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Re: [pyrnet] Joe



Sariena, You have done a great job of investigating the situation and
trying to learn about the breed.  And I absolutely give you credit for
attempting to identify a problem and work with it, rather than just
eliminate the dog.  Remember these are opinions expressed, not absolute
fact.  Trust your judgement, you seem to have your priorities straight (
I think ), and the person who is working with the dog ( I am sure he
doesn't want to see a child injured either ), and go from there.  Your
doing fine on your own! :-)  Cindy

P.S. I don't know if you ever read the story about the dog
( I think it was a Saint ) who bit the child.  He was checked over and
then put down.  Autopsy ( Necropsy ) later found that the "little
darling" had driven a pencil into the dogs head, thus provoking the bite.
 Some would have you believe that even under those circumstances the dog
should never bite a human child?  I'm amazed with this train of thought. 
Sure, it doesn't happen all the time, but it  points out that these
things need to be checked out before final judgements are passed on an
animal, there usually are reasons why things happen.  That's why I
appreciated your comments when you first wrote!

Cindy Henke
clhenke@juno.com
Ennis, Texas

"All knowledge, the totality of all questions and answers, is contained
in the dog."  ~ Franz Kafka

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