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Ultimate Dog Repellent

I despair.

There’s nothing wrong with a bit of research (albeit numerous recent posters seem to be avoiding that) but going to the ‘I have to be certain’ level and asking ‘how do avoid the possibility of this non-life-threatening inconvenience’ is really rubbish (I assumed I couldn’t say ‘crap’; we’ll see).

There is always the option of booking a cruise. You’ll travel further, see more countries and have someone to complain to when your dinner’s a few minutes late. And if there are dogs, they’ll be in the kennels.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
The difference between a terrier and a terrorist?

You can negotiate with a terrorist.
I can vouch for that henrythedog! Our Jack Russell cross, Dig - who passed away in 2012 - had the nickname Diggy Bin Laden! Oh, we’ll never stop missing him though - he was Personality Plus.
Cheers to all from Oz -
Jenny
 
I just untip my poles and move from holding them by the handles to holding them like two spears. My friend who served in the Marines told me exactly where to stick the poles if the worst ever happens. It hasn't, but their were some scary moments on the Ourense to Santiago leg of the VdlP I did in 2017, when i was literally the only person walking down a road in the middle of nowhere and I can hear a dog trying to jump over a wall from a compound to get at me. Would have much preferred something more suitable for dealing with aggressive dogs. You just have to accept that if it happens, it happens. You just have to deal with it and you are probably going to get injured, but ultimately your goal should be to slay that dog before it kills you. More than one dog, game over, unless you are carrying something better than poles or somehow manage to take one of them out really quickly. I plan for dealing with dogs, but I don't dwell on it, just like I plan for getting attacked by humans, but don't particularly dwell on it. If it happens, it happens and I will deal with it accordingly.

Didn't really have any issues on the CF with dogs when i walked. Their were a few on the Sarria last 100km leg when I walked in 2016, but before that I don't think I saw that many and the ones I did see were more the annoyance types than truly dangerous. The mastiff, rottweiler, doberman, german shepherd types were few and far between and never running around loose.
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
In the UK this year - and it is only June 5th, five people have already been killed by dogs, two of them children.

Last year ten were killed by dogs and there were 22,000 attacks with many people seriously injured.

All of the dogs were household pets.

Dogs bite - unexpectedly, and they kill too.
 
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Its a bit like cars - most are driven properly and are not a problem, but some are erratic/over fast and need to be evaded.... My husband loves cars and will look at them, name them, appreciate them, I don't - those of us that have had car accidents will likely be more anxious and concerned about cars - especially those driving erratically.... How we feel about them does not cause the accident - it is beyond our control.... but how we behave can lessen the likelihood or severity...
That is how I think about all common dangers as I walk/pedal around this wondrous planet.... a healthy dollop of common sense, alertness and some kind of plan for 'events'..... but sometimes sh1t just happens.....!
Stil vastly prefer dogs to cars,...
 
Fail to prepare? reduce your risk by buying this book full of practical info.
2nd ed.
In my homevillage in Galicia the neighbour had a crazy fierce dog called "lobito" always loose. When I passed near he showed me his teeth but never bit me. I knew that there was an imaginary line that I couldn't trespass. The owner was an old man who lived alone. So I am "used to" fierce dogs. Once in Asturias, out of any Camino, I was surrounded by two " lobitos" like, one in front of me and the other back. I wasn' t bitten maybe because I am accustomed to the situation. Who knows.
 
"when she’s just trying to say hello"

The next dog-owner who says that to me may receive quite a surprise...

We do not wish your canine to "say hello" to us - keep the animal on a lead - and use the lead properly i.e. it should be short enough to prevent any question of contact with the passing pedestrian/cyclist.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
@DoughnutANZ has prompted my own story.
I have become fearful of large, unleashed dogs. A number of years ago a family moved into our neighborhood and I met their two twin twelve year old daughters out walking the family's two large Rottweilers on leashes, and we had a nice introduction and chat. The girls told me the dogs were very friendly even though I was a bit skeptical.

A few days later after trimming my hair, I'd taken the towel I'd used out front to shake it off. It was dark out and I noticed the sisters walking the dogs on the sidewalk the next house over. As I shook my towel, the dogs got loose and ran and charged, jumping on me. Thankfully I threw the towel over my head, but one of them bit me through my sweater under my arm. No stitches, but I had to have a tetnus shot and my arm became severely brised. The owners were not happy, but the dogs were impounded overnight to check for rabies. Later that week a fence was put around their back yard and I never saw the dogs again; they have since moved away.

I live near a walking/biking trail and walk a portion of it most days. To this day I do not look at big dogs in their eyes even if they are leashed and with their owners. I look away and pretend they are not there.

On the Caminos I have yet to encounter an unleashed guard dog, thankfully, but I sure see plenty of them behind fences and gates where they belong.
 
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So far I only met scary loose dogs in France, not in Spain. Usually farm dogs or dogs guarding their property.

If a dog tells me very clearly not to pass, I don't, and find a way around. Often walking by with more distance and looking away from whatever they try to guard helps.

Most of the time they only growl and bark and it's only warning and a big show. But I won't rely on that, my experience with dogs is very limited and my knowledge of their body language not as good as I would like to. So I prefer to be cautious, just in case they do mean it serious!

