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Are small dogs safer pets around children than large dogs?

Results so far:

Yes
25% 524 votes Total: 2099 votes
No
75% 1575 votes

Yes

by Jennifer Paige

Created on: October 27, 2007

A big dog's jaws can exert enough pressure to crush a bone. By this measure alone, they are more dangerous than smaller dogs. Therefore, a smaller dog is safer to have around children.

Regardless of the temperament of the individual dog, we cannot read a dog's mind. We can never state with 100% certainty that the dog would not bite if provoked. A dog can surprise you and not respond with aggression, but it is not wise to make the assumption that they will not.

Children poke, climb, pull hair and stick things in dogs faces. Sometimes, children are tempted to take toys or bones away from dogs. With that in mind, would you rather take the chance of a small dog getting irritated and retaliating or a big dog?

A situation could go either way and you cannot predict the outcome. I heard a story once about a girl who tripped over her dog in the dark and was attacked. On the other hand, my son once dropped a bowling ball on the Husky we had at the time and the dog did nothing other than give him a dirty look. You just don't know how a dog will respond, even if it responded differently in the past.

I know first hand that little dogs tend to be nippier, but the damage they can inflict is minimal compared to a big dog. I have witnessed what a big dog can do to a smaller dog. I can't even imagine what that dog could have done to a child.

Of course, if you believe your dog (regardless of its size) has aggressive tendencies, you should put your children first and find the dog another home. With that said, I think it is more about training your children than it is about training your dog.

We have four dogs, ranging from 90 pounds to 4 pounds. Although my biggest dog is the calmest dog, I acknowledge that she is a dog. As soon as they were mobile, I began to teach my children about the proper way to act around dogs. Even with the best precautions, though, my earlier examples show that accidents can still happen.

Not only can a big dog bite with extreme pressure, enough to shatter a bone, but big dogs can also knock children to the ground. Thankfully, our big dog doesn't jump, but we have had dogs in the past that did. We have also had neighbors with big dogs that jumped. My oldest son was bruised and scraped up one time by the neighbor's Akita knocking him to the ground and pinning him. A small dog probably would not have even put him off balance.

So, I have to conclude that the strength of big dogs, both in biting and knocking down, makes them more dangerous than small dogs.

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No

by Marc Phillippe Babineau

Created on: March 23, 2008   Last Updated: April 12, 2010

Have you ever noticed how smaller dogs are more often than not the ones that attack other dogs?  More often than not, it is the small dogs that are more aggressive, and they are usually the ones that attack you aggressively if you come near them.  However, most larger breeds of dog are much gentler, and many even go so far as to simply ignore the smaller dog biting at it’s ankles.  So, are small dogs safer pets around children than large dogs?

Smaller dogs are small only in size, they make up for their lack of menacing size with tenacity as a genetic trait.  Put a child beside a Golden Retriever and you have instant chemistry.  Put that same child beside a Shi Tzu, and you had better have quick reactions. No, my friends, small dogs and children usually do not mix. There are, of course, exceptions to the rule, as there are with pretty much everything else in life. You will have people tell you stories about how cute, cuddly and sweet their small dogs are. But, when socializing, small dogs tend to be more vicious.

Mid-sized dogs, like beagles, terriers and hounds, are excellent with children. Any dog in this size category should be okay with children, as long as you have been the sole owner of the dog, and have raised it to be a friendly, socialized dog from day one (hopefully, no older than 8 weeks old). If you take a dog from a kennel, or the shelter, and bring it home, do not expect it to be good with your children, or anyone else's children for that matter, until properly trained and socialized.

A dog's upbringing will play a great role in how it reacts to other animals about its' own size.  A dog will not know right off the bat, "hey, thats' a Human child, I should be nice to it", the dog only sees something about its' own size, and that something is crawling towards its' dinner dish.  Oh, this scenario plays itself out all over the World, every day, and it is not always a good result. The dog may see the child as competition, and aggressively handle the situation as best he knows how (usually with growling, barking and/or biting).

Large breed dogs, like golden retrievers, Dobermans and even pit bulls will be good with any child, even the more precarious of children. If a child pokes his hand into the larger dogs' eyes or mouth, or keeps jumping on it, poking it with things and throwing things at it, you need not fear retaliation. However, this is not so with Schnauzers, Shi-Tzu's, and other small breed dogs.

So, are your children safe with small dogs?  Personally, I would rather have my child play with a well brought up and trained pit bull than I would a stranger's Schnauzer that barks continuously at any people who walk by their house, that they see or come into contact with.

Please, before bringing a dog of any size home  to your children, check the dog's breeds' specific natures. Some dogs are just known to not be reliable with children, no matter how well trained, if the master is not right there. There are way too many breeds now, especially with all the "designer" dogs out there (golden doodle or cockadoodle anyone?), with instincts from different breeds all mixed up inside that little brain. As well, please do not listen to one friends' testimonials about how good their Shi Tzu is with children, because 19 out of twenty (with a margin of error...) unsupervised small sized dogs will not be good with children.

Be safe.  Be informed.

Learn more about this author, Marc Phillippe Babineau.
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