Can you see your sheepdog doing this? Absolutely hilarious!

Was reading on another list I'm on....no not Bull Terriers but...another doggie breed....and could just see my Dawn doing something similiar...

Read on and enjoy...but don't drink anything at the same time....I will NOT be responsible for damage to or electrocution from your monitor! lol



Are Bull Terriers Good With Children
The following story titled "Are Bull Terriers Good With Children?" by Peggy
Arnaud appeared in The Bull Terrier Club Of South Australia magazine in
February 1994, and has me in stitches every time I read it.

Here goes:-

Haven't we all been asked this question many times? Yes, if raised with
children, a bull terrier is a perfect companion; gentle and aware of the
child's fragility. Haven't we all watched a great lump of dog play quietly
on the floor with babies, then without warning hurl itself upon an
unsuspecting adult with sufficient force to practically land him in the
intensive care unit. So I would like to ask this question - Are Bull
Terriers Good With Adults? Not one of my dogs has ever laid a tooth on me,
but the damage to my person has, over the years been considerable.

One rainy morning I was standing in the driveway watching my husband back
out the car when Muffin came flat out around the corner of the house
carrying a length of 2 x 4. What she was intending to do with this piece of
lumber has never been determined - it is possible that she was becoming
bored with the demolition trade and was about to enter the construction
business. Turning at her approach, I received the full impact of the wood on
my shinbone and was knocked to the ground by the force where I lay screaming
with pain and fury. Muff observed this odd behaviour for a moment, then
deciding that she had heard all those words before (usually directed at her
anyway), she retrieved her wooden weapon, and spinning it around with the
grace and agility of a baton twirler, connected neatly with the back of my
head as I was attempting to get to my feet. The impact returned me to my
previous horizontal position, this time face down. My husband, who witnessed
the entire performance informed me later that the timing was superb - worthy
of the best Keystone Cops or Marx Brothers. But he delayed his departure,
herded the menace into her kennel and inquired through his merriment if I
was hurt. Stating I thought I might live long enough to murder the wretched
bitch, I was helped to my feet but found I could not put any weight on the
injured leg and my scalp was cut and bleeding - so a trip to the accident
room of the local hospital was thought advisable.

Being my first visit for emergency treatment, I was not prepared for the
volume of information required. Name, address, occupation are routine - but
how, when and why!....(I am an obstetrical nurse and our patients are
admitted onto the floor with a minimum of questions. We know why they are
there, and we know how it happened and we assume the patient knows too,
although sometimes one wonders)!

The admitting nurse was efficient and thorough. Vital statistics dealt with
came unexpected questions. "Now, how did this accident happen?" "Well," I
said, "You see my dog had this big piece of wood in her mouth and she hit me
with it."

"Your dog?" "Yes." "I see, - and the head wound?" "Well my dog did that
too." "With a piece of wood?" "Yes, - it was the same piece of wood
actually." "I see."

"Well," I said, coming quickly to Muffin's defence," of course she didn't
mean to, she sort of spun around and she had this piece of wood in her
mouth, you see - and, well-she hit me with it - I was sitting in the
driveway at the time..."

Our local hospital does not have a psychiatric floor but I could see by the
expression on the nurse's face that she was aware of the desperate need for
one.

I was X-Rayed, treated amid controlled giggles from the staff, and released.

The next major incident followed swiftly. (Minor ones occur almost daily.)
The paddock gate is, of necessity, sturdily built of oak and heavy. It opens
inward. Every day I collect each dog after his play period.

I call them from whatever act of mayhem they may be committing, push open
the gate and bend down ready to snap on the lead. For three hundred and
sixty four days of the year Bloody Mary had galloped to the gate, come
around it, and been leashed in the usual fashion. On this particular day,
whether due to a whim, or perhaps because the moon was in Aquarius she chose
to project herself at approximately the speed of light from the far corner
of the paddock, and instead of coming around the gate, she leapt at it with
all the force of her fifty pounds of muscle, slamming it shut on my head. I
went down like a pole-axed ox, and remained down and out long enough for the
murdureous beast to remove and eat the bait-biscuits from my pocket - she
also removed and apparently ate the pocket. A small hairpiece I was wearing
has never been seen again - presumably it was quickly killed and buried.
Staggering into a lawn chair I sat holding my head and considering an early
retirement from dog breeding, while Mary amused herself by eating the
geraniums.

This pastoral scene continued for awhile until my neighbor drove up, took
one look at me, and insisted - yes, you guessed it - on a trip to the
Emergency Room.

The last thing I wished to do on this earth was return to the hospital
where, after the Muffin episode, there exists some doubt as to my sanity - I
am known locally as "that kook who lives up on the hill with those funny
looking white things she says are dogs". But feeling too sick to argue or
resist I was firmly placed in the car and hurried off to my fate.

And so it came to pass that once again I presented myself at the local
Emergency Room. Of course, the admitting nurse was the same as before, the
staff also. Approaching the desk in embarrassed misery - torn clothing, wild
hair, a great lump on my forehead and eyes blackening fast, I am greeted by
an obviously wary nurse - "Goodness, Mrs Arnaud, sit down. Whatever happened
to you now?" I take a deep breath, (Oh God will get you for this Bloody
Mary) and with visions of padded cells looming large in my future, "Well," I
said "you see - my dog..."

Are Bull Terriers Good With Children?
Oh yes. They are lovely.
Are Bull Terriers Good With Adults?

Well I am an adult and they are not good with me, and I have the scars - my
body, my furniture, and my psyche - to prove it.

Acknowledgement COLKET - 1976
Respond to this topic here on forum.oes.org  
LMAO :lol: :lol:
LMAO... that was awesome! :) Thanks for posting it... :lol:
That was fantastic- thanks for sharing!
Oh gosh.... that's hilarious..

Thanks for the post!!
That's hilarious!!!! :lol:

It is reminding me that Murph was so excited to see me at Dog Camp after we went to Winnipeg for a long weekend that he ran, full force, head down and plowed into the side of my shin! This made me roll my ankle in the other direction while my knee cap decided to move towards my other leg!!! I layed on the ground holding my knee (which I had hit back into place! 8O ) almost crying while Jim (the owner of Dog Camp) kept asking me if I was OK! I couldn't walk for a week and a half...did I mention that Murph took me out, didn't stop...just ran and stared at the car??? :lol:

People gave me strange looks when I would tell them what happened too...I so wanted an elaborate sport injury story to tell them... :wink:

I will forever wonder if Murph had planned this all along! :lol:

Thanks for sharing this story...it's like a support group for me!!!! :lol: :lol:
I am so glad I put my tea down before reading this! Hee-Hee!

Lark
I am laughing so hard I am still wiping the tears away. Thanks for sharing.
I had a bull terrier in a prior life and can totally relate! She was a tough cookie, as they all are.

What a funny story.
This is hilarious, Dawn!! Thanks for sharing!!
That was so funny. You were right to warn about the water!
ROTFLMAO!!! Thanks for the heads up on any liquid!!!
LOL! THAT WAS GREAT! Thanks for sharing.



Michelina~
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