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Posted
1 hour ago, Scouse123 said:

 

Inappropriate use of the word.

 

The chap was acting out of kindness, so he didn't deserve it, as you state.

 

 

 

 

 

I disagree. 

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Posted
On 12/2/2024 at 7:12 AM, blaze master said:

 

I think it was an extremely foolish idea in the first place. So that's the reason.

 

You made a decision you were woefully unprepared for. Also I hate thai soi dogs yes. They are dirty disgusting disease spreading problems. 

Tong Dang too?

Posted

Took your tea cup!  Maybe you should be a bit proactive and keep such items out of reach as well as availability?

 

Vaccinations for both dogs as well as neutering is the best route to take to care for these who have adopted you.  Best dogs I have ever had came along and adopted me.  I'm always amazed how many fools post with hate statements,  It's you folk... not the dogs.

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Posted
8 minutes ago, WDSmart said:

I've adopted well over 20 dogs over the past 20 years. I have 12 right now. I don't regret adopting any of them. 

 

what about your neighbors? japping all day and night

Posted
On 12/2/2024 at 7:34 PM, advancebooking said:

Your comment indicates to me about your personality traits. No need for me to mention this apart from the fact I can only assume you are an old grumpy man with no friends and no love in your life. How accurate does that sound?

 

 

It's always amazing here on AN. People try to top the others with insults and offends. It's apparently a competition who's best. Congrats. Go on. It will make my day. 😂😂😂

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Posted
On 12/2/2024 at 7:12 PM, blaze master said:

 

I think it was an extremely foolish idea in the first place. So that's the reason.

 

You made a decision you were woefully unprepared for. Also I hate thai soi dogs yes. They are dirty disgusting disease spreading problems. 

No doubt soi dogs and many humans hate you also

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Posted

I sometimes get "locals" leave a  dog outside my gate, I ignore it if that fails I dump it at the temple. Pity they cant keep their rubbish for a bin instead of dumping it like their local dogs, stuff strewn everywhere.

Posted
10 minutes ago, WDSmart said:

That's part of why I adopted all of the dogs. My neighbors are now so intimidated that they have ceased yapping all night. :cheesy:

Actually, I live up in the mountains in northeastern Thailand on about ten rai of land and don't have any neighbors who live close enough to me to be bothered by my dogs. Also, all the people up here have dogs, and many of them have several dogs, so my having so many is not a problem for any of them.

huh 10 rai I can hear those dogs barking for miles by me 10 miles would be better and when one starts they all go off  howling

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Posted
4 minutes ago, Rampant Rabbit said:

I sometimes get "locals" leave a  dog outside my gate, I ignore it if that fails I dump it at the temple. Pity they cant keep their rubbish for a bin instead of dumping it like their local dogs, stuff strewn everywhere.

So you're declaring that you are definitely not part of the solution but rather part of the problem?

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Posted
On 12/2/2024 at 6:51 PM, advancebooking said:

Over a month ago 2 dogs arrived at our land. They seemed friendly and I fed them once and then started everyday. My child liked them a lot. After a week or so we asked the village head to try to find the original owners- to no avail. We started to let them sleep inside our yard and one of them turned out to be a good guard dog. Also they caught and killed a snake last week. 

 

The negative thing is that one of them is younger and a little bugger bc he chews everything in site. So many ripped up things eg: Shoes, tools, 2 chairs, my work shirt. The young one even started drinking out of my tea cup and the next day jumped up on my stone table and took the cup to the yard and broke it. Anything he can find eg pipes all ends up in the back yard. 

 

I started putting everything in plastic boxes but it was always something. Im not there all the time and come back and find something ripped up in the yard. 

 

Yesterday I was really pissed as they chewed up and pulled out 5 trees that I had planted. I hit the roof and put them outside the gate. They sleep in another area of the land where I had new bags of soil. This morning I saw they had ripped open the plastic bags and soil everywhere.

 

Now I dont know what to do. I think if I was to sterilize the older one he would be ok. He is the guard dog as well. The younger one is useless and immature. I dont know if I can ever trust him inside our yard again

 

2 weeks ago when walking them a guy stops on his motorcycle and the dogs were so happy to see him. He was the previous owner I think. My thai skills are a bit average but I think I kind of know the direction where he lives in our semi rural area. He didnt want to take the dogs back. I suspect he'd had enough of them as well for reasons stated above. 

 

Its a bit heartless to take one of them back up to the area where the original owner is and keep the older one. They should not be separated. They chase each other around and enjoy each others company so much. 

