That said, one thing that can sometimes go wrong is that some dogs who are tied up/chained up feel more vulnerable and might bite or nip. It happened to my kid once. He wasn’t with me and learned the hard way (mild puncture wound, he was fine) that you don’t approach a strange dog that is tied up.
Having said that, I see dogs waiting outside stores here in Denver (people do walk here :)) all the time. There are water bowls and hitching posts for dogs in a nearby commercial neighborhood. You can tell that these dogs are okay with it. And some of them might be just fine being petted.
I don’t do it with my dogs, they are very large, tend to attract attention, and one of them, the one year old, is still awfully rambunctious.
Is this in Ellicot City or Mount Washington? I’ve seen dogs tied up in both places (moreso in Ellicot City). The dogs are all really quiet.
I wouldn’t do it with my dogs. Without me around, the dogs will go into a sit/stay/quiet for 5 minutes max before they start barking their fool sheltie heads off!
I’ve lived in both Washington and California (suburbs, both places), and I see dogs tied up outside stores all the time. I’ve also done the same occasionally.
For me, there are only a couple of considerations:
[ul]Will the dog remain friendly? As stated above, some friendly dogs can get nervous when tied up around strangers.[/ul]
[ul]Is the dog a purebred (purebreed)? I am perfectly comfortable leaving my lab-mix pound puppy outside, but if the dog has a black-market value I would not take the risk.[/ul]
Eh, I don’t think animal-torturing sickos care about what breed it is.
My other concern is whether the dog will feel that it has been abandoned in a strange place. When we took the late great Miss Emily Kimberly to Colorado along with us to visit friends for a week, she would not settle down to sleep unless we put her in our car – the one “place” that was familiar to her, and she knew we would not leave without the car. But I can see how tying the dog to a post and going into a store may make the dog wonder if you’re ever coming back.
She ended up being Zoe - a friend of mine thought she looked like a Zoe and it sort of stuck. I suppose it’s as unoriginal as Molly but I rather lik eit.
Is there really a black market for purebred dogs? Zoe is probably a Collie/Sheltie mix but I guess she could be mistaken for a purebred Collie. She is extremely friendly with strangers, which isn’t good for her own safety.
All in all, it seems like something one should do only if other people in the area are doing it. I generally don’t worry too much about “kooks and law suits waiting to happen”, but if I’m the only one doing it, I would attract the attention of the few kooks out there.