Live dogs used for shark bait...is this real?

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Like any of this is a surprise at all? Just listen to the media pump out the latest in "horror" news stories. Why would treating a pet or animal be immune to barbaric treatment, when the same folks accidently drop their newborns in vomit pales and they drown in it? or watch the latest beheading live on video from Iraq. I looking forward to armageddan, we certainly havent earned our role as the dominant species. Time for something else to take over...:eek:
 
like it says in oddballs sig "the day will come when we become the feeder" or somethin close to that....

but if this is true we need to use this jack*** as shark bait
 
totally fake! thats not even how you rig wire on a hook, much less using a Double hook for sharks....please...and it looks to be less than a 9/0 hook...too small for size of bait, you;d need like a 19/0 or bigger J-hook and rig it up like a mack, with the line down its throat and the hook commin out the belly.

besides, bluefish and bonito work 100% better for sharks than cats and dogs...now seals on the other hand....well...;)
 
i dont care if he was used for shark bait or not...if that hook is f'n real some one needs to die and it not that poor dag he endured enough...im pissed beyond words...
 
This subject raises the whole question about what we, as supposed caring humans, consider as a "pet" and what we consider as just another animal. For example, a lot of people on this site use what some people consider as their "pets", ie their fishy friends, to feed THEIR fish. (Using Guppys and Convicts to feed your predatory fish).

Many other countries around the world eat animals that we would consider a pet, or would never think of eating, e.g. horses and dogs. A lot of the fish we keep are someones dinner in their country of origin!

A similar question arises with the whole vegetarian, meat is murder, "animals have feelings too" debate.
Having grown up on a pig farm, I have seen both sides of this argument, my simple answer to it is the straighforward fact that humans are omnivores and we are designed to eat both meat and veg - just look at our teeth!
In this case, the animals would not exist, would not have been bred and reared, if they were not going to be eaten by human beings.

I in no way condone the actions descibed previously, real or not, but is it just another example of the different views that people have of animals?

I personally would consider such action as gross and cruel, but is that because it truly IS gross and cruel, or just my viewpoint based on the morality of my upbringing and experience?
 
well, my aunts dog got eaten/attacked/mutilated by a seal. even though i didnt like the dog, it was pretty sad. and pretty exciting too. i got pics somewhere, will look for them.
 
I reckon that a load of bull. The dog obviously just bit a hook, and was not baited up. As for using live dogs as shark bait, why? Unless you just let him tread for a while with a hook in him, it would be no better than a hunk of fish or dead meat. As for breeding cats for snake consumption, why not? Same thing happens to mice and rabbits, and they're both kept as pets.
Paul
 
Just read this in the paper. That's about as close as I can find.

KEY LARGO -- Ray Truche Jr. and Lisa Largrassa fished for hours and didn't catch anything -- except a drowning dog.

Motoring their 23-foot fishing boat earlier this month on Florida Bay, the two hit something unusual and turned around to check.

"As we came back upon it, I realized it was a little fat dog," said Truche, of Manchester, Mass. "It was having trouble keeping its head above water. Its big eyes were looking at us. It was almost as if it was saying, 'Don't leave me here!'"

The couple leaned over the boat and made their only catch of the day: a 5-year-old cairn terrier named Tigger, The Key West Citizen reported Monday.

Tigger was apparently thrown from Diane and Richard Beckman's boat on their way from Key Largo to Marathon.

The Beckmans searched frantically for 2-1/2 hours with no sign of the dog.

"We went back and forth, back and forth," Diane said. "Finally we just gave up, because we thought he couldn't have survived in the water for that long. I was just heartbroken. "

Since there was no answer at the home listed on Tigger's tag, Truche and Largrassa dropped him off at the Upper Keys Animal Shelter.

Diane was elated when she got home and listened to her messages. She went quickly to pick up Tigger.

"He didn't know me. He was so terrified. As soon as he realized it was me, he jumped in my arms and wouldn't let go," she said.
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com