How to deal with dog attacks
Posted: September 6th, 2023, 9:49 am
Yesterday evening, while I was walking down a street, I came to a house with a garden with parts of the fence broken or missing completely. In the garden there was an unsupervised dog which looked like a pit bull or a similar kind of breed. The dog immediately jumped up and edged towards me with a menacing growl. As I retreated to get away from the dog, it started to charge at me and chased me to the other side of the road. I was then backed up against a wall at the opposite pavement and the dog continued to stalk me while growling aggressively.
In that moment, I had neither a weapon nor any object that could be used to throw at the dog as a distraction. For a second, I considered kicking the dog in the nose as hard as I could but feared that if I missed the dog would have an opportunity to latch onto my leg and cause serious damage. I don't understand the anatomy of animals as much as I do that of humans. I don't know where their weak points are or how do inflict maximum damage on them while avoiding being bitten. Martial arts are designed for fighting other humans, not animals.
So I just kept calm and continued to slowly back away along the wall. Eventually the dog calmed down and returned to the garden from where it came.
What kind of retard leaves a dangerous breed of dog unsupervised in a garden with large portions of the fence missing right next to a public pavement? I'm sure that it was exactly the kind of 80 IQ moron that our moderator and resident misanthrope @fschmidt believes should be exterminated. In this particular case, I agree with him.
Although I didn't panic and the event only shook me up slightly, it made me think about the need for suitable strategies of defense against dog attacks.
Ideally, I would like to carry with me some kind of lance-like weapon, maybe a wooden staff with a protractible blade or point that one could use to fend off animal attacks and stick into the aggressive animal's eyes or neck if necessary, although carrying such a weapon would be illegal in most "civilized" societies.
Such is the lamentable condition of modern man - a weak and cowardly subject deprived of all survival instinct and unwilling to even prepare for self-defense. Moreover, those of us who still do have those same primal instincts are forbidden by law to carry any kind of genuine weapon for our own protection (e.g., from wild animals). The result of this is a generation of stunted imbeciles completely lacking the essential knowledge or preparation needed to survive life-or-death scenarios that our prehistoric ancestors would have faced almost on a daily basis.
So staffs and lances are out of the question. Concealed carry of a firearm isn't permitted in most countries either. I suppose that pepper spray might be one of the best options.
What do you guys think are the best options against dog attacks?
@WilliamSmith
@Cornfed
@Pixel--Dude
In that moment, I had neither a weapon nor any object that could be used to throw at the dog as a distraction. For a second, I considered kicking the dog in the nose as hard as I could but feared that if I missed the dog would have an opportunity to latch onto my leg and cause serious damage. I don't understand the anatomy of animals as much as I do that of humans. I don't know where their weak points are or how do inflict maximum damage on them while avoiding being bitten. Martial arts are designed for fighting other humans, not animals.
So I just kept calm and continued to slowly back away along the wall. Eventually the dog calmed down and returned to the garden from where it came.
What kind of retard leaves a dangerous breed of dog unsupervised in a garden with large portions of the fence missing right next to a public pavement? I'm sure that it was exactly the kind of 80 IQ moron that our moderator and resident misanthrope @fschmidt believes should be exterminated. In this particular case, I agree with him.
Although I didn't panic and the event only shook me up slightly, it made me think about the need for suitable strategies of defense against dog attacks.
Ideally, I would like to carry with me some kind of lance-like weapon, maybe a wooden staff with a protractible blade or point that one could use to fend off animal attacks and stick into the aggressive animal's eyes or neck if necessary, although carrying such a weapon would be illegal in most "civilized" societies.
Such is the lamentable condition of modern man - a weak and cowardly subject deprived of all survival instinct and unwilling to even prepare for self-defense. Moreover, those of us who still do have those same primal instincts are forbidden by law to carry any kind of genuine weapon for our own protection (e.g., from wild animals). The result of this is a generation of stunted imbeciles completely lacking the essential knowledge or preparation needed to survive life-or-death scenarios that our prehistoric ancestors would have faced almost on a daily basis.
So staffs and lances are out of the question. Concealed carry of a firearm isn't permitted in most countries either. I suppose that pepper spray might be one of the best options.
What do you guys think are the best options against dog attacks?
@WilliamSmith
@Cornfed
@Pixel--Dude