
Terrierman's Daily Dose
Information on working terriers, dogs, natural history, hunting, and the environment, with occasional political commentary as I see fit. This web log is associated with the Terrierman.com web site.
Thursday, December 04, 2025
Poison for Profit

Wednesday, December 03, 2025
At Least Six Possibilities
Be Here Now
"Death is always on the way, but the fact that you don't know when it will arrive seems to take away from the finiteness of life. It's that terrible precision that we hate so much. But because we don't know, we get to think of life as an inexhaustible well. Yet everything happens a certain number of times, and a very small number, really. How many more times will you remember a certain afternoon of your childhood, some afternoon that's so deeply a part of your being that you can't even conceive of your life without it? Perhaps four or five times more. Perhaps not even. How many more times will you watch the full moon rise? Perhaps twenty. And yet it all seems limitless."
Tuesday, December 02, 2025
Small Signs in the Hedge
Three Kinds of Trouble
Monday, December 01, 2025
Unmistakable
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Diversity vs Conformity
During Rolissa’s research on dog training, she became fascinated by a new breed and decided she wanted to pursue Bullmastiffs. But again, she discovered that her biggest roadblock to getting the dog she wanted was her skin color. “Once they found out I was Black, they didn’t want to sell me a Bullmastiff,” she said….The majority of people in Rolissa’s training classes had limited social exposure to Black people before. The same was true at Obedience competitions. But she realized that once fellow competitors saw she knew what she was doing in the ring, and she knew how to control her imposing dog, their attitudes changed. “The more people that got to know me, the more their reactions to me changed,” Rolissa said. “I don’t know if they got past my color, but I got past their judgement.”….
On trips to the Midwest and South, Rolissa’s husband would stay in the car. “I cannot go inside and watch. You’re going to places where there are no Blacks, Rolissa,” he said.
“But there are no Blacks anywhere,” Rolissa responded. At the time, Rolissa had never seen another Black person show a dog in Conformation.
“Never. Ever. Nowhere. Anytime. I would walk in places and they literally had their mouths hanging open. It was the strangest feeling, but I had an objective. The objective was to enjoy myself and to give back. Not just to give back to my dogs but to give back to me.”….
It wasn’t until the early ‘90s that Rolissa saw another Black woman competing in the show ring. A few years later, at the Bullmastiff National, a group of Black people came in with about 20 gorgeous Bullmastiffs. They didn’t win anything. Not their class, not a placement. Nothing.
“Don’t let this define you,” Rolissa told them, encouraging them to stick with it. “If you keep coming and you don’t get bitter, you will win. But you have to keep coming out. You have to keep pushing forward to get the respect you deserve. If you leave, they’ve won.”
That was the first and last time Rolissa ever saw them.
Misogyny at Westminster

Friday, November 28, 2025
Turkey Trotter
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Wild Wolf-Dog Hybrids In Italy
Genetic evidence reveals extensive wolf-dog hybridisation in peninsular Italy: warnings against ineffective management by Di Rita Lorenzini, Antonella Pizzarelli, Lorenzo Attili, Massimo Biagetti. Carla Sebastiani, Paolo Ciucci, in stampa in Biological Conservation.Highlights:• Wolf-dog hybridisation (WDH) is a relevant and emerging threat for European wolves.• Using tissue samples from 774 wolves we assessed WDH in peninsular Italy, 2020–2024.• Peninsular Italian wolves suffer from widespread (46.7 %), ongoing dog introgression.• Persistent lack of management will likely cause complete admixture (genetic swamping).• The genetic integrity of wolves is crucial to assess their conservation status.
Silly on a Stick
Specialized things are specialized for a reason.
This is true of dogs, as I have noted in the past. A terrier small enough to go to ground cannot also be large enough to be a really excellent all-day retriever. You may get a small dog that can retrieve a few birds, but it will not be as good a dog as a dedicated breed on either end of the spectrum.
More likely, by planting one foot on the dock and one foot on the boat, you are going to end up in the water. Sometimes it's best to make a decision and not get somewhere in the middle.
And so it is with guns and fishing rods. One is not like the other, and if you need both out in the woods, might I suggest a reasonably-priced four-piece Eagle Claw pack rod paired with a Smith and Wesson .22 Kit Gun or its analog made by Taurus?
But no, an American genius has decided what the world really needs is a 1-pound pack-rifle and fishing pole combination.
As a fishing pole, it appears to be a wonderful tire iron, and as a rifle it appears to be a wonderful tire iron that loads one shot at a time and might blow up in your face.
To repeat: Specialized things are specialized for a reason.
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Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Every Breed Is a “Designer” Dog