Once a pack of three attacked me from all sides, two border collies and a jack russel type dog. The small one tried to bite my ankles. I used my hiking stick to keep them at distance, constantly spinning around since they had me surrounded, and running away like that. Must have looked like a very silly dance but it worked!

What also often helped was to throw a treat. In Germany once I could only pass a farm after I had given my lunch to the farm dog. At first he wanted to eat me, but then he was happy to let me pass while eating my cheese sandwich. There were no shops that day so it wasn't a perfect solution, but better be hungry than bitten.

Some dogs are afraid of the big backpack, poncho, hat or hiking staff. It can help to take those off for a moment to show them you're just an ordinary person and no threat.

Most of the dogs I met were friendly, like this very good boy in France that had managed to run away from his owner. I picked him from the street where He was almost run over. He walked around the town with me for over an hour, with only my tent's guy line as a leash, until we had found the girl who had lost him:
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Because there are literally hundreds of posts on here about nuisance dogs and dog attacks on the Camino.
And to someone who disagreed, …
That is not consistent with what I am hearing over and over on Camino forums.
You're not reading the same forum I'm reading! But I agree with those advising us to not diminish the fears of others. I have been bitten by dogs three times, and had one narrow escape. However, I have walked or biked from Pamplona to Hontanas, from Santiago to Cee, Muxia, and Fisterra, from Zamora to La Bañeza, and a section not properly documented that included León. Parts between Estella and Logroño many times. In all of that, I encountered only two dogs, both very friendly. One tried to make me its new owner and the other was accompanying a pilgrim. This is the first thread I can recall mentioning dogs.

But as everyone knows and my experience shows, dogs can bite. In hundreds of encounters with dogs elsewhere, the reason I have only had three bites is because in every other case (except one), if I face the dog, it backs off, and if I pretend to pick up a rock, it flees. For the one exception, there happened to be a large stick handy and that critter undoubtedly regretted not fleeing. Frankly, pepper spray would be a more desirable deterrent for both of us. (I have been taught a technique which I've never tested that—if not a hoax—would have killed the dog and severely injured my right arm.)
 
Don't you want to share those tips?
 
Fail to prepare? reduce your risk by buying this book full of practical info.
2nd ed.
View attachment 148514
The only dog attack on my Camino Frances. Not aimed at me but at my Coffee cake. He was trying to hypnotise the cake to come towards him
Love it.

This lovely old guy was very pissed off that I did not give him my lunch right away.
He looked at me like that all through my meal!
But he got all the customers bones, once they finished lunch (the owner gave them to him as he cleared the tables)

 
Barking dogs are common ........
About a month ago on the VdlP I was videoing when a couple of dogs started barking at me.
 
But he got all the customers bones, once they finished lunch (the owner gave them to him as he cleared the tables)
My family's Beagle growing up almost choked to death on chicken bones. It took a gloved hand shoved in his mouth to pull the bone out. I hope the cute dog in the photo doesn't eventually choke, although I'm sure the owner knows the dog's capabilities.
 
Fail to prepare? reduce your risk by buying this book full of practical info.
2nd ed.

It did worry me a bit. I've had dogs, and would never give them cooked bones.
But the owner did it, and it was an old dog........
He just crunched the bones!
 
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Last spring, I walked the Camino Del Norte between Bilboa and Santiago. I had three dog related incidents over the 5 weeks that it took me. Two 2 involving dogs acting aggressively, albeit without biting. The other involved me having to pass a large unattended dog, which was not in an enclosure or on a chain, etc. I both love dogs and am scared of ones that I do not know, especially large ones which are strong enough to cause serious injury or worse.

I recently was walking my dog at home in the UK when my dog was attacked by a massive muscular dog (a Cane Corso). I managed to pull the dog off without serious injury to my dog. The experience has left me fearful whenever I take my dog out. What used to be a relaxing hour with my dog has turned into something which I spend the rest of the day dreading.

This year, I plan to walk the whole of the Portuguese Camino. I have found an ultrasonic dog deterrent, I have successfully used one before when out mountain biking. I have also found an aerosol spray (K9 17, but there are others), these are not pepper sprays and cause no lasting harm to to the dogs. They are a source of great comfort, and frankly, why not carry them when they can safely save the situation for yourself or others?
 
I know this is little comfort after the event, but Spain has recently passed legislation making it illegal to allow a dog to roam so if you have a bad encounter you could report it to the local police.
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
I know this is little comfort after the event, but Spain has recently passed legislation making it illegal to allow a dog to roam so if you have a bad encounter you could report it to the local police.
So dogs HAVE to be on a lead no matter what?
 
I'll be in Spain later this year with my dog, I've just told him; he aint happy.

I did do a few searches online but didn't find anything concrete, most of what I read was to do with animal welfare (not leaving dogs unattended, neglected, etc) although I did see large fines could be issued under certain situations.
 

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I walked the Portuguese Camino last autumn and I was pleasantly surprised to find at the end that I didn't have one incident with a potentially vicious dog
One or two of them barked at me from a distance from their garden but none of them charged towards me or caused me a moments concern. I was even adopted by one cute, large but friendly dog who walked with me for about 3kms.
At first I thought that it must be a cultural thing with the Portuguese people but once I was in Spain, the dogs I saw there were as well behaved as the Portuguese ones. I don't know if I was just lucky but it was a pleasant surprise.
 

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