Saturday, November 12, 2011

Attacked by a dog

I was attacked by a dog today.  The conversation with the owner afterward upset me nearly as much.

This post is for documentation purposes.

I have been walking for exercise in the neighborhood around my house for at least the past 10 years.


Today about 3 PM I was walking past 1300 Tamarisk and a chihuahua came out and barked at me.

Then a medium/large short-haired white dog came around the house from the west side and barked very loudly, growled, and charged me.  Multiple times.

He made physical contact once but did not break the skin.  I noticed later my capris were ripped right above the slight abrasions he made on my right front shin.


I screamed and shouted "No, go home" and clapped my hands to make a loud noise at him.  I later noticed broken blood vessels on my hands from how strongly I had clapped.

I backed away and called 911.

The 911 dispatcher took the information I gave him and sent animal control.

I walked the other direction.

A half hour later I got a call from my house; Mr. Williams with animal control was there and he wanted to talk to me.

Did I want to file a report?  Yes, please.

The owner wanted me to come describe the dog.  So I followed Mr. Williams to 1300 Tamarisk.  When Officer Tim Edwards came outside, he came out swinging.  Metaphorically.


Some of the things Mr. Edwards said are as follows:
  • I was harassing them by making this complaint three times
  • It was definitely not his dog that caused a problem
  • He'd already called the sheriff's office about it
  • He'd been gone all day to church and to the store with his kids; he came home the same time Mr. Williams arrived; and the dog was in the fence (Mr. Williams never saw the dog; it was not in the yard when he got there)
  • It was not even a pit bull, it was a boxer (I'd never said what kind of dog it was)
  • He asked how I would feel if he called the police whenever he saw my dog out and reported that it attacked him.  Then this would just escalate.  (I took that as a threat)
  • He told me I lived up the street; this wasn't my neighborhood and maybe I shouldn't be there, maybe I should find another route to walk
  • It could not possibly have been his dog; the animals were behind a privacy fence; there was no way for the boxer to have gotten out.
  • He said wouldn't I like it better if he came to me if he had a problem with my dog?
    • I said I'd tried to do that.  I called and talked to his wife (at work) the first time it happened and I had been very nice about it
    • He acknowledged that his wife said I had been nice about it 
    • Note of explanation: that phone call was the only occasion I had contacted them; therefore I felt the accusation of harassment at the beginning of the conversation had been unwarranted; the "three times" was in reference to the fact I had told 911 that this was the third time the dog attacked me.  The second time I'd taken no action; all three times the dog acted basically the same)
  • He said the dog was not mean; it would not have attacked; maybe it was territorial but it would not have left the yard (it had followed me across the yards of two houses on the other side of the street)
  •  He refused to fill out the incident report form as requested by Mr. Williams because "it was not his dog."  Instead he wrote his information on the blank side of a paper.
This conversation lasted about 10-20 minutes, outside in the driveway by Mr. William's animal control truck.  Mr. Edwards did calm down by the end of the conversation.

I, however, was in tears.

The encounter ended with my statement that next time I would record (video) what happened.  Then I went and asked Mrs Bartlett (the neighbor directly across) if they had noticed any of what had happened.

Mrs. Bartlett said she had not seen or heard anything; she'd been in the back of the house watching a movie.  The dog had never troubled her, but she gave me a hug because she could tell I was upset and told me to start carrying a stick.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Beyond Method #12

  I feel like I learned a lot from this program.  Some things I already knew, but most I did not.  The thing I plan on using the most is screencasting.
   I appreciated being reminded about Goodreads; I plan on using this myself.
   The one suggestion for any future program is to give an estimate for how much time it will take. I am interested in completing more programs like this in the future.
   Thank you very much!

Beyond Method #11

  I have taken online surveys, but never created one.  JCPenny gives 15% off coupons for completing a survey, so I usually take the time to do so.  Other businesses offer random drawings as incentives; I almost never bother to give feedback unless I have something specific to say. 
   The only kind of survey previously used at our library is a paper survey given to walk-in patrons.  I am happy to know how to create an online survey, but I don't see an immediate need for one.  Ditto for live-audience survey tools: this is a small library with very few adult programs.

Beyond Method #10

   Webconferencing is a great tool.  I have attended several webinars from the Texas State Library (as have other library staff) and really enjoyed having relevant, quality workshops at my fingertips.  I prefer archived webinars because when attending  during working hours, I invariably get interrupted to help a patron and then miss part of the presentation.
  Our library currently does not have a webcam; all our computers are in the very middle of the library; Sykpe seems better suited to private conversations.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Beyond Method #9

 


   Originally, I thought to try Microsoft Photo Story 3, but decided against it because it would mean loading my pictures into yet another program.  So I thought I would make a slideshow in Picasa. Then I saw that I could make a movie and upload music.  So I did that and used ccMixter to find some music.
    It wasn't really that hard, but since I didn't know what I was doing and whether it would work or not, it felt stressful.
    I see limited use for this at the library.  The cutest application would be to interview some kids (direct-to-camera) and post.

Beyond Method #8



   This was actually very easy to do using Screenr.  (The hardest part was trying to find a microphone)  Logging on to their library account is something that I regularly demonstrate to patrons, and showing is so much better than telling for something like this.  I plan to upload this screencast or one very similar to our website.

Beyond Method #7

  Click here for the first presentation I have ever created.
  I used Google Docs because I already have an account with Google, but I was very unhappy that incremental view does not work when a presentation is embedded. That stinks. So instead of embedding it here, you only get the link.
   I liked Prezi but did not realize until the very end that you could navigate it yourself instead of just watching it zoom all over.  It looks like a terrible lot of work to put together
   I think online presentation tools are great; I can see doing one for our library's website.
   If someone asked for a recommendation I would warn them about Google's glitch with incremental reveal and then point them to this portion of this class.