Should I get a cat to defend my farm from squirrels?
![https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg](https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg)
twoblacklines wrote:
this is dog
He doesnt like cameras so its hard to get good pics
Pablo currently enjoys eating sheep poo.SuperJail Warden wrote:
What is the life of Pablo like?Ty wrote:
How in fuck is this place still going?
Anyway, this is Pablo.
Okay so same neighbors got another dog. It is a big dog. Not sure what breed. I didn't look at the barking monster for long. I heard barking outside so I went to look because I thought it might have been our dog and the neighbors dog barking at each other. I saw the neighbors dog jump on top of a large plastic storage bin and put his head over the fence in the corner away from our dogs and start barking at whatever is in that other yard. The neighbors came outside and took their dog away but they really need to move anything the dog can jump on top of near the fence. That thing is going to jump into someone's backyard.SuperJail Warden wrote:
So I haven't seen the dog in forever. They must have returned it and if that is the case the shelter put it to sleep. There are no third chances in this racket.SuperJail Warden wrote:
So the pitbull bit the owner on the arm. The owner tried to give up the dog to animal control. Animal control said they need to take the dog back to the animal shelter in Brooklyn they got it from. This raises the question: who buys a pitbull from a shelter?
So I wanted to ask an important question related to dogs: do dogs go to heaven? Do all dogs go to heaven? Could my neighbor's dog theoretically be in hell?
The minute you find a cat turd in your carefully manicured tomato box, you'll probably change your tune.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Cats are harmless to people though. A dog is a different story.
I know you live in the land where the wild things are but not everyone has space for a cat amusement park.
A 2011 study that examined tapeworm infections in stray animals of Istanbul found that 4.65% of the examined cats had Joyeuxiella pasqualei infections.[4] Feline immunodeficiency virus and feline leukemia virus were found to be common among outdoor and stray cats.[5] Although stray cats can be a vector for rabies, out of all 21 rabies cases in Turkey documented between 2000 and 2014 none were through a contact between cats and humans.[6]
Public feeding of cats by the locals has been criticized by several veterinairans. A 2015 paper published by Rutgers University academics stated that collective feeding attracts and leads to concentration of animals to a specific area, which in turn facilitates the transmission of certain diseases. Healthy cats' contact with objects such as food and water containers that were contaminated by sick animals is another concern.[7]