... hunting dog shot in head & buried in Algonquin Park
http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/o...park-1.3864379
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... hunting dog shot in head & buried in Algonquin Park
http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/o...park-1.3864379
Sent from my SM-T560NU using Tapatalk
So they shot the dog by accident and buried the evidence.
If they only knew how much heartache a missing dog brings to an owner.
I had a dog stolen . He would be 18 now so long dead but still .....
I highly doubt it was an accident.
It sure wasn't the owner, more than likely a neighbouring camp who are ticked off or an anti dog camp.
Shouldn't be too hard to find out who was hunting in the area and put the heat on them until someone talks.
Then go after them with the fullest extent of the law.
isn't AP closed to hunting..?
A similar story from a friend in Germany just a few days ago. A dog went missing while hunting. The GPS signal went dead. Finally they located the dead dog sans the GPS collar shot and covered by some brush.
Perhaps a case of mistaken identity (target).
Mine wear orange collars.
If I read correctly , one of the reasons some areas have been closed to coyote hunting is that people mistake them for a wolf and have shot wolves. Obviously mistakes are made.
Even so, the person should have had the integrity to try to contact the owner and be a man/woman.
I am not defending the person but it could be easy to think it was a coyote. Twice of have seen blonde yotes and other than their ears they looked just like my goldens. Even my hubby thought it was one of our dogs eating apples under the apple tree. Last year I saw a yote that was black/tan. It looked just like a german shepard until it got up close. I didn't shoot at first because I thought it was the neighbours dog and then it was to late.
deb