#30844 - 08/28/04 03:20 AM
Re: Another Good Reason to Have a Dog
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Enthusiast
Registered: 09/19/03
Posts: 256
Loc: brooklyn, ny
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i saw the story on tv as well the guy didnt look too badly hurt.
my cousin used to live in fla and im told its common for little dogs to just get snatched like that.
while i agree it is lack of common sense on the guys part, but everyone should still carry a knife, not carrying one is more foolish.
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been gone so long im glad to be back
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#30845 - 08/28/04 04:04 AM
Re: Another Good Reason to Carry a Knife
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Enthusiast
Registered: 10/09/02
Posts: 245
Loc: Tennessee (middle)
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Thanks!
I don't go anywhere without a knife. When I visit Florida, my Emerson Raven or Microtech SOCOM is in my pocket or clipped to my waistband--everywhere, including the beach & ocean!
David
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#30846 - 08/28/04 08:33 AM
Re: Another Good Reason to Carry a Knife
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Veteran
Registered: 08/16/02
Posts: 1207
Loc: Germany
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The mink glove might have been more humane. In my country itīs just plain rude to invite someone to have a snack and then go after him with a knife if he doesnīt turn down the offer. Allowing the dog to play in the water is like offering a snack to the gator.
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If it isnīt broken, it doesnīt have enough features yet.
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#30847 - 08/28/04 09:08 AM
Re: Another Good Reason to Have a Dog
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Veteran
Registered: 08/16/02
Posts: 1207
Loc: Germany
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I fully agree with your opinion about carrying a knife. The story just reminded me of something Mark McYoung called getting "rattlesnake cornered". He defined it as being too confident and ignoring warning signs combined with a certain eagerness to use skills and equippment. That way one stumbles into trouble that could have been avoided. IMHO itīs not good to use a story like that as an example for reasons to carry a knife.
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If it isnīt broken, it doesnīt have enough features yet.
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#30848 - 08/28/04 06:49 PM
Re: Another Good Reason to Carry a Knife
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Veteran
Registered: 12/18/02
Posts: 1320
Loc: France
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Bounty, sorry, but you will have to explain things to me : - I know what a mink is - and I know its fur is quite expensive
Is there a special meaning to the "mink glove" or are you wondering if I really use an expensive mink glove for my cat ? You know, for a cat used to foie gras, lobsters and caviar ...... and a mink glove is wonderful to remove shedded hairs, so they won't get on its mohair blanket...
<img src="/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
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Alain
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#30849 - 08/29/04 12:07 AM
Re: Another Good Reason to Have a Dog
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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So much for my refuting the likelyhood of "lions and tigers and bears, oh my" attacks and Bountyhunter's latest recommendation for a laser sighted Beretta .25 ACP with folding bayonet. I have a new acquaintance, an ethnic italian American who (GROAN) discovered he, along with 99.98% of americans has CHER-O-KEE ancestry. This guy is 'bonding' with his spiritguide, said mystical entity a rather mangy looking coyote. Now I've had lots of fun encounters with 'yotes and bear none any ill will, except the one who scent marked me in my sleeping bag one night. But my friend is hand feeding and trying to pet MR Canis Latrans . I predict the Castaneda books will be in the trash soon. Wild animals are, well, wild. It was certainly a fun link to remind us all that nature in all her glory, splendor and indifferent readiness to refute humanitie's hubris is just beyond the greenway. A golfer just got bit out here. He went into the rough, or should I say chapparel in search of his ball and got bit by a buzzworm right next to the warning sign that said "DANGER! Rattlesnake Habitat."
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#30850 - 08/29/04 02:58 AM
Re: Another Good Reason to Carry a Knife
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Registered: 11/14/03
Posts: 1224
Loc: Milwaukee, WI USA
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Frenchy:
The mink glove issue came from an old James Bond movie, no hidden meaning intended.
I have heard you cat people really "put on the dog" (An old saying that means doing something on a grand scale.) so I shouldn't be suprised at the expense you are willing to go to in order for your cat to feel pampered.
Last dog I had was a german shepard trained in Serbian who cost me quite a bit of money in paying off people he bit. The period of time that I had him, we had a lot of break-ins of homes in our area. They hit a house across the street with 2 labrador retrievers that would probably have hauled the stuff to the burgalars house if he had loaded them up with saddle bags.
No one came near our house.
The dog slept outside winter and summer in a raised floor insulated house that I built which had an interior wall so that he was not directly in front of the entrance, a swinging plexiglas door for keeping out drafts, and a tilting roof so that he had ventilation with the door removed, and the interior wall removed in the summer. He rarely came into the house unless I was gone for the night, in which case he was in the family room to watch over my parents.
I was raised and I believe that working animals belong outside the house unless they are companions or help mates (Seeing eye dogs, etc.).
I'll probably get a lot of flak over my views of how to keep pets, but I would never own a warm weather pet in Wisconsin even if I were to keep it in a heated environment. It goes against nature and only feeds the human ego (Boy!, am I looking for flak or what?).
Bountyhunter <img src="/images/graemlins/cool.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/images/graemlins/smirk.gif" alt="" />
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