, and the other dog,
Bernie, was taken to an animal hospital for treatment.

 When everyone had left, Janet counseled me about
 what should be done about Muttley.

She said this was more than ordinary aggression,
and only intensive (and expensive) one on one
training would have any chance at working, and
in any case, he was not suited to group training.

She advised me that Muttley could be dangerous,
and she recommended that he be euthanized.

"They can't all be saved".

<snip>

                               -------------- 

                 BWEEEAAAHAAAHAAA~!~!~!

Subject:       Muttley: Now a question of Life or Death
"Paul E. Schoen" <pst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote

<snip>

If I did not have to worry about my cat, I would
probably keep him, and I am certain I could avoid
any more dangerous episodes. I probably would
not have taken him to obedience cl***** at this time
if that was not such a difficult issue, and if people
here had not essentially shamed me into doing so.

Then he would only be a bratty dog with a mind of
his own, but he would not have been identified as
dangerous.

                           -------------------------- 

                 BWEEEAAAHAHAHAHAAAA~!~!~!

Here's janet's REAL LIFE IN PERSON "student" paul:

#2 - 6/05/07

>> When I was training him under Janet's supervision
>> I was instructed to give it a ? firm yank as a correction.
>
> I advised you to use a prong collar, not give firm
> yanks on a chain choke collar. I hate the things.
>
>> She was able to get his attention with
>> just a quick tug, but I had to yank on it
>> hard enough to lift him off his feet to get
>> him to respond. Looking back now, I think
>> it was based on his fear, which he had for
>>  her (as an unknown), but not for me
>> (whom he had learned to trust).
>
> He wasn't afraid of me. He knew I was a
> confident trainer. Fear has no place in dog
> training, as I told you THEN.
> Janet

It seems to me that applying stern corrections, by
popping a choker chain, prong collar, or whatever,
is a way to ensure compliance by instilling a fear
of further punishment.

Sure, if it is administered very consistently
 by a confident trainer, the dog soon learns
 to obey. There was no positive reinforcement,
 so what remains is negative.

Also, I recall the time you were going to show me
 how I could get Muttley to take his rawhide treat
from me without lunging for it. When you offered
 it to him, he refused to take it. This IMHO is likely
 a fear behavior.

Things have changed a lot since then, and I have
learned a lot, and Muttley has settled down quite
 a bit. I probably still give him too much freedom
to think on his own, but that's just my way of
doing things, and that's probably not going to
change much. He may never win an obedience
medal, but I don't think he is dangerously out
of control, either.

Paul and Muttley

"I thought I was told that the way to get the dog to go
down was to make him sit and then step onthe leash.
That was awkward and didn't seem to work.

I will confess that I only tried the "down" position
 once or twice at home, and I also often used it
 instead of "Off" when I wanted him to stop
jumping on me or elsewhere I didn't want him to be.

I had to give him corrections every few seconds,
and also just about kick him, to keep him at my
left side.

Muttley is really a very sweet and loving dog, but
 he needs more socialization with other dogs. However,
it is very likely that I will have him put down in a week."

Subject: Muttley: Now a question of Life or Death
"Paul E. Schoen" <pst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote

It is a shame that Muttley will probably be put
down (his appointment is next Wednesday),

                 ----------------------- 

             HERE'S HOWE COME:

Subject: Re: redirected aggression
Date: 4/11/07

"Janet Boss" <ja...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:janet-730AB8.17321511042007@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 seems I have been dealing with this a bit lately.
Dog to dog and dog to person,, with dogs who are
obviously overstimulated by what's in front of them.

What's in front of them varies from people at the door
to dogs in their path or directly in their face.  The dogs
in question all have very poor self control.

 I have dog(s) with not-so-great-natural self control,
 so it's something we constantly work on.  We don't
 have redirected stuff going on, because we have enough
obedience to avoid it.

While I know that's the big answer for the dogs in
 question as well, I'm curious what things people have
 found useful to redirect/focus/gain attention from
drivey dogs or just very distracted of over-the-top dogs.

We're having success with my recommendations, but I'm
always open to something novel that may be the hot ticket.
-- 
Janet Boss
www.bestfriendsdogobedience.com

             BWEEEAAAHAHAHAHAAAA~!~!~!

> I always suffer when animals suffer (cosmetic,
> biological, military tests, etc.).

Yeah? Does NORMAL dog trainin cause you to SUFFER, RW?

                            LIKE THIS?:


       "Don't Let Your Dog Scream. Use Your Hand To Hold
       His Muzzle Closed And Tell Him To Quit Moaning,"
       Sindymooreon.

