dank69
Lifer
- Oct 6, 2009
- 33,538
- 24,649
- 136
I am 99% sure I know that female... I mean for real. When wifey gets home I'm gonna have her text her..
Low res gif, big dark sunglasses, beanie and big jacket, that could be Putin in hiding for all we know.I am 99% sure I know that female... I mean for real. When wifey gets home I'm gonna have her text her..
I don't think that is a female.I am 99% sure I know that female... I mean for real. When wifey gets home I'm gonna have her text her..
Damn it, now he has to wait for it to recharge...
I'm 100% sure that is not a female.I don't think that is a female.
Too late, he already fapped to it.I'm 100% sure that is not a female.
Right after my daughter started crawling, she crawled up to my dog and touched his bone. He bit her in the face, blood everywhere. Next day she had a perfect mouth shaped bruise on her face. Up until that point he had never growled or snapped in his life and had always shown affection for her. He was 9.5 and hadn't ever really been around kids before she was born, though.
Yeah, I didn't think it was female even. Really hard to tell.Low res gif, big dark sunglasses, beanie and big jacket, that could be Putin in hiding for all we know.
Right after my daughter started crawling, she crawled up to my dog and touched his bone. He bit her in the face, blood everywhere. Next day she had a perfect mouth shaped bruise on her face. Up until that point he had never growled or snapped in his life and had always shown affection for her. He was 9.5 and hadn't ever really been around kids before she was born, though.
The dog in the video looks upset and worried, not excited that the kid is crawling to him. In so many of these "cute" videos the dog's body language is giving a warning, not an invitation, luckily most people get away with it.
He had never shown any food aggression before, I could stick my hand right between him and any food and he would just stopped and looked at me.I agree that people often misread a dog's behavior (ie: assuming a wagging tail means "happy dog") however if the dog is familiar with the kid and has been properly trained it shouldn't be a problem.
Any kind of even apparently minor food-aggression in a dog is really a MAJOR red-flag and that animal should be kept away from kids. Every dog I've owned would do nothing more then give you a sad look if you took their food completely away never mind just touched it.
What did you do with the dog in question? (biting my kid on her face intentionally is something ANY of my former dogs would not likely have survived)
Thing is you are almost certainly bigger and scarier then your dog while your kid was not, plus (apparently?) your dog for whatever reason didn't see your kid as "above" it in the pack or it would have submitted regardless of physical size/strength.if they were never exposed when they were younger
Mmmmmm. Torque a la Rivian.
The dog's tail wagging proves you are wrong.Right after my daughter started crawling, she crawled up to my dog and touched his bone. He bit her in the face, blood everywhere. Next day she had a perfect mouth shaped bruise on her face. Up until that point he had never growled or snapped in his life and had always shown affection for her. He was 9.5 and hadn't ever really been around kids before she was born, though.
The dog in the video looks upset and worried, not excited that the kid is crawling to him. In so many of these "cute" videos the dog's body language is giving a warning, not an invitation, luckily most people get away with it.
Mmmmmm. Torque a la Rivian.