Dechristo Posted June 30, 2005 Posted June 30, 2005 Depends on the skill and creativity Of the individual goat; some are virtual Oliviers. Quote
Mr._Natural Posted June 30, 2005 Posted June 30, 2005 A dog was injured badly in the area just west of the liberty bell group last year, or maybe the summer before. Somebody here wrote about it but I couldn't find it. It was gored in the abdomen. Quote
John Frieh Posted June 30, 2005 Posted June 30, 2005 A dog was injured badly in the area just west of the liberty bell group last year, or maybe the summer before. Somebody here wrote about it but I couldn't find it. It was gored in the abdomen. Happened again this year. Leave your dog at home or in the car. Quote
cldbase Posted June 30, 2005 Author Posted June 30, 2005 Thank ya. This is just what I needed to know. I almost got my dog killed about a year ago when I let her out in a yard with my uncle's nice tame burros. She almost got the shit stomped out of her... WTF, instincts I guess. Quote
susan Posted July 1, 2005 Posted July 1, 2005 And it's not just the dog that is at risk. Two weekends ago at Pearly Gates we saw some very interesting goat/dog interaction. A very well behaved (hand signal trained, quiet, obiedient) dog showed up and the young goat hanging around got very upset. When the dog arrived, the goat went to the top of the cliff and started stomping around. This lead to a significant amount of moss, dirt and good sized rocks being kicked off of the cliff onto lead climbers. Not a happy scenario. When the dog and it's people moved to a different area, the goat went over there. We obseverd the goat at the top of a slab stomping it's feet and bascially preventing the climber from ascending the route. I wish I had my camera. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.