    "Many People Have Problems Getting The Pinch
    Right, Either They Do Not Pinch Enough, Or They
    Have A Very Stoic Dog. Some Dogs Will Collapse
    Into A Heap. About The Ear Pinch: You Must Keep
    The Pressure Up," sindy "don't let the dog SCREAM"
    mooreon, author of HOWER FAQ's pages on k9 web.

   "J1Boss" <j1b...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
    On 6 Feb 2006 17:41:08 GMT, Mary Healey
    <mhhea...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
    clicked their heels and said:

    > Does that include tone of voice?  Some tools are easier
    > to ban than others.

    yes - screaming banshees are told to shut up!  And I
    always have to remind spouses that they may NOT do the
    "honey - you're supposed to be doing it like THIS"......
    --
    Janet B
    www.bestfriendsdogobedience.com

             ========

Janet B wrote:
> On Fri, 02 Dec 2005 14:44:14 -0500, Janet B
> <j...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, clicked their
> heels and said:
>
> Since you quoted me repeatedly, where does it say
> I beat dogs, choke dogs, scream at dogs, etc?  Thanks
> for your clarification.

 responding to my own post, I had to go back and look
 at the original post, to remind myself what "we" are all
accused of doing:

 "screaming, choking,
 shocking, pinching, beating
  the living crap out of your dogs"

  Scream?  no
  Choke? no
  Shock?  e-collars are a lot more sophisticated than that
  Pinch? if you want to classify a momentary discomfort
  by a prong collar, go ahead, but unless you have first
  hand experience with one, your opinion means nothing

 Beat the living crap out of?  hardly - no hitting exists

                    -------------------------

    "Well, Jack Did Hit My Dog. Actually I'd Call It A Sharp
    Tap Of The Crook To The Nose. I Know Jack Wouldn't
    Have Done It If He Thought Solo Couldn't Take It.  I Still
    Crate Him Because Otherwise I Fear He Might Eat My
    Cat," Melanie Lee Chang *  mch...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
    Canine Behavioral Genetics Project
    University of California, San Francisco
    http://psych.ucsf.edu/K9BehavioralGenetics/

        "Pudge Was So Soft That She Could And
        Would Avoid A Simple Swat On The Rump
        With A Riding Crop," lying frosty dahl,
        discoverer of CANNIBALISM in Labradors.

                    --------------------

lying frosty dahl writes:

"Get a stick 30- or 40-inches long. You can have a
helper wield the stick, or do it yourself. Tougher, less
tractable dogs may require you to progress to striking
them more sharply.

With your hand on the collar and ear, say, 'fetch.'

Immediately tap the dog on the hindquarters with the
stick. Repeat "fetch" and pinch the ear all the way to
the dummy.

Repeat, varying how hard you hit the dog,

Now you are ready to progress to what most
people think of as force-fetching: the ear pinch.

Make the dog's need to stop the pinching so urgent
that resisting your will fades in im****tance.

but will squeal, thrash around, and direct their
efforts to escaping the ear pinch

You can press the dog's ear with a shotshell
instead of your thumb;

even get a studded collar and pinch the ear against that

Say "fetch" while pressing the dummy
against its lips and pinching its ear.

if the dog still does not open its mouth,
get out the shotshell.

Try pinching the ear between the metal casing
and the collar, even the buckle on the collar.

Persist! Eventually, the dog will give in"

                  --------------------

From: BethF (d...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
)
Subject: Re: to treat or not to treat
Date: 2002-01-14 12:50:27 PST

> "Jerry Howe" <jho...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
<news:8TI%7.10635$du.948527@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>...

> > And you jerk and choke your dogs on pronged spiked pinch
> > choke collars lock them in boxes and call that training
> > and spray Binaca in their eyes to quite their crate anxiety barking...

I dont' jerk or choke my dog (the little one is
too little yet for a pinch collar).  They simply
wear pinch collars.

It prevents any jerking or choking on their part.

I do crate my dogs - the big one only at the dog
club and to travel, and the little one so he can
become accustomed to being in a crate.

He is learning to enjoy it and to use it as a place
to rest from the playing that he and Kavik do
..
I used binaca to quiet Kavik's in class whining
that disturbed the class. It would be quite difficult
to binaca a dog that is in a crate.

I did hit him in the eye accidentally, and stopped
using it at that time.  Jerry, have you NEVER made
an error in training the dogs you have trained?

How many dogs have you trained exactly?
Can you list some references here - I
would like to contact some of your former
clients to get a reference or two?