 

I dont know what to do about the actually. The younger one is a real little <deleted>. My child is attached to the older one now. I will be the bad dad if I get rid of them. 

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A young dog, just like a young child need to be taught what is right and wrong.

As you adopted them, that is your task. Read some information on the internet if you don't know how to do it.

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Posted
38 minutes ago, Rampant Rabbit said:

huh 10 rai I can hear those dogs barking for miles by me 10 miles would be better and when one starts they all go off  howling

Yes! And that's part of the wonderful aspects of living in the jungle-covered mountains! 

Posted

Always had dogs at home. Adopted soi dogs will show devotion and gratitude until death. Never been disappointed by one of them. You just need to take care of them as any other family’s member.

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Posted

I've also gotten two street dogs, got them babies, 90% of the time on the cage. Release twice a day for an hour or two. They're happy dogs. No problems.

 

Posted

Boarding kennels owners in the UK receive a lot of business from working people whose dogs have eaten their expensive kitchen cupboards. They lock them in the kitchen when they go to work and return to find all their fittings demolished by the bored dogs. The owners who have to continue working, put them into kennels while they decide what to do with the animals. Owning a dog can be an expensive and time-consuming business, especially if you have more than one. The best decision I ever made was when I split with my dog loving wife and became an ex-dog owner.

Posted
22 hours ago, msbkk said:

Dogs like to chew and you must give them something to chew on. In our case the wooden bone (ordered from Lazada) did the trick. At the same time you have to try to teach the dog not to chew other items. There are lots of videos on Youtube how to teach the behavior of dogs. It takes some time and patience however. Or dog is sterilized.

 

Limit the dog's space while training.

 

Get a bar of plain soap. Something like Ivory.

 

Rub the soap on things you don't want chewed. The dog will avoid them.

 

Provide other soap-free things for the dog to chew on.

 

- Thomas

Posted

Spell-dog backwards build this volcano when you’re not around keep the little guy out of trouble train them you started feeding him deal with it TIT.  you can always replant the plants

Posted
On 12/3/2024 at 8:02 AM, advancebooking said:

Thanks for your comment. So they will grow out of it if I do this? Did you get them sterilized/ de-sexed? I think this might help as well?

A puppy crawled under my front gate and entered my property June 5th 3 years ago. She was covered with fleas and dirty and nearly starving to death. The vet said she was 2 to 3 weeks old at the time.

 

I washed her and took her to the vet and had her spayed a fewmonths later and she's been with us ever since.  It's a real joy and a great addition to our lives.

 

Yes? She will grow out of it. Puppies don't really grow a brain until they're about 2 years old. Until then it's a problem to keep up with them. It's all part of the joy of owning a dog.

 

I guess if you can't take the heat then get out of the kitchen.

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Posted
3 hours ago, WDSmart said:

I've adopted well over 20 dogs over the past 20 years. I have 12 right now. I don't regret adopting any of them. 

Forgive me, but I have to ask.

 

Are you saying you've taken in 20 stray dogs in the past 20 years?  That's a remarkable number of stray dogs. I live out in the countryside too, and even if I took in every single stray or even possibly stray dog I came across, I don't think I've encountered 20 in the past 20 years. Do you slam on the brakes when you pass stray dogs padding alongside the road?

 

Stray dogs are usually extremely leery of strangers, and it usually takes an extended period of time to get them to accept food much less allow themselves to be touched. What is the acculturation process like?

 

You said you had 12 dogs right now. Most of the time when a stray dog wanders into a moo ban the resident dogs don't exactly roll out the welcome mat, do they? More like, try to rip them a new you-know-what and chase it out of town, wouldn't you say?

 

I'm wondering if you haven't developed a reputation as the local patron saint of stray dogs and people aren't dumping all their unwanted dogs on your doorstep.

 

The problem I have in my area is stray cats which quickly accept food and are happy to start hanging around. On nocturnal bike rides out in the countryside I see them all over the place, and they can live without much human contact pretty easily. But they're feral to the bone, and almost always refuse to be kept indoors, and will tear your window screens to shreds if you try to domesticate them, and left outside all the time, they usually end up disappearing as mysteriously as they first appeared. Blood tests usually come back positive for either kitty leukemia, kitty aids, distemper, rabies or some other disease you never knew existed.

 

I applaud your canine outreach but the level of vet service in my area isn't that good, and I've been happy with my decision to not go down the animal welfare rabbit hole in Thailand.

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