By Anonymous - 13/05/2009 18:49 - United States

Today, I let my 5 year-old niece walk my 3 month-old husky puppy while I watched. I didn't realize how strong my puppy actually is until she took off running while dragging my niece with her. My niece now has two busted up knees and chin and her mother is now calling my puppy "demon puppy." FML
I agree, your life sucks 40 268
You deserved it 26 814

demonpuppy tells us more.

demonpuppy 0

Hey you guys, the OP here! I just wanted to clear some things up. My puppy is very sweet. She has never pulled anyone else while on the leash. She's actually one of the most timid dogs I've ever owned and yes, I have owned dogs before and I know the breed. But because she is a puppy anomaly and doesn't pull, I thought it would be ok for my niece to walk her as I walked next to them. Also, this took place in my fenced off back yard. I do however have a stone terrace, which is where my niece got pulled over on. I know that my niece getting hurt is probably my fault and I've now learned that my puppy goes crazy when there are squirrels in sight. I've apologized to my sister-in-law. My niece is fine, she was back up and playing within minutes, but her mother wont let her near my puppy and I got a talking to. So, hope that clears some things up for you guys.

Top comments

Vilen1025 0

I clicked both "I agree, your life is f***ed" and "you deserved that one". While you didn't know its strength, you should *not* have let your niece handle it.

Stupid that she's not allowed near the puppy anymore. The puppy didn't mean any harm, your niece probably barely even cared about getting hurt, and her mom is just feeding a possible fear for puppies and/or dogs.

Comments

I love that her mum calls it a "demon puppy". It's not like he did it on purpose but you should've at least walked with your niece whilst she held the lead so you had more control. Oh well, you know now!

organismal 0

you kinda deserve that, haha, though the poor kid didn't. you should have known that huskies are extremely high energy and strong. my friend has a husky, and she wrestles with it. not just playful, it's full out wresting, with both of them on the floor, looking like they're almost fighting.

dude i have had a husky/malamute mix for 14 years and never once have i been able to walk her without her yanking my ******* arm off. maybe you should learn more about the dog breed before you buy it...

#19 - Not HONESTLY pissed off. Anything to do with physical harm to a child especially under 10 is a big deal. Maybe I'm alone in that, but this was easily avoidable, and completely moronic.

if you own a husky, you should KNOW they're strong. maybe you should've done a little more research. at least you were watching her. but still, THINK.

screw all these people...go tell your sister (since the child is your niece) that the puppy accidentally pulled her kid over...no permanent damage = stronger child - "pain is weakness leaving the body"- ~USMC

the child hurt her knees and it is the ops fault for not researching huskies and their energy levels before letting a five ear old child take it for a walk you are clearly a dumb ass too because you clearlythink that pain is fun. YAY I HURT!!WOO ******* HOO

That's what you get for owning a husky. Most are demons - the nippy, snappy, overly energetic kind.

they can be nice you just don't let your five year old neice take your puppy for a walk

i can relate though.. i have a labsky (husky/lab cross) that just turned one.. and even as a little puppy she could have pulled my arm out of my socket if i wasn't paying attention.. which i would have never guessed! either way large breed dogs are still awesome! better than those yappy small dogs haha jk.. sort of.. hope your niece heals quickly and isn't scared of dogs for life :P

That's what you get for owning a husky. Just wait until it's a larger, nippy, ill-behaved, screaming, overly energetic dog. Fun for all.

Only if you don't train it properly. It isn't a cat. You Have to Work. If you're referring to some experience with it, all animals have a chance to be like that and isn't specific for one breed, even if it is more prelavent with certain breeds. in the end it still requires training, not dog's fault.

Smiledog.jpg? Your niece is a ******* wimp.