                          ------------------

                       AND LIKE THIS:

  lyinglynn writes to a new foster care giver:
  For barking in the crate - leave the leash on and
  pass it through the crate door.  Attach a line to
  it. When he barks, use the line for a correction.-
  if necessary, go to a citronella bark collar,"  Lynn K.

Here's HOWER DOG LOVER pal sgt grant teebon, RAAF:

    "Reliable Punishment Cycles, Different Thresholds
    To Pain And Punishment, High Tolerance For
    Correction, Escalation Of Correction To A Level
    Where The Dog Yelps When You Punish Him,
    Thus Making The Experience One Which The Dog
    Will Want To Avoid In The Future," grant teeboon,
    RAAF.

Here's HOWER DOG LOVER pal captain
 arthur haggerty, USArmy K-9 Corps:

    captain arthur haggerty SEZ: "A CHIN CHUCK"
    Makes A ResoundingSound Distraction: "When
    You Chuck The Dog The Sound Will Travel Up
    The Mandible To The Ears And Give A Popping
    Sound To The Dog."

                      =======

>I don't know U.S. law about this, so destroying dogs
> after an unpredictable attack is legalized.


           "Training is not confrontation,"Lynn K.
                   <except when it is>

      "Unfortunately, some confrontation is necessary,
      just to be able to handle the dogs.  For example,
      we need to crate train a dog immediately because
      they are usually in need of medical care and they
      are in foster homes with other dogs. It's a safety
      necessity," lying "I LOVE KOEHLER" lynn.

           "Training is not confrontation,"Lynn K.

                   <except when it is>

     "So what?  Whoever said that it's right to
     always not confront?  We sure can try, but
     a dog who knows a command and growls when
     given it is certainly being confrontational".
     You can't simply walk away and pretend it
     didn't happen or leave it for later work in
     every situation." Lynn K.

              -----------------------------

"You Lying Sack Of Dung.When Have I Ever Said
Anything About Using A Prong Collar, Or Any Collar
Correction At All, To Make Dogs Friendly To House
Cats? Don't bother. The answer is never," lying "I
LOVE KOEHLER" lynn.

lying "I LOVE KOEHLER" lynn writes about kats and dogs:

"This Article Is Something We've Put Together
For SF GSD Rescue

From: Lynn Kosmakos (lkosma...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
)
Subject: Re: I have a dog he has cats
Date: 1999/11/20

ginge...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
>  How can I get him to quit chasing the cats.

Okay - this is going to be a bit loooong  - Lynn K.

"Put a prong collar with a six-foot leash on the dog.  Don't
forget to put the muzzle on the dog.   I think a prong works
better than a choke with less chance of injury to the dog in
this situation.

Electronics can be used to create an aversion to cats, but
should be used under the direction of a trainer who knows how
to instruct the owner in their proper use.   Electronics can
take the form of shock, sonic or citronella collars.  At that
time the owner will train with electronics instead of food or
whatever other reward system was being used."

8)  Put a prong collar with a six-foot leash on the dog.
Don't forget to put the muzzle on the dog.   I think a prong
works better than a choke with less chance of injury to the
dog in this situation.   Have the dog in a sit-stay next to
you with most of the slack out of the leash and let the cat
walk through the room and up to the dog if it wishes (this is
why you have the dog muzzled).

If the dog makes an aggressive move towards the
cat, it must be corrected strongly with both your
voice and the collar.

This is im****tant - the correction must be physically
very strong - not a nag.   (PS: not many dogs need
to be corrected at all)."

lying "I LOVE KOEHLER" lynn CONtinues:

"My last paying "job" was as Exec. Dir.
of the local Humane Society, I used to
work the Kill Room as a volunteer in one
shelter.)  But their ability to set their own
schedules and duties causes a great deal of
scheduling overhead.

And it takes effort and thought to ensure that
volunteers get the meaningful experience that
they work for.

Someone has to be responsible for that
Volunteer Program, and it is best done
by a non-volunteer."

Lynn K.

"I worked with one shelter where I bathed and groomed
every adoptable dog on intake.  I frankly felt that the
effort/benefit equation was not balanced for some of the
older/ill poodle/terrier mixes we got in badly matted condition.

Should I have refused to groom them?

Or even more pertinent - I was one of the people who
had to make the euthanasia decisions at that shelter."

Lynn K.

 Baghdad Bob <Baghdadbob> wrote in message
<news:04591a2c5d469ef78d35c89ed4ed58f7@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>...

 Lynn, looks like he got you there if these
 quotes are true.
 In the posts below you take responsibility for
 making those calls.

 In your post above, you state you do not
 make those calls.

 Which one is it?

