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Is it not strange that before Hunting was banned these same people were telling us how simple it is to rehome an ex pack Foxhound into a family home and now tell us all Greys should be exteminatet ?
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Well, count me in as another absolutely incensed greyhound owner.Eceni said:fewterer said:
From which this:
I think I’d like to see a time where every rescue centre in the country wasn’t stuffed full of animals discarded by an industry using animals for human entertainment and also I’d like someone to actually read the article in the way it was intended instead of going off the deep end then telling all and sundry that I said something I absolutely did not.
so - will go out and read the article and try to understand what she was saying.
m
We are all entitled to our own opinion and here is mine.Eceni said:You're all going to shoot me for this, and probably ban me from life for K9, but I've just bought and read Dog's Today and can't for the life of me see what the problem is.
as far as I read it, she's saying:
1. racing greyhounds have such a massive prey drive that it over-rides the normal canine responses to calming signals.
2. this makes it very hard for the incredibly honourable people who work in the (utterly overwhelmed) rehoming centres and for those who take on the rehomed greyhounds. the woman in the article was seriously injured trying to protect other dogs from those she had taken on.
3. Given that the greyhounds are doing exactly what they're bred to do, it's hardly their fault. Her point, as far as I could see, was that we don't need to be farming greyhounds for sport, and if we do, why do we then try and treat them as domestic pets.
I thought it was an intelligent, thoughtful, heart-felt, thought-provoking article and she should be commended for it.
It absolutely isn't normal for one dog to kill another - they do it because the prey drive is inherited - and it doesn't have to be. I was at the Whippet Club at the weekend and talked to some show and working whippet people - the two strains can have very different prey drives and it would be entirely possible to breed greyhounds that didn't kill other dogs on sight.
I'm not sure I'd go with Emma on the idea that we shoot them when their life as a racer is done, but let's face it, that's what happens to the overwhelming majority of them ('shoot' here is a euphemism for PTS). I've worked alongside people who were in greyhound rescue and they knew full well that they were barely touching the tip of the iceberg - exactly as the lurcher rescue (and bull rescues) are doing now. There are too many dogs bred in the UK today, period. There are way, way too many racing greyhounds and it isn't necessary.
Greyhounds can make incredibly good pets, but we don't have to select for the ones that live only to run very, very fast at small fluffy moving things and annihilate them.
seems logical to me
manda scott
Neither of us is saying every racing greyhound is the same - clearly they aren't, I was trying to make that point clear and failed as she did. She actually said that most of the ones that come into her surgery are gorgeous, submissive, beautiful dogs.clairej810 said:We are all entitled to our own opinion and here is mine.
You say - "1. racing greyhounds have such a massive prey drive that it over-rides the normal canine responses to calming signals." How then does my reasonably successful ex racer live perfectly calmly with my cat (was two but she died a brain tumour not because she was eaten) and on walks does not react to any cats, dogs, foxes, squirrels, pigeons etc beyond a glance?
Your second point about " this makes it very hard for the incredibly honourable people who work in the (utterly overwhelmed) rehoming centres and for those who take on the rehomed greyhounds" - Yes greyhounds can be hard to rehome but not necessarily because of their prey drive, they can be difficult to rehome because people like Emma Milne make sweeping dismissive statements which people who don't know the breed accept as fact and they become scared to even try a greyhound.
And you say - "I thought it was an intelligent, thoughtful, heart-felt, thought-provoking article" Well I for one thought it was a diatribe written in haste and in anger, it was not thought through or balanced in any way.
You're overlooking the facts that 1) not all racing greyhounds are inclined to kill small animals (out of the three I've personally owned, only ONE would have done that) and 2) many, many other breeds will indeed kill another dog, given half the chance. Go read the post about the chav in the dogpark. I can tell you from my own experience that the worst cat killer I met was a spaniel, the most vicious all-round was a Westie, and the one who inflicted GBH on a smaller dog merely for being too close was a spaniel too. That one bit the snout clean off a JRT pup which then had to be PTS.Eceni said:It absolutely isn't normal for one dog to kill another - they do it because the prey drive is inherited - and it doesn't have to be. I was at the Whippet Club at the weekend and talked to some show and working whippet people - the two strains can have very different prey drives and it would be entirely possible to breed greyhounds that didn't kill other dogs on sight.
Far too many dogs bred, of all breeds, especially the new 'designer breeds'. I agree with that.There are too many dogs bred in the UK today, period. There are way, way too many racing greyhounds and it isn't necessary.
Same could be said for other breeds, using different words. You cannot control what people do when choosing which dogs to breed. They have a huge problem in the US with more than 50% of all ex-racers dying of osteosarcoma. This of course, bothers the racing industry not at all, because they're usually done with racing when the disease strikes, but research is being done at Ohio State University and Dr Cuoto tells me that he believes it will be proved that there is a strong genetic component. Unsurprising, since we don't have nearly the incidence of OS here among our Irish or English bred dogs.Greyhounds can make incredibly good pets, but we don't have to select for the ones that live only to run very, very fast at small fluffy moving things and annihilate them.
