Amanda R
Posted : 6/29/2006 10:51:09 AM
lol @ the last comment.
ok first off keep in mind the pup is still young, for now she is doing it instinctually, no its not usually dangerous to humans, but you should definitly correct the dog and give her something NOT living to chew on, the bunny may have been the same one from the day before, but being little it may not have survived the trauma of being tossed around by a 55lb pup
i dont think getting a kitten is a great idea at the very moment, in fact with the type of dog i dont suggest leaving anything furry under 5 lbs in the same room as the pup. this brings me back to my friends akita, because akitas love to hunt. she has had the dog for 3 years and has never had a probem she has a great dane, an italian mastiff, a shiba inu and quite a few cats. not too long ago she got 2 new kittens and they were fine for a few months, but one day she woke up and came down to find the kitten (sorry for being graphic) bloody and ripped up on the floor, the only animal capable of getting to her was the akita being as she was the only one allowed to roam the house at night plus the large doggy toothmarks were obvious.we have no idea what triggered it because nothing had changed recently and she was always more motherly to the kitten. but i also realize that the bunny u speak of may have been sick and it is instictual that the dog may have been picking on it for that reason to begin with, the bunny may have died of natural causes. but if u do get a kitten i suggest getting one old enough to defend itself and be able to jump when it needs to, i also suggest getting a gate and block off one room of your home to make it accesible to the cat but not the dog just in case the cat needs to escape