Lampuri ampui laitumelle tulloeet koirat. Kumpi syyllisempi: lampuri vai koirien omistaja?
Mitä sanoo av-raati?
http://www.ts.fi/uutiset/kotimaa/377452/Kaksi+koiraa+ammuttiin+susina+T…
Kommentit (183)
että eipä ole sulla enää koiria, lällällää!
Aivan varmasti tunnisti koiriksi, halusi vain ampua kun siihen oli tilaisuus.
.... yksi koira. Omistajan valvonnassa.
Kolme koiraa... ei omistajaa, mitään eroa? Tuossakin kerran meinasi lähteä yhtä lammasta ajamaan hieman enempi, mutta OMISTAJAN käsky pysäytti tilanteen etenemisen.
Oletko lainkaan miettinyt mistä on kyse, kun koira on oikeasti jahtaamassa lampaita ja laumassa metsästysvietti voimistuneena äärimmilleen???
http://www.malamute.org.nz/Page.php?page=2
OFF-LEASH EXERCISE They can virtually never be let off the leash. If you have a completely enclosed area with good high fences, then they can stretch their legs. But if they are let off the lead just anywhere, 90% of Malamutes will run. That is what they have been bred for, and generally they do not come back when called. Sleddogs in the Arctic don't require a trained recall, so this is not something which can easily be trained into them. You may see people running their Malamutes off lead, but usually that is not because the dog is trained to come back, it is because those people are willing to gamble their dogs life when it runs onto the road.
They were bred to be stubborn. They were bred to go in one direction for hundreds of miles. Their job was to lean into the harness and pull and run and pull and run. They have zero road sense. They have zero car sense. If you leave a Malamute or a Siberian Husky loose in your neighborhood, keep the phone numbers for rescue and Animal Control and the road supervisors very close because your dog will go out in the neighborhood. He will overturn your neighbors' trash.
He will chase down and kill neighborhood cats, chickens, goats and sheep. He WILL get on the roads. He may be fine the first time you allow him off leash in the yard. He may come back to you promptly every single time no matter how interesting the smells. That is, until he hesitates, just once, and the car hits him. These are sled dogs. Not porch dogs.