I agree with that, and it seems to be what the Dogs Today editor thinks, also.clairej810 said:Well I for one thought it was a diatribe written in haste and in anger, it was not thought through or balanced in any way.
Because unless you ban the industry completely, there is a need to breed replacement dogs, and by it's nature you will always need to breed more than you will use. You will always get a proportion of dogs that don't make it in terms of health or ability. Same with the horse-racing industry, and if I'm not mistaken, they have a similar problem in that ex-racing horses don't always make ideal rehomers.Eceni said:so why, in a world when we have way too many dogs being bred and a serious deficit of good, caring homes for them, do we have to keep breeding racing greyhounds? It's a question not a statement of fact, but it seems perfectly viable to me.
but we have four on our yard, and they're all stupendously amazingly gorgeous, good-natured horses - but yes, I think the wasteage in Tb racing (which was my professional focus for 10 years) is grim and should be stopped.Because unless you ban the industry completely, there is a need to breed replacement dogs, and by it's nature you will always need to breed more than you will use. You will always get a proportion of dogs that don't make it in terms of health or ability. Same with the horse-racing industry, and if I'm not mistaken, they have a similar problem in that ex-racing horses don't always make ideal rehomers.
An unpalatable fact for the anti-racing lobby is that without greyhound racing we would not have the incredible dog that we have today. Show greyhounds look different and have more genetic problems in terms of health - because like greyhound racing or not, they breed for use and performance not looks. My four have all had different builds, shapes, weights and heights, but they could all run very fast and none of them suffered from stuff like congenital hip dysplasia or PRA. Congenital health problems in racing greyhounds on this side of the Pond are actually quite rare. We don't even have the incidence of Pannus that the US greys do.
Just going off topic for a sec - Guillermo Couto is great isn't he Irene? He helped me get Tiny diagnosed properly - he has AID and megaesophagus and I had trouble getting a diagnosis and he sorted it all out for me.IreneJ said:Same could be said for other breeds, using different words. You cannot control what people do when choosing which dogs to breed. They have a huge problem in the US with more than 50% of all ex-racers dying of osteosarcoma. This of course, bothers the racing industry not at all, because they're usually done with racing when the disease strikes, but research is being done at Ohio State University and Dr Cuoto tells me that he believes it will be proved that there is a strong genetic component. Unsurprising, since we don't have nearly the incidence of OS here among our Irish or English bred dogs.Greyhounds can make incredibly good pets, but we don't have to select for the ones that live only to run very, very fast at small fluffy moving things and annihilate them.
This is why my greyhounds if I find a safe area to run them in run in muzzles .unfortrunately most people see them muzzled and think they are vicious. But how many times do we hear of rotties staffies etc that have attacked other dogs whilst out of their lead. Does one dog on dog attack make the whole breed vicious?TTT said:"It absolutely isn't normal for one dog to kill another"
I wouldn't necessarily agree with this statement. I think that it comes very natural for some dogs (from all breeds) to behave like this. My own dog was given a right hiding from a dog who he knew very well and spent a lot of time with, he ws a similar size and weight and was lucky not to bleed to death. And of course we all know of instances where dogs have fought/attacked - in streets, in parks etc. and we are horrified by it. I know my own dogs, particularly when they are both loose can be quite bold, they are not so brave when they are alone. I would own up to having dogs, one in particular, that goes wild at cats - that's just what they are like, they were never encouraged to nail cats it just comes NATURALLY to them, just as it comes natrually for some dogs to kill/chase other dogs.
Of course we all like to think that OUR LOVELY ROVER "wouldn't do that sort of thing" but would we bet our lives on it? All we can do is be RESPONSIBLE FOR OUR OWN DOGS.
I merely meant that many of them are not a novice ride and not for everyone - very similar to greyhounds really. I don't think they're everyone's ideal dog, either.Eceni said:but we have four on our yard, and they're all stupendously amazingly gorgeous, good-natured horses - but yes, I think the wasteage in Tb racing (which was my professional focus for 10 years) is grim and should be stopped.Same with the horse-racing industry, and if I'm not mistaken, they have a similar problem in that ex-racing horses don't always make ideal rehomers.
One can only hope, but the sad fact is that if you look at other breeds which have become an anachronism in terms of use, they've often ended up .. shall we say .. not the dog they were. As you say, some of them are positive parodies of the dog they were.is there no chance of breeding functional greyhounds that aren't the appalling parody of a dog that is the show greyhound? is this not something we should be considering, rather than saying it can't be done?
Yes, he's a sweetheart - always has time to reply to people and help you out.clairej810 said:Just going off topic for a sec - Guillermo Couto is great isn't he Irene? He helped me get Tiny diagnosed properly - he has AID and megaesophagus and I had trouble getting a diagnosis and he sorted it all out for me.
