
Walking Wyatt this morning, I hear, for what has to be the two-hundredth time, "Don't worry, she's friendly!" being shouted from the other side of the park as a wiggly-butt retriever mix comes tearing over to us. "Don't worry, she's friendly" might just be my least favorite combination of words. I don't think people understand why this isn't a sufficient explanation for why they are allowing their off-leash dog to charge my dog, putting both dogs and myself at risk, making my walk ridiculously stressful, and basically being inexcusably irresponsible as a dog-owner. I have many a time lost my temper while trying to explain why I don't care if a dog is friendly or not, I don't want it running up and accosting my dog! I'd like to try to do it calmly now. Here are the problems with a dog approaching uninvited:
- While your dog may be friendly, mine may not. Not all dogs like all other dogs. As a responsible dog-owner, I can control my dog, keep him safe and keep him out of trouble. However, I can't control your dog and neither can you if it is bolting away from you and heading straight towards a reactive dog. By not leashing your dog and allowing it to run up to strangers even when that stranger is yelling back "Call your dog!! My dog isn't friendly!" you are asking for another dog to bite your dog. It is completely unfair to impose upon the right of another dog owner to walk her dog safely on leash down the sidewalk or through a park without fear of being accosted. My dog doesn't like other dogs rushing up to him and will snap at one if it does. Can you blame him? I don't want some stranger running up to me full speed and throwing his arms around me, kissing me, scaring me. Why would my dog?
- A lot of people are afraid of dogs. Why should they have to be afraid to walk through a park or down a sidewalk just because you don't think you have to abide by the law and leash your dog? There is a sense of entitlement that some people display that drives me nuts. Everyone should be able to enjoy a walk without fear of being rushed by some strange dog. I have seen more than enough children get knocked down by an off-leash "friendly" dog , only to struggle to get up, crying and terrified. I once saw a small, frail old man have his legs swept right out from underneath him. Not okay. Your dog does not have to run loose to enjoy a walk, and if you really think he does, take him to a DOG PARK!! There are "safe" places to run your dog, which leads me to my next point.
- Unless you are 100% positive that your dog will turn around and come running back to you when you call him, he shouldn't be off leash in an unfenced area. If you don't have total control of your dog, he is going to get hurt - either by another dog, by a car, collision with a biker, etc. Do you really know that your dog won't dash across the street - into traffic - to chase that squirrel that just ran right in front of her? Are you willing to bet her life on it??
- In most urban areas, it is against the law to walk your dog off leash.
Dogs get lost, dogs get stolen, dogs get hit by cars, dogs get in fights, dogs get attacked, dogs hurt people... we can prevent a lot of this by just leashing our dogs. It is the responsible thing to do. I'll leash mine, will you leash yours? Please?

