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How to Enjoy the Public Park with Your Dog Fargo ND

Unlike parks designated for dogs only, public parks designed for mass consumption require owners and their dogs to meet a different set of criteria -- one that allows for a peaceful co-existence between humans and animals. Following are six suggestions for meeting it.

Local Companies

Pets R Inn Fm
(701) 282-3088
3902 13th Ave S
Fargo, ND
Poodle Parlor the
(701) 662-2048
120 Highway 2 W
Devils Lake, ND
Dickinson Home & Pet Sitting
(701) 483-9407
683 3rd Ave SE
Dickinson, ND
Hillbilly Dawg House
(701) 838-8527
1400 4th Ave NE
Minot, ND
House of Sund Pet Center
(701) 223-0112
2700 State St
Bismarck, ND
A-1 Pet Center Inc
(701) 282-3088
3902 13th Ave S
Fargo, ND
Bird House
(701) 258-6955
3101 State St
Bismarck, ND
K T Animal Supply
(701) 224-1063
1606 E Main Ave
Bismarck, ND
Pets R' Inn
(701) 746-1354
2800 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND
Gencon
(701) 663-7490
415 E Main St
Mandan, ND

By Jill Sherer Murray for WebVet

A few weeks ago, I was walking my two dogs in the public park close to our house, when from out a nowhere, a Yorkshire terrier came running at us like a speeding fur-covered bullet. I stood there, a leash with a barking and lunging dog in each hand, feeling as if a meteor was about to crash into the earth and I was helpless to stop it.

It was a horrible experience, and fortunately, it didn’t lead to any casualties. It did leave me shaking, cursing the Yorkie’s owner, and wondering how some people can be so careless in a public park with their animals.

That’s because it’s not the first time I’ve seen a dog owner behave irresponsibly (i.e., walking a dog off leash, leaving dog poop in the grass, letting tenuous dogs get close to small children, etc.) in a public park.

And yet, unlike parks designated for dogs only, public parks designed for mass consumption require owners and their dogs to meet a different set of criteria -- one that allows for a peaceful co-existence between humans and animals. Following are six suggestions for meeting it.

#1: Leash your dog

Always leash your dog when walking in a public park. Because leash laws aside:

  • Not everybody is a dog lover or relishes an errant dog -- especially if they’re with small children.
  • Even dog lovers don’t always want to encounter a dog they know nothing about.
  • It’s bad for a dog that’s on leash to engage with a dog.

Click here to read full article from WebVet.com

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