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Dangerous dogs and the treatment of other dogs - how the Swiss do it...

36 replies

MmeLindt · 18/01/2010 22:01

I just posted this on my blog and thought that some of you might find it interesting.

Owning a dog in Switzerland is not as straight forward as one might think. There are a list of regulations that vary from canton to canton.

As Swiss residents have to obey laws made not just on a cantonal level, but also federal laws, and those made after a referendum, the list of dos and don'ts is long and confusing. They vary from canton to canton so if one moves to a different area, it is important to check the laws in the new canton.

To make sure that dog owners know their responsibilities, all new dog owners are now required to pass a theory test, and a practical test will follow soon.

Last week I did the theory course, in typical Swiss fashion, with wine and nibbles served. The local vet organised the course, thankfully in English as we had to do a small test at the end of the 35 minute lecture.

Basically our responsibilities include getting the dog a medallion - a tax disc - and proving that we have civil liability insurance for our dog. The hound must be chipped and registered with a federal agency and be vaccinated against rabies. Some of the regulations are designed to protect the population, some are protection for the dogs themselves such as the banning of choke chains with spikes or that dogs should not be left alone all day.

Other laws protect the general population and range from keeping dogs on leads in public areas to picking up poo and not allowing your dog to disturb neighbours.

The rules here in Geneva are very strict for dogs termed as 'Dangerous Breeds'. These dogs, 15 different breeds such as Staffies, Rottweilers, Mastiffs and Pit Bulls, are very highly regulated. They must be sterilised and crossbreeds with these dogs are also illegal. Dogs that are already here are allowed to stay, but must be muzzled when out of doors. These dogs must be taken at least three times a month to training classes until they are 24 months old and yearly thereafter. The owners must do a yearly theory training, instead of the one time training that owners of other dogs are obliged to do.

Basically, the authorities have made it so difficult and expensive to keep a dog termed as 'dangerous' in the hope that they will eventually die off in the canton. The vet estimated that keeping a dog from the dangerous dogs list would cost the owner an additional CHF 3,000.00 a year. That is around £1500.

DS recently had a couple of women come into school and give a talk on safety with dogs.One of the women put a mask and 'paws' on and pretended to be a dog and the other woman demonstrated how to behave if a dog were to run towards one (curl up on the ground, face hidden in your arms and pretend to be a rock, girls to hold their hair) and how to treat dogs.

OP posts:
Blondeshavemorefun · 19/01/2010 22:49

sounds good mmelindt

woofa waves paw sadly to daphne as he has a tummy upset and yes blondes had to clear up dog puke

MmeLindt · 20/01/2010 10:25

Blondes
Oh, not nice. Especially a dog the size of Woofa.

OP posts:
Blondeshavemorefun · 20/01/2010 13:49

oh yes, the amount he eats = the amount he chunders

GrimmaTheNome · 20/01/2010 14:00

I tried a google to see what dog breeds were popular in Switzerland to see if that explained their bittenness, but instead turned up this

JJ · 20/01/2010 14:13

Slight hijack to Romanarama: pine martin insurance? We had it and laughed and laughed and then were very glad we did when they started chewing some cables under the car.

darkandstormy · 20/01/2010 16:45

what about the dangerous biting toddlers any legislation to sort them.

MmeLindt · 20/01/2010 18:19

Incidently, I know of many people who have had serious problems with pine martins biting the cables, in Germany not in Switzerland but I guess it is common here too.

It can be a costly business.

LOL at biting toddlers. We could just lock them in the atomic bunker that every house is required by law to have.

OP posts:
Romanarama · 20/01/2010 18:44

Ha ha, really??? We had our cars in the garage - next to the bunker(!) - never saw a pine martin in there (what is a pine martin?).

Bella32 · 20/01/2010 19:52

Pine Marten

expatinscotland · 20/01/2010 19:59

I'm moving to Switzerland (I wish).

JJ · 21/01/2010 11:07

Yes, it was funny. What weird animals. Our car was parked in the garage next to our bunker, too. The bunker was great. We just used it for garden storage, though. Luckily they never came around and checked it was stocked.

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