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Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
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#1
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Taming My Dog
When I got my first dog, a beagle, as my pet several years ago, I was thrilled. I was finally able to have my very own lively, obedient, and loving pet. After about week, I became very frustrated. If happened to own a dog too, then you know what I mean. Taking care of Sally was like having to take care of an unruly child. I already had some knowledge on how to train Sally. But it didn't seem to work, Sally would continue her bad habits in spite of what I've done. She would let it out anywhere she pleased. The incessant barking, whether it's indoors or outdoors drove my neighbors mad. Do get me wrong, I love my pet, but this was getting out of hand. Sally was afraid of the simplest things: I can't even use the toaster without her barking like mad. Whenever an icecream truck drove by, she run for cover. She disobeyed my commands many times and would bark at my friends and neighbors for no apparent reasing. Taking her out was a pain. I was tired of having to fetch most of those frisbees myself. There must be something wrong with the way I'm training her I thought, so I went out and bought a couple of dog training books and read through them in about a week. I've applied most of the techniques in the book but a month passed and there was still no progress. I then tried other books and asked for advice from other dog owners. Again, almost a month passed and there was still no progress. I was exhausted. Having stress from work was bad, I don't want to be stressed at home too. I pondered for a while and realized that no matter how difficult a situation is, there's always solution if one is persistant. With the newly found drive to train my dog for the better, I scoured for more information on dog training. Then I stumbled upon something that actually worked. I thought it was the same old stuff that's already in the books that I've read, but no this was actually something new and effective. It was a epiphany for me after I bought the manual and followed its instructions and techniques. After about a month, Sally was starting to become fairly obedient. Most of her worse habits were gone. She was on the right track for improvement. You see, there's usually always a solution to even the worse problems. The answers are out there, you just have to find it. I was glad I didn't give up early. Dog Obedience Training http://tinyurl.com/22644o |
#2
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Taming My Dog
On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 14:28:07 -0700, Billy Bean
wrote: . Taking care of Sally was like having to take care of an unruly child. I had a dog once. I couldn't cure it from spamming, so I had it put to sleep. |
#3
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Taming My Dog
On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 18:27:48 -0400, mm
wrote: . Taking care of Sally was like having to take care of an unruly child. I had a dog once. I couldn't cure it from spamming, so I had it put to sleep. Dummy! Send it too SPAM-ANON, a four leg program. -- Oren "I don't have anything against work. I just figure, why deprive somebody who really loves it." |
#4
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Taming My Dog
Billy Bean wrote:
SNIP HAPPENS DIE SPAMMER DIE! |
#5
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Taming My Dog
Billy Bean wrote:
When I got my first dog, a beagle, as my pet several years ago, I was thrilled. I was finally able to have my very own lively, obedient, and loving pet. After about week, I became very frustrated. If happened to own a dog too, then you know what I mean. Taking care of Sally was like having to take care of an unruly child. **** that. Toss him on the barbie and call the neighbors over to share the feast. There ought to be enough meat there for them if you're judicious in how many you invite. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#6
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Taming My Dog
Billy Bean wrote:
When I got my first dog, a beagle, as my pet several years ago, I was thrilled. I was finally able to have my very own lively, obedient, and loving pet. After about week, I became very frustrated. If happened to own a dog too, then you know what I mean. Taking care of Sally was like having to take care of an unruly child. I already had some knowledge on how to train Sally. But it didn't seem to work, Sally would continue her bad habits in spite of what I've done. She would let it out anywhere she pleased. The incessant barking, whether it's indoors or outdoors drove my neighbors mad. Do get me wrong, I love my pet, but this was getting out of hand. Sally was afraid of the simplest things: I can't even use the toaster without her barking like mad. Whenever an icecream truck drove by, she run for cover. She disobeyed my commands many times and would bark at my friends and neighbors for no apparent reasing. Taking her out was a pain. I was tired of having to fetch most of those frisbees myself. There must be something wrong with the way I'm training her I thought, so I went out and bought a couple of dog training books and read through them in about a week. I've applied most of the techniques in the book but a month passed and there was still no progress. I then tried other books and asked for advice from other dog owners. Again, almost a month passed and there was still no progress. I was exhausted. Having stress from work was bad, I don't want to be stressed at home too. I pondered for a while and realized that no matter how difficult a situation is, there's always solution if one is persistant. With the newly found drive to train my dog for the better, I scoured for more information on dog training. Then I stumbled upon something that actually worked. I thought it was the same old stuff that's already in the books that I've read, but no this was actually something new and effective. It was a epiphany for me after I bought the manual and followed its instructions and techniques. After about a month, Sally was starting to become fairly obedient. Most of her worse habits were gone. She was on the right track for improvement. You see, there's usually always a solution to even the worse problems. The answers are out there, you just have to find it. I was glad I didn't give up early. Dog Obedience Training http://tinyurl.com/22644o Do you dummies REALLY think the spammer comes back to read responses? lol, no they don't. Better: Report the spammer. Kill his accounts. Frustrate him that way. I do. Pop` |
#7
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Taming My Dog
In article I1bhi.22$Pv2.9@trnddc03, "Pop`" wrote:
Billy Bean wrote: [snipped] Do you dummies REALLY think the spammer comes back to read responses? lol, no they don't. Better: Report the spammer. Kill his accounts. Frustrate him that way. I do. Best: report the spammer, WITHOUT reposting the whole spam. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#8
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Taming My Dog
"Pop`" wrote Better: Report the spammer. Kill his accounts. Frustrate him that way. I do. Pop` Thanks, Pop. I'd do it, but I don't know how and I don't have the time. Go get 'em. Steve |
#9
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Taming My Dog
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 17:10:00 GMT, "Pop`"
wrote: Do you dummies REALLY think the spammer comes back to read responses? lol, no they don't. I don't reply for the spammer but to entertain you guys, when There was one spammer, who came back, to "thank" someone for contributing money to his company. |
#10
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Taming My Dog
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 12:16:47 -0700, "SteveB"
wrote: Thanks, Pop. I'd do it, but I don't know how and I don't have the time. Go get 'em. Steve I'm confounded, Pop is even able to declare what is on-topic; who is on or off topic, plus what is pertinent to the OP - just ask him! -- Oren "I don't have anything against work. I just figure, why deprive somebody who really loves it." |
#11
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Taming My Dog
"Oren" wrote I'm confounded, Pop is even able to declare what is on-topic; who is on or off topic, plus what is pertinent to the OP - just ask him! -- Oren Lemmee see. A newsgroup for home repair related topics. Enter, a site for dog obedience training problems. A solicitation for you to sign up at his site. A HUGE ****ING SITE. Is this spamming? Wait, wait, I know this one. Steve |
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