miasmum wrote:It had nothing to do with the cat on its territory, and everything to do with instinct. My neighbours had a Staffie, great with people, hell with other dogs and lethal with cats, rabbits, etc.
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Absolutely right mm, staffies are just like that. A lady I once knew had had them all her life, but she knew them inside out. She had a big garden and would jump if she saw a cat in it, because staffies lock their jaws once they've got hold of something and it's almost impossible to stop them.
Someone came to visit us here with theirs, 'oh she's a lovely dog, we'll bring her in...'. Thankfully I was very wary and asked them to keep her on the lead till we were sure it would be ok. They had a job hanging onto the lead once she saw poor Minnie - and that's in
her own home, not the staffie's territory at all. I honestly dread to think what would have happened if she'd been loose.
There are quite a few breeds I'd just never have, and they're one of them.
I've been thinking about it and actually, if Minnie did catch a bird or cat, if I told her to stop/drop it, she would. We've had a mouse in the garden which she went to, but we just told her to leave it and she didn't even try to touch it.
And when one of the baby birds got stranded it was in and out of the bushes; again we just told her to leave it and she stayed away.
She's not a breed that would naturally attack or kill, she's a retriever, being a labrador/spaniel cross. But then I wouldn't get any kind of dog before learning about its breed's characteristics. Wouldn't have a Jack Russell for instance, a) they chase and kill rabbits, and b) they go down and get stuck in rabbit holes. And I wouldn't want a dog that couldn't be let off the lead.