Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Encounter with a Feral Dog Pack

Last evening at the Pheasant Branch Prairie I decided to take a little side trail through the red osier dogwood to look for American Woodcock. My excursion abruptly ended when I apparently startled a large animal that went crashing through the dense tangle of willow and dogwood from about twenty feet away. Then I heard another. At first I thought it might be deer, but having flushed them numerous times in the conservancy, I detected something different about these particular animals.

Curious but cautious, I made my way back onto the main trail and caught a flash of copper through an opening in the dense tangle – it was definitely too small for a deer. From what I could tell by the sounds around me, there were at least four individual animals and then I realized they weren't running away from me, but making systematic passes up and down the line of habitat, as if hunting. A little nervous, I began a slow retreat. Then suddenly, a rather haggard looking black dog appeared at the edge from about 50 feet away and gave me the most discomforting stare I've ever received from an animal. Then another dog appeared, gave a look, but quickly resumed hunting. It was a pack of feral dogs.

The black dog also rejoined hunting with the others, flushing American Tree Sparrows as they tore through the thicket. From a safer distance, I watched the dogs aggressively hunt – probably looking for rabbits or other small mammals. I know packs of feral dogs can be dangerous even to humans, so I reported the incident to Dane County Parks. It's a little disconcerting to think I was a mere twenty feet away from one of the dogs – I shudder to think what might have happened if that first dog had seen me. I'm grateful that my instincts warned me to move out of the area.

Link: U.S. Facing Feral-Dog Crisis

5 Comments:

At 4:16 AM, Anonymous Nuthatch said...

I've had this experience more times than I care to think about. Our site gets unwanted pets (both cats and dogs) that are dumped by people, and dogs that wander over from Detroit where they have been discarded after no longer being useful in dog fights, or unmanageable guard dogs. It's just a bad situation waiting to get worse.

 
At 8:34 AM, Anonymous Birdfreak said...

This is such a sad situation... I'm positive that the majority of these dogs began life as someone's pet, perhaps bred and purchased specifically for type of dog (large, tough, etc.) I would be happy if people who dump pets would be arrested and fined.

Over 12 years ago we adopted a stray Doberman, left to die in the slums of Rockford after a crackdown of dog-fighting rings. She turned out to be the sweetest, caring creature, a true living angel. After she passed away, we adopted another dumped Doberman.

Dogs are meant to be loved and cared for.

 
At 2:02 PM, Blogger Mike McDowell said...

Anonymous,

If you want to make personal attacks, email me and sign it with your real name. You couldn't be more wrong regarding the responsibility of dealing with feral dogs. The irony of calling me a coward via an anonymous comment is not lost on me.

Mike M.

 
At 8:00 AM, Anonymous Peace B W/U said...

Mike, Besides the full time job, I am also the Town Treasurer and one of the responsiblities is the dog tags in our community. This is a problem in our rural area. I do get calls about dogs on the loose or dogs that show up on townspeople's doorsteps. Dogs killing livestock. Along the same line feral-cats are a huge problem too. More so for the birds in our community. I was attacked by a german shepherd when I was younger and I can only imagine what you were feeling when you saw a pack of them. Carol

 
At 6:51 AM, Blogger Diane Trim said...

A pack of feral dogs sounds frightening. I didn't realize we had that problem in Dane County.

 

<< Home