Defence against dog attacks

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Defence against dog attacks

Postby jpYB3Gq » Aug 11th, '11, 06:29

I have recently been bitten by a dog on the thigh, luckily not the genitals. I bled and have to take injection and eat antibiotics.

Is there anyway I can defend myself against dog attacks?

Thanks.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Lateralman » Aug 11th, '11, 07:34

Carry a bone!
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby The Beige Avenger » Aug 11th, '11, 10:22

jpYB3Gq wrote:....
Is there anyway I can defend myself against dog attacks?
....


Get a dog?

If you don't want a dog, avoid the nuisance dog.... why did it bite you? Cross the road etc.

Carry some treats with you? Dogs tend to become compliant when there's bacon involved.

Carry pepper spray or something offensive to canine senses? You probably won't be allowed to in Singapore though...
Caveats apply as it is entirely possible that the information contained in the above post is either an attempt at a wind-up, an attempt at a joke or just plain wrong.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Lateralman » Aug 11th, '11, 14:08

On the other hand, any one of these should do the trick; Carry a ball! Carry a Postman! Wear a Gillie suit! Adopt a Rottweiler! Buy an armoured truck! Wear chain mail! Move house! Don’t walk! Buy stilts! Become a Doctor Do Little and talk the dog out of biting you!
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Shadowwolf » Aug 11th, '11, 14:25

Well I wouldn't imagine they are all too common so chances are this is your one and only experience.

That said, if a dog is attacking and you have no reasonably safe means of escape or substantial ad-hoc weapon then I - in the comfort of my living room with no prior experience of such - would suggest offence. Do not turn and run unless you are absolutely certain you can get somewhere the dog cannot, do not shield with your arm thereby presenting a bite and hold object, do not recoil keeping your arms raised over your head. Make your self as large and threatening as possible, if you have a coat or jacket remove it and use it as an ad-hoc net, if you have keys you can keep a grip on like car keys use them, if it gets in close I can only imagine that your best objective is to keep the teeth away by going for the head and wrestle it to the ground. Subjugate it until help arrives and / or attempt to inflict as much damage as possible so it is the one trying to flee.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Doonhamer » Aug 11th, '11, 23:42

The manly way is to stand and let it bite your leg. Once it has a good grip, grab it round the neck and squeeze as tight as you can until it's dead...
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby M Paul Lloyd » Aug 12th, '11, 05:47

Sounds like a very Scots sort of solution Doonhamer. :mrgreen:
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Lateralman » Aug 12th, '11, 07:54

If you are in crowded Singapore, you should report the attack to the authorities right away. Children may be hurt.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby jpYB3Gq » Aug 12th, '11, 16:46

thank you all so much for the kind suggestions, i will consider all the options . thanks so much. :)
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby M Paul Lloyd » Aug 12th, '11, 20:08

Just take care of yourself Mr.J. ;)
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby MrIsaksson » Aug 12th, '11, 23:15

Doonhamer wrote:The manly way is to stand and let it bite your leg. Once it has a good grip, grab it round the neck and squeeze as tight as you can until it's dead...


Now that is a very manly way! :D
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Doonhamer » Aug 15th, '11, 13:06

There is a degree of truth in it though. Obviously you want to prevent it biting in the first place, sometimes just standing you ground, trying to look as big as possible helps. That's what some cats do. But if it's going to bite you, you probably don't want it to get your arms, particularly your stronger arm, or your face/neck area. You could quickly wrap a coat/jumper around your weaker arm and let it go for that, might win you some time until help arrives.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Thinker » Aug 15th, '11, 14:02

I don't mean to sound like a ruffian, but surely kicking it really hard in the throat should disarm it for a short while.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Doonhamer » Aug 15th, '11, 15:53

Thinker wrote:I don't mean to sound like a ruffian, but surely kicking it really hard in the throat should disarm it for a short while.


Yes, it's just difficult to do if a crazed dog is biting chunks out of you. That's why, if you can bear it, to let it get a good grip around your shin is a good idea. It gives you a chance to throttle it. The hard bit is you have to keep squeezing until it actually dies, or it'll likely just attack again...
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Thinker » Aug 15th, '11, 16:15

Doonhamer wrote:
Thinker wrote:I don't mean to sound like a ruffian, but surely kicking it really hard in the throat should disarm it for a short while.


Yes, it's just difficult to do if a crazed dog is biting chunks out of you. That's why, if you can bear it, to let it get a good grip around your shin is a good idea. It gives you a chance to throttle it. The hard bit is you have to keep squeezing until it actually dies, or it'll likely just attack again...


I find your response disturbing! :shock:
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Shadowwolf » Aug 15th, '11, 23:51

Tis the likely requirement though.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby MrIsaksson » Aug 15th, '11, 23:53

Doonhamer wrote:There is a degree of truth in it though. Obviously you want to prevent it biting in the first place, sometimes just standing you ground, trying to look as big as possible helps. That's what some cats do. But if it's going to bite you, you probably don't want it to get your arms, particularly your stronger arm, or your face/neck area. You could quickly wrap a coat/jumper around your weaker arm and let it go for that, might win you some time until help arrives.


Having kept dobermans for many years and currently got two male dobermans, I can tell you if a large dog properly goes for you, you are a gonner.
There is just no way you can stand and fight and hope to get away unless you have a weapon of some sort.

I love playing rough with my dogs but one thing I have learnt from having large dogs is that you would never win if it was real.
Dobermans natural attack tactics, as with few breeds of dogs, is not to first bite you. It is to hit you with their chest, which knocks you over. Then they bite.....
Even when I know one of them are coming to try to play knock me over, it is really hard to withstand 45 kg of dog hitting you in full speed.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Shadowwolf » Aug 15th, '11, 23:58

I would imagine that one would not actually stand and receive their charge.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Lateralman » Aug 16th, '11, 20:22

Letting the dog bite you isn’t such a good idea if it is rabid.
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Re: Defence against dog attacks

Postby Shadowwolf » Aug 22nd, '11, 23:38

There are drugs for that but I'd still not be inclined to let it bite down just so I can get an unobstructed hold on its neck.
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