devil wrote:I'd be Beardie, the luckiest dog in Christendom. He was abandoned at ~6 weeks, in ways only Cypriots can abandon dogs, after whipping him. He was a starved skeleton, covered with parasites, when he chose to adopt us. He is now a robust 4-year old 26 kg multipedigree dog who has a good meal, often home-cooked, every day, the occasional walk in the hills, a large garden to play in and chase cats and hedgehogs, a comfortable bed in the house and two loving parents who look after him like no other dog has been looked after.
phoenix wrote:Devil, I have come to expect better from you, so am disappointed to see you being thoughtless.
devil wrote:phoenix wrote:Devil, I have come to expect better from you, so am disappointed to see you being thoughtless.
I do not accept your reproach. This animal had been beaten so badly that he still has emotional scars as well as physical ones. Some time ago, I was gardening and picked up a stick to train a plant. The dog ran away, yelping. He is also very racist; he is a very friendly dog and loves to greet most people (and other dogs), but he runs away from some Cypriot men, usually tall and not overweight in the ~30-50 age range. He has never run away from a man of any other nationality, nor from a woman. Presumably, he was beaten by a Cypriot man and he recognises the kind of man who did it.
I do not say that this does not happen elsewhere, it does but I've never seen so many mistreated, stray and feral dogs as I've seen here. Within a radius of about 100 m from here, I could take you to 4 dogs that have a dog's life, stuck permanently in small enclosures with not enough water in the summer, oil drums as the only shelter from the sun and rain (if only!).
I've discussed this with our vet (Cypriot) and he agrees with me.
And I do NOT thank you for unnecessarily introducing irrelevant racist politics into this thread.
devil wrote:I'd be Beardie, the luckiest dog in Christendom. He was abandoned at ~6 weeks, in ways only Cypriots can abandon dogs, after whipping him. He was a starved skeleton, covered with parasites, when he chose to adopt us. He is now a robust 4-year old 26 kg multipedigree dog who has a good meal, often home-cooked, every day, the occasional walk in the hills, a large garden to play in and chase cats and hedgehogs, a comfortable bed in the house and two loving parents who look after him like no other dog has been looked after.
Niki wrote:devil wrote:I'd be Beardie, the luckiest dog in Christendom. He was abandoned at ~6 weeks, in ways only Cypriots can abandon dogs, after whipping him. He was a starved skeleton, covered with parasites, when he chose to adopt us. He is now a robust 4-year old 26 kg multipedigree dog who has a good meal, often home-cooked, every day, the occasional walk in the hills, a large garden to play in and chase cats and hedgehogs, a comfortable bed in the house and two loving parents who look after him like no other dog has been looked after.
Devil a wonderful story and well done after your fantastic job with this beautiful dog and I agree, Cypriot people in general do not look after their animals in the same way. He looks very much like my dog Charlie.
Phoenix shame on you for even trying to bring in political/cultural differences. I know about the UK and am qualified to dispute this but the difference in attitude towards animals is vast between Cypriot and British.
The problem Phoenix is that even if someone is doing a good thing you jump on the political aspect far too easily. This is about animals, not cultural differences. The 'Cypriot' connection was mentioned but LET IT GO! for the sake of a good deed.
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