- Time of past OR future Camino
- Annually - often more - from 2014
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I despair.@VNwalking isn’t that the saddest part of what is happening to our beloved Camino. It was always supposed to be a challenge, it was always supposed to be a bit scary. A long walk in a country of which we knew little or perhaps too much if we’d ever paid any attention to European history. A long walk; down to the chemists is a long way as the blessed Douglas Adams had it.
And now we find that Camino has to be “safe”, safe from all challenges: a safe space full of comfy beds, yummy meals, perfect families of random people who all think just like you and your own private flushing toilet.
Last time out I was gonna complain to the cruise director but they wos hiding in their cabin screaming “why, why, why?”
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.The difference between a terrier and a terrorist?
You can negotiate with a terrorist.
Yes. Dogs and much else. Life isn't safe, people.You just have to accept that if it happens, it happens
"when she’s just trying to say hello"Little Dog says she is afraid of humans. Apparently they act irrationally: they do fear or flight stuff when she’s just trying to say hello and they do attack lunges at her when she is just ignoring them. She is puzzled because after somewhere near a million years of close association she thinks that if we were anywhere near as clever as we appear to think we are we would have got an, at least tenuous, grip on homo/cana relationships.
She will never bite a human. Even that 18 month old nightmare that thinks she likes being dragged around the kitchen by her ears. Except that human whose smell she doesn’t recognize moving to quickly towards the nightmare.
Sorry Doctor.
Ah, I remember now. Big bad dog repellent: get a bigger, badder, dog. Or a Terrier. The Terrier is likely the more effective
But others, including I, have had a different experience. Depends on many things, I guess.Walked several thousand km in Spain , never had problems with dogs.
Buen Camino
Brandy
And to someone who disagreed, …Because there are literally hundreds of posts on here about nuisance dogs and dog attacks on the Camino.
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 ownerThat is not consistent with what I am hearing over and over on Camino forums.
Don't you want to share those tips?I assure you that there are dogs which attack without provocation and I have been subjected to this on two occasions-- both lesser caminos, as the dogs on the Francese look upon us with sheer boredom, which is how I like it.
On one, a passing motorist saved me when I was cornered by two (possibly unemployed and wandering, as it was far from any house or farm) guard dogs, pushing them out of the way and allowing me into his car-- he told me that this had happened before and he did not know to whom they belonged. On the other occasion, two Asturian mastiffs saw me from a rise on the road almost a km off, and began bounding in my direction, barking furiously. I turned tail and a nearby farmer allowed me within his gate-- he told me that the owner was unstable, and housed goats and sheep in her house, and that the dogs had attacked others before. I reported this to the ayuntamiento in the next pueblo, and filled out a denunciacion for the provincial police, which is needed before they would go around and get the owner to control her dogs.
A few years previously, I was given a mini-course by a local dog trainer who gave me some basic tips on how not to be perceived as a threat, and I have found this very useful while training on local paths. However, I will likely pick up some pepper spray for my next Camino.
They have been briefly referred to by others with more skill than I, to not challenge the dog, to adopt a calming demeanour, and to get out of his territory as quickly as possible.Don't you want to share those tips?
Love it.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
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.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.
Just curious… why would one need dog repellent on the Camino? Are you afraid of dogs? We come from a neighborhood of many dogs, but whether on or off leash they are always with their owners and under voice control. And we have our own dogs so personally wouldn’t be fearful. Am I missing something?
So dogs HAVE to be on a lead no matter what?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.
More or less. Working dogs are exempt though. If you check online you can get the details.So dogs HAVE to be on a lead no matter what?
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 dogLast 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?
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