                      WORDS OF WISDOM
                 From Our Own Lynn Kosmakos
            1200mg Of Lithium And 50 mg Of Zoloft
                        EVERY DAY
                    For Twenty Years

         I THINK I'M QUALIFIED TO TALK ABOUT LITHIUM

  "I, too, have a bi-polar mood disorder (manic-
  depression) requiring 1200mg of lithium and 50
  mg of Zoloft every day.

  I, also, care about dogs and use this forum to
  learn more, while happily sharing pertinent
  information I have learned.  But if I were ever
  to post such sh*t,  I would hope that every other
  reader of this group would be rightfully outraged."

  "Community is an evolutionary thing that we
  earn the right to participate in by observing
  the easily understood rules and contributing
  to in constructive ways."

  Lynn K.

                  ------------------------
BWEEEAAAHAHAHAHAAAA~!~!~!

Here's janet's PARTNER:

"The actual quote is misleading when taken out of context,"
sinofa***** writes:
> > What I have said- repeatedly - is that he
> > took posts from two different people,

No, there was ONLY WON quote.

> > took pieces of them out of context,

Of curse. QUOTED. You wanna see it in context?

> > cobbled them together,

No. There was WON DIRECT QUOTE.

> > then added his own words:

"Neatly," and "Smartly."

> > and a fake signature.

"sinofa*****" instead of sionnach.

> > Which is exactly what he did.

INDEEDY. That's HOWE COME you deny it.

> > The actual quote is misleading

That so?

> > when taken out of context,

We'd been talkin abHOWET beatin the dog with a shoe...

> > and Jerry's faked "quote"

The WON sinofa***** totally DENIES.

> > is downright meaningless.

Only if you're a MENTAL CASE.

 Here's Jerry's version

 "I Dropped The Leash, Threw My
 Right Arm Over The Lab's Shoulder,
 Grabbed Her Opposite Foot With My
 Left Hand, Rolled Her On Her Side,
 Leaned On Her, Smartly Growled Into
 Her Throat And Said "GRRRR!" And
 Neatly Nipped Her Ear," sinofa*****.

  Here's yours:

 "I dropped the leash, threw my
 right arm over the Lab's shoulder,
 grabbed her opposite foot with my
 left hand, rolled her on her side,
 leaned on her, said "GRRRR!" and
 nipped her ear.
 --Sara Sionnach

"The actual quote is misleading when taken out of context"


                                      See?

EVERY POSTER HERE IS A PATHETIC MISERABLE STINKIN ROTTEN LYIN ANIMAL 
MURDERIN MENTAL CASE.

                                      See?

> In spite of that I think it is hard to get an idea that my
> dog will be killed after few of hours because (s)he slip
> off of my hands...

Dogs that have been TRAINED withHOWET FORCE work
BETTER OFF LEASH on accHOWENTA the weight of the
leash itself, triggers thigmotaxis, and compels the dog to pull.

> and for his genetic code.

THAT'S HOWE COME we got BREED SPECIFIC LEGISLATION
and universities GETTIN PAID to STUDY the genetic links to aggression:

..    "Well, Jack Did Hit My Dog. Actually I'd Call It A Sharp
    Tap Of The Crook To The Nose. I Know Jack Wouldn't
    Have Done It If He Thought Solo Couldn't Take It.  I Still
    Crate Him Because Otherwise I Fear He Might Eat My
    Cat," Melanie Lee Chang *  mch...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
    Canine Behavioral Genetics Project
    University of California, San Francisco
    http://psych.ucsf.edu/K9BehavioralGenetics/

                         SEE?

ALL temperament and behavior problems are CAUSED
 BY MISHANDLING, NOT GENETICS <{}: ~  ( >

>Terriers were breeded to be sturdy, hard and tireless.

Yeah? So was Molossers.

> So can we predict behaviour of such dogs?

Behavior is a SCIENCE, not a conglomeration of OPINIONS,
PREFERENCES, IDIOCY, INSANITY, LIES an LUCK <{}: ~ ) >

> It might be helpful to wear four things in pockets:

malinda likes to pack a strap-on and an extra boot incase she
looses WON kickin an innocent defenseless dumb critter in
the head and an EXXXTRA leash an a sleigh whip.

> 1. a bag with delicacy

THAT'S IDIOCY. Offering dogs bribes CAUSES aggression.

> 2. a plastic bag for excrements

If you train your dog to relieve hisself next to a tree it's FERTILIZER.

> 3. an electric shocker for defence and

SHOCKING aggressive dogs MAKES THEM MORE AGGRESSIVE.

> 4. a handy phone.

