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#1
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Dog and lawn
Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all
these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Getting rid of the dog is not an option Thanks, Lukas |
#2
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Our dog makes very 'green spots' on our lawn- maybe you should feed your dog some fertilizer? :-) ^^ |
#3
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Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have
all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Our dog makes very 'green spots' on our lawn- maybe you should feed your dog some fertilizer? :-) ^^ mmm That could work, she eats anything anyway, grass, weeds, leaves etc. Lots of fun in the fall when she swallows whole large oak leaves, these pass straight through her, an I end up having to pull them from her butt, as pooping does not completely push them out.... Lukas |
#4
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Lukas Louw wrote:
mmm That could work, she eats anything anyway, grass, weeds, leaves etc. Lots of fun in the fall when she swallows whole large oak leaves, these pass straight through her, an I end up having to pull them from her butt, as pooping does not completely push them out.... Lukas Feed her carrots once a week. |
#5
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Our dog makes very 'green spots' on our lawn- maybe you should feed your dog some fertilizer? :-) ^^ mmm That could work, she eats anything anyway, grass, weeds, leaves etc. Lots of fun in the fall when she swallows whole large oak leaves, these pass straight through her, an I end up having to pull them from her butt, as pooping does not completely push them out.... Lukas Jeez....you must be kidding. This, for a damned dog? |
#6
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Our dog makes very 'green spots' on our lawn- maybe you should feed your dog some fertilizer? :-) ^^ mmm That could work, she eats anything anyway, grass, weeds, leaves etc. Lots of fun in the fall when she swallows whole large oak leaves, these pass straight through her, an I end up having to pull them from her butt, as pooping does not completely push them out.... LOL! Boy, I bet that's quite a sight- You down on all fours behind the dog, trying to 'dislodge' to leaf (partly out) while the dogs wandering around (not cooperating) gettin' 'that crap' all over the house! :-Q ^^ |
#7
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Getting rid of the dog is not an option Thanks, Lukas Check the information at this link for some ideas. I like the one about following the animal with water to wash/dillute the urine so it doesn't burn the grass. As the article states. this would likely be quite entertaining for your neighbors. Especially coupled with the leaf extraction manuevers! lol joe Here's the article link. http://www.uwex.edu/ces/cty/polk/hort/lawnanddogs.html |
#8
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Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have
all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Getting rid of the dog is not an option Thanks, Lukas Check the information at this link for some ideas. I like the one about following the animal with water to wash/dillute the urine so it doesn't burn the grass. As the article states. this would likely be quite entertaining for your neighbors. Especially coupled with the leaf extraction manuevers! lol joe Here's the article link. http://www.uwex.edu/ces/cty/polk/hort/lawnanddogs.html Thanks - the water idea makes sense, and the neighbors think I'm nuts anyway, so walking behind the dog with a watering can will supply extra entertainment to brighten up their dull lives a little more.... Lukas |
#9
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Jeez....you must be kidding. This, for a damned dog? Yea it's like having an extra toddler in the household |
#10
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Jeez....you must be kidding. This, for a damned dog? Yea it's like having an extra toddler in the household Let me guess: If not for your wife, you'd handle this correctly, using this dog training tool: http://www.cz-usa.com/01.detail.php?id=65 |
#11
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Let me guess: If not for your wife, you'd handle this correctly, using
this dog training tool: http://www.cz-usa.com/01.detail.php?id=65 Not quite, but if not for my wife I'd have installed an electric fence, but oh no, that's cruel! |
#12
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Let me guess: If not for your wife, you'd handle this correctly, using this dog training tool: http://www.cz-usa.com/01.detail.php?id=65 Not quite, but if not for my wife I'd have installed an electric fence, but oh no, that's cruel! It's not cruel. You bait the fence with something the animal likes. This causes the animal to become quickly acquainted with the presence of the fence. If deer are any indication, they learn after one or two visits that the area near the fence is not a good place to be. Dogs....hard to say. Deer are smart. Dogs are stupid. |
#13
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Getting rid of the dog is not an option Thanks, Lukas Believe it or not, you can train the dog where to pee. Pick a spot, cover it with an appropriate material (pinestraw is fine) and when you take the dog outside, walk the dog to that spot to do his/her business. My border collie is trained not to pee on the grass, even when he's left in the yard all day long. It only took a few weeks of reinforcement to teach him where to pee. Before I taught him potty manners, I tried the pills and food additives that are supposed to make dog pee harmless, but the only result was I had less money in my wallet and just as many pee spots on the lawn. |
#14
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On Wed, 08 Jun 2005 15:35:18 GMT, "Lukas Louw" wrote:
Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Getting rid of the dog is not an option Thanks, Lukas I've the same problem. It's not totally solved by putting down a lot of lime. In Texas, I had dark green grass where the dog went. That was with bermuda grass. Here in Carolina, we have tall fescue. Either use a lot of lime or follow the dog around with the water hose, ha! Thunder |
#15
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"Lukas Louw" wrote in message ... Our dog urinates all over the lawn, as dogs are wont to do, and we have all these little infertile spots on the lawn that take ages to recover. Does anyone know if there are any easy solutions to this? It can be an eyesore. Our dog makes very 'green spots' on our lawn- maybe you should feed your dog some fertilizer? :-) ^^ mmm That could work, she eats anything anyway, grass, weeds, leaves etc. Lots of fun in the fall when she swallows whole large oak leaves, these pass straight through her, an I end up having to pull them from her butt, as pooping does not completely push them out.... Lukas ... too much information! Seriously, tho, other than training the dog to use just one area to pee, the solution is water to dilute the strength of the "fertilizer." Suzy, Zone 5 Wisconsin |
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