Cujo I and Cujo II
Reforestation Success in Costa Rica
The country's success is due to government policies that made logging illegal without permits and implementing a groundbreaking Payment for Environmental Services (PES) program that financially incentivizes landowners for conservation.
Other strategies include expanding sustainable forest management and landscape restoration programs, creating national parks, and planting native trees.
These efforts have created new economic opportunities through ecoa-tourism and a rise in GDP, and the country is now recognized as a leader in forest conservation.
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
A Damn Good Job
How Did an American Bird Get Called Turkey?
The Kennel Club Doubled Down on Inbreeding?
Disappointment Turned to Optimism

Monday, November 24, 2025
On This Day, On the Origin of Species
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Saturday, November 22, 2025
Article VI, US Constitution
“An order requiring the performance of a military duty or act may be disobeyed when such act is unlawful.” — Manual for Courts-Martial United States (2024), Part IV, ¶ 14.c.(2)(a)(i)
In a Single Life Time
Friday, November 21, 2025
Terrier Longevity Vs Brachycephalics
“Jack Russell Terriers and Yorkshire Terriers have the highest life expectancies of dog breeds in the UK, according to a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports. However, flat-faced breeds such as French Bulldogs and Pugs have some of the lowest life expectancies.“Kendy Tzu-yun Teng, Dan O'Neill and colleagues analyzed 30,563 records of dog deaths from veterinary practices across the UK between 2016 and 2020 using the VetCompass database, categorized into 18 dog breeds recognized by the Kennel Club and also a group of crossbreed dogs. They created life tables which calculate life expectancy throughout the life cycle, starting at birth (0 years).“Jack Russell Terriers had the highest life expectancy at birth (12.72 years), followed by Yorkshire Terriers (12.54 years), Border Collies (12.10 years), and Springer Spaniels (11.92 years). In contrast, French Bulldogs had the lowest life expectancy at birth (4.53 years). This is approximately three years less than other flat-faced breeds that showed low life expectancies at birth including English Bulldogs (7.39 years) and Pugs (7.65 years). The authors propose that these short life expectancies could result from the high health risks known to occur in these flat-faced breeds.“Across all dog breeds, the average life expectancy at age 0 for male dogs was 11.1 years, four months shorter than the estimate for female dogs. Dogs that had been neutered had a higher life expectancy (11.98 years for females and 11.49 years for males) than those that were not neutered (10.50 years for females and 10.58 years for males). The authors discuss the potential benefits of neutering and associated increased life expectancy and whether neutering could possibly reflect more responsible dog owners and better care.
Thursday, November 20, 2025
The Local Doomsday Bunker

I was having a coffee with my wife at my local coffee establishment, when my cell phone died, necessitating a reach for a nearly week-old analog version of the local small town newspaper.
There, I found a fascinating story, by James Rada, Jr., detailing the hollowing out of a portion of nearby South Mountain in the 1950s, in order to build a massive atom-bomb-proof bunker to house politicians and military personnel should that be needed following a nuclear attack.
The Raven Rock site was chosen because “the mountain was made a very hard green stone granite, the fourth hardest mineral on the planet. At the time it was believed that the underground bunker could withstand a nuclear attack.”
Right. That same Catoctin Greenstone is the hard stuff on which my house sits. It’s a type of meta-basalt, green schist, or prasinite that was laid down about 570 million years ago, making it older than the rings of Saturn or the North Star.
I’ve shifted a bit of this stuff, and it’s as hard as Easter Island hammer stone.
So how much of this stuff was blasted out? Apparently, half a million cubic yards over the space of 10 months. Wow. A big dump truck might hold 15 cubic yards of material. To move half a million cubic yards, you would need over 33,000 dump truck loads.
The hollow part is a half a mile inside the mountain, and a half mile below the peak. Inside is a facility the size of a small town, complete with fire department, police department, medical facilities, bowling alley, and a dining facility serving four meals a day. The buildings inside are as tall as three stories.
Today, the site appears to be a communications facility which houses part of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.

