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Yet another reason cats rule and dogs drool

Discussion in 'Anything goes' started by forever_town, Jan 29, 2010.

  1. Ben_Hecht

    Ben_Hecht Active Member

    ::)

    Dogs have multiple admirable attributes. But reluctant to move too
    fast to make intelligence one of them.
     
  2. AD

    AD Active Member

    there's a reason women say men are dogs.

    dogs are men; women are cats. break down the numbers of who likes what, and i'll bet just about anything that more men than not will say they like dogs better, and more women than not will say they like cats better.

    never the twain shall -- fully -- meet.
     
  3. forever_town

    forever_town Well-Known Member

    My grandmother had a tiny little Chihuahua that thought it was a much bigger dog. A large dog of a breed I don't remember was walking near our front yard and the little dog started barking and going after this big dog.

    Luckily for Grandma, I was there. She asked me to get Ci Ci out of there, which I did by towering over her and putting myself between the two dogs. Thankfully, she ran back to the house and was not hurt in any way.

    So much for hasty generalizations...
     
  4. canucklehead

    canucklehead Active Member

    Do you think your cat would do this?

    Family dog saves B.C. boy from cougar attack


    Angel the Golden Retriever saved Austin Forman, his eleven-year-old owner, when he stepped between the boy and an advancing cougar. RCMP Angel the Golden Retriever saved Austin Forman, his eleven-year-old owner, when he stepped between the boy and an advancing cougar.

    BOSTON BAR, B.C. -- Austin Forman figures he owes his life to his aptly-named dog Angel. The Golden Retriever saved his eleven-year-old owner Saturday when he stepped between the boy and an advancing cougar.

    "I'm pretty sure that if my dog wasn't there I wouldn't be here right now," Austin said Sunday. "Thank goodness we are both alive and she protected me."

    The drama began at about 5:30 p.m. Saturday when Austin was hauling firewood using a wheelbarrow between his family's woodpile and their Boston Bar home when the predatory cat approached.

    While trudging through the snow, Austin noticed Angel running around the yard and barking wildly.

    "I was about five feet away from the basement door and she had run toward me and that's when the cougar had attacked her and brought her under the stairs," Austin said. "It was coming after me and Angel intercepted. The cougar grabbed Angel."

    The animals became entangled in a battle just a metre away from the boy. Uncertain if it was a cougar or another dog, Austin said he stayed long enough to determine it was a big cat before running screaming inside the house.

    "That's when I was in shock and I was frantic," he said.

    Boston Bar RCMP Const. Chad Gravelle was finishing paperwork at the station just half a kilometre down the highway when his dispatcher told him about a cougar attack at the Forman home.

    Const. Gravelle thought, "I know that family," jumped in his car and "flew right over," he said Sunday.

    Austin's mom, Sherri Forman, had phoned 911 while Angel was being mauled in the yard. Before she knew it, Const. Gravelle was through the front door and on the back steps peering down at the fight.

    "I could see the cougar had the dog in its mouth, around the dog's neck. It was chewing on its neck," Const. Gravelle said.

    He fired the first shot from his semi-automatic pistol into the cougar's hind end -- then fired another shot into its head.

    "I had my flashlight in one hand and I had my gun in the other hand and I just aimed.

    "It's not too often we get an aimed shot. They were all wrapped up in each other but I could see the cougar's head."

    By then, neighbour Travis Conkin had arrived and pulled the cougar off the dog.

    "The cougar is lifeless, the dog is lifeless. They are in one ball," said Mr. Conkin.

    Then, like a miracle, Angel took a deep and noisy breath.

    "The dog hasn't been moving or making sounds for minutes now and it comes back," said Mr. Conkin.

    Angel spent Sunday nursing her injuries, but was scheduled to see a vet Monday.

    She had numerous puncture wounds, a ripped eyelid and injured sinus cavities, but the family expects her to make a full recovery.

    "It could have turned out a lot different if it wasn't for Angel," said Sherri. "She's our guardian angel."

    Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=2403805#ixzz0e4LUVmjb
    The National Post is now on Facebook. Join our fan community today.
     
  5. Football_Bat

    Football_Bat Well-Known Member

    Fortunately for me, the only cougar attack I expect in suburban DFW involves a yapping Chihuahua as I enter her apartment.
     
  6. JackReacher

    JackReacher Well-Known Member

    See what happens.....?

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35182229/ns/us_news-life/
     
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