<br clear="all"><div>Here in Salem we rarely have a problem with dogs attacking us on our walks. Data was the only one who provoked two visiting leashed Dobermans. One of them picked him up by the neck, but then dropped him. The owner berated me loudly for having Data out, but I was quickly stuffing the 3 dogs into the car to escape the approaching Dobermans when Data pulled away. I think that if her dogs could kill, that they shouldn't have been walked by her teenage son, who could not completely control them. The poor kid was crying because he believed that Data had been injured (He was not). That was last year. Data is a smarter now, thank goodness.</div>
<div><br></div><div>At Heidi's Beach House, however, people are more casual about having dogs leashed. Our old shar pei, Deohgee, was bitten in the butt by a huge Husky who was tied in front of a house on a very long rope. I called Dog Control and they showed up and talked to the people.</div>
<div><br></div><div>We have been rushed by other dogs at the coast while the dogs and I are walking. Usually we just stand still and the offending dogs veer off when I shout at them. I would not want to carry a riding crop for fear that I would strike my own dogs. I used to use mace when I worked as a letter carrier (I should say that I only actually sprayed it once). </div>
-- <br><div><font color="#3333ff" size="4">Janice Henry Colvin</font></div>