Ahhhh, a WIZE IDEA~!

Be SHORE to pack a couple of penny cans or other sound distraction
 device THEN you could phone The Sincerely Incredibly Freakin Insanely
Simply Amazing, Majestic Grand Master Puppy, Child, *****, Birdy,
Goat, Ferret, Monkey, SpHOWES, And Horsey Wizard to get a FREE
LESSON on the spot.

I'm almost ALWAYS available at 407-425-5092 <{}: ~ ) >

> RW.

From:  lucyaa...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Mon, May 23 2005 1:08 am
Email:   lucyaa...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
Anyone else have an opinion?

I'm not a trainer and my experience is limited to my two dogs, so take
it for what it's worth. As someone who had to deal with a puppy who
had his own ideas about what was and what wasn't "proper behavior",
I was very happy to find The Amazing Puppy Wizard's dog training
method.

It is a method that is gentle to the dog, very easy to apply and it has
been working wonderfully with both my dogs, giving practically instant
results. It was as if I had been given the "key" to understanding and
controlling my puppy's behavior: suddenly, he was listening to me,
doing what I was asking him to do, instead of constantly opposing me.
It also worked with some issues my older dog had, too - her fear of
thunder, her barking and her aggression towards another female dog.

Don't let either the first impression about the "weirdness" of The
Amazing Puppy Wizard, or the regulars' negative opinion of him
(there's a long history behind it) deter you from at least reading
the manual and deciding for yourself if you want to try it or not.

I wish all the best to you and your dog.

Lucy

                        --------------------------

           ALL Temperament And Behavior Problems Are
                  CAUSED BY MISHANDLING

     "The day may come when the rest of the animal creation
                  may acquire those rights
         which never could have been withholden from them
                    but by the hand of tyranny.
             The question is not can they REASON,
                       nor can they TALK,
                     but can they SUFFER?"  -
                      - Jeremy Bentham

           "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny exercised
                 for the good of its victims,
                 may be the most oppressive.
           Those who torment us for our own good
                 will torment us without end,
             for they do so with the approval of
                   their own conscience." -
                       - C.S. Lewis.

         "Death is better, a milder fate than tyranny",
                  Aeschylus (525BC-456BC),
                        Agamemnon.

        "If you talk with the animals, they will talk with you
                   and you will know each other.
         If you do not talk to them, you will not know them,
                and what you do not know you will fear.

                   What one fears, one destroys."
                      Chief Dan George

             All truth p***** through three stages.
                     First, it is ridiculed.
               Second, it is violently opposed.
            Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.
                    -Arthur Schopenhauer

             "Thank you for fighting the fine fight-- 
                  even tho it's a hopeless task,
                     in this system of things.
                  As long as man is ruling man,
                 there will be animals (and humans!)
                    abused and neglected. :-(
                    Your student," Juanita.

                "If you've got them by the balls
                    their hearts and minds
                        will follow,"
                         John Wayne.

                    ANY QUESTIONS, People?

                  "Ye shall know the truth,
              and the truth shall make you mad." -
                       ~Aldous Huxley.

      "Mit der Dummheit kaempfen Goetter selbst vergebens!"
      "Against stupidity the Gods themselves  contend in vain!"
                      -Friedrich Schiller.

                          INDEEDY.

       AND THAT'S HOWE COME THEY GOT ME NHOWE!

                        In Love And Light,
             I Remain Respectfully, Humbly Yours,
                The WORLD'S CRUELEST Trainer,
                           Jerry Howe,
         The Sincerely Incredibly Freakin Insanely Simply
                         A-M-A-Z-I-N-G
                      *M-A-J-E-S-T-I-C*
                         *G-R-A-N-D*
                       *M-A-S-T-E-R*
        Puppy, Child, *****, Birdy, Ferret, Goat, Monkey
              SpHOWES And Horsey Wizard <{) ;~ ) >

                HOWE MAY I SERVE YOU <{}; ~ ) >

Sincerely,
Jerry Howe,
Director of Research,
Human And Animal Behavior
Forensic Sciences Research Laboratory,
BIOSOUND Scientific,
Director of Training,
Wits' End Dog Training
1611 24th St
Orlando, FL 32805
Phone: 1-407-425-5092 (Call ANY TIME)
http://www.freewebs.com/thesimplyamazingpuppywizard

E-mail:

Human_And_Animal_Behavior_Forensic_Sciences_Research_Laboratory
@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 @[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 @[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Re: Dog-lead vs. free-dog
<DelusionalDimensionsR  2008-06-02 13:00:46 

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tan12V112 Thu Dec 4 21:32:29 CST 2008.