All Aboard the Change Train
Nature or Nurture?
Domesticated or wild? Tame or feral?
It’s not quite that simple is it?
Yes, if you are painting broadly, wolves as a group are “wild,” and one on a leash can be described as “tame”.
Conversely, dogs as a group are “domesticated,” but an adult dog that was born in a dump far from humans, eats roadkill, and has never seen the inside of a building or worn a collar on its neck can be described as “feral”.
But things fall apart and come together if we look a bit closer.
Take a truly feral adult dog or cat.
Can they be rehabilitated?
It depends on the animal, but it’s *always* difficult, as truly feral adult cats and dogs are as fearful of people as a naturally wild animal.
Why is that?
Well, it seems the process of “going feral” in dogs and cats fundamentally changes how their brain and central nervous systems deal with novelty.
Anxiety is almost always on the front burner.
These genetically “domesticated” dogs and cats have been effectively “wired for wild”.
Where and when does this wiring occur?
It occurs in the Limbic System of the brain, and it occurs in the first few days and weeks after birth.
What’s the Limbic System?
The Limbic System is the part of an individual animal’s brain that controls “flight or fight,” emotion, fear, and mood.
An individual animal’s Limbic System is wired and rewired starting at birth and over the next few weeks.
Changes in the Limbic System are, as far as we can tell, one-way events.
What’s that mean? It means that if a domesticated animal, such as a dog or cat, is born and raised to adulthood without human contact, it’s always going to be wild, and its “flight or fight” button will govern a great deal of its life.
Conversely, if a wild animal, such as a wolf or big cat, is born and raised to adulthood with lots of positive human contact, its “flight or fight” button will be attenuated due to changes made to the Limbic System shortly after birth
What about domesticated dogs that are born with genetic fear?
There’s a topic that too often gets little attention!
Dogs born with genetic fear may have been well-cared for through their first 12 weeks of life, but they remain anxious and hand-shy nonetheless. These animals are, in the words of Lady Gaga “born that way”.
Can they be “fixed”?
Not easily.
A dog with genetic fear is a dog with a broken Limbic System. People are free to do what they want, but in my opinion a dog with genetic fear needs to be put down as humanely as possible, as the defect is in the brain, and makes them maladaptive as a pet.
Now, let’s flip it around and look at it the other way. What about wild animals that are captured when only a few days old?
Here things go in the opposite direction. Several things are happening in this situation, especially with animals whose eyes are not yet open.
Imprinting, socialization, and rewards-based training all work together in this scenario to “tame” the natural fear of humans that pervades most wild animals.
This is Limbic Imprinting.
Limbic Imprinting begins with Filial Imprinting, in which baby animals naturally follow the first moving thing they see. When that instinctive behavior is rewarded with food, warmth. and positive contact, the imprinting that occurs is likely permanent, and certainly difficult to change.
Why is it so hard to change?
That’s because an animal’s neonatal experience wires, or rewires, the brain’s Limbic System (aka, the paleo-mammalian cortex) which is involved in emotional processing and motivation in vertebrate animals.
Limbic Imprinting is a physical thing, and it’s key to understanding why the “taming” of wild animals captured when only a few hours or days old, is so often successful.
Limbic Imprinting also explains why adult feral versions of “domesticated” animals are so difficult to work with despite descending from thousands of