There is a dog with a genetic tendency to osteosarcoma in the UK (which I won't name) but dogs from his line do get bone cancer quite often I am told.
Eceni said:If you go back to feral dogs/wolves/any non-domestic canids, there's a well-defined system of 'calming signals' which prevents inter-pack carnage. It isn't normal for dogs to attack/kill others of their own species because there are some fairly hard wired behavioural responses that prevent this. They don't need to kill, they can establish pack order without.
When we remove them from their pack situation and domesticate them, when we keep them apart from other dogs and fail to socialise them, or when we breed them for specific prey-drive OR dog-dog aggression, we can destroy their normal responses - either the attacker's ability to read the signals and respond adequately, or the victim's ability to give those signals in the first place.
Turid Rugaas, one of the world's foremost dog behaviourists has written an immensely good monograph on calming signals which is well worth reading and takes very little time - it's short, coherent and well argued. (she's written others on barking and lead-pulling as well. If I were still in practise, I'd give them out to every puppy owner who came in for vaccination or socialisation classes). In it, she describes the process by which she encouraged one of her own dogs to re-find her own calming signals and then used her as the 'stooge' with other dog-dog aggressives for many years afterwards.
so I contend that (to paraphrase Sir Ian McKellan in entirely another context), while it may be common for dogs to attack other dogs, but that's because we put them in unnatural social circumstances (for the dogs, not for us). It isn't normal .
and given that we're not going to go back to living in round houses with our tribal dogs in their pack, we need to address the realities of the world we live in. I freely and completely accept that your rescue dogs may be wonderful, but the rehoming services are overloaded, the wastage from the racing world is horrendous and clearly some of these dogs are dangerous on the street.
so back to Emma's point that we're the ones with the big frontal cortexes and the opposing thumbs and, more to the point, we're the ones that made this mess. Is there no way we can get ourselves and the dogs out of it?
ms
Eceni said:If you go back to feral dogs/wolves/any non-domestic canids, there's a well-defined system of 'calming signals' which prevents inter-pack carnage. It isn't normal for dogs to attack/kill others of their own species because there are some fairly hard wired behavioural responses that prevent this. They don't need to kill, they can establish pack order without.
When we remove them from their pack situation and domesticate them, when we keep them apart from other dogs and fail to socialise them, or when we breed them for specific prey-drive OR dog-dog aggression, we can destroy their normal responses - either the attacker's ability to read the signals and respond adequately, or the victim's ability to give those signals in the first place.
posh totty said:would it be possible for you to put Turids findings on here and im sure a mod could put it in the FAQ sect ? i would be very interested reading it :thumbsup:
Quite right Helen, I'm always very careful if there are other dogs about if I have both boys out together - I don't let them off the lead in a public place because I know they'd leg it, but also I don't want them to go belting up to other people's dogs for whatever reason because I know how intimidated I feel if a strange dog or two comes belting up to us.oakmoorehill said:It was me that mentioned that 2 greyhounds together need to be watched and no rescue didn't tell me that simply because if you re read my post you will see that my ex racer came to us straight from her trainer and not from rescue. It is just my opinion and the same applies to my whippets I am very aware of other dogs in the area.
Eceni said:You're all going to shoot me for this, and probably ban me from life for K9, but I've just bought and read Dog's Today and can't for the life of me see what the problem is.
as far as I read it, she's saying:
1. racing greyhounds have such a massive prey drive that it over-rides the normal canine responses to calming signals.
2. this makes it very hard for the incredibly honourable people who work in the (utterly overwhelmed) rehoming centres and for those who take on the rehomed greyhounds. the woman in the article was seriously injured trying to protect other dogs from those she had taken on.
3. Given that the greyhounds are doing exactly what they're bred to do, it's hardly their fault. Her point, as far as I could see, was that we don't need to be farming greyhounds for sport, and if we do, why do we then try and treat them as domestic pets.
I thought it was an intelligent, thoughtful, heart-felt, thought-provoking article and she should be commended for it.
It absolutely isn't normal for one dog to kill another - they do it because the prey drive is inherited - and it doesn't have to be. I was at the Whippet Club at the weekend and talked to some show and working whippet people - the two strains can have very different prey drives and it would be entirely possible to breed greyhounds that didn't kill other dogs on sight.
I'm not sure I'd go with Emma on the idea that we shoot them when their life as a racer is done, but let's face it, that's what happens to the overwhelming majority of them ('shoot' here is a euphemism for PTS). I've worked alongside people who were in greyhound rescue and they knew full well that they were barely touching the tip of the iceberg - exactly as the lurcher rescue (and bull rescues) are doing now. There are too many dogs bred in the UK today, period. There are way, way too many racing greyhounds and it isn't necessary.
Greyhounds can make incredibly good pets, but we don't have to select for the ones that live only to run very, very fast at small fluffy moving things and annihilate them.
seems logical to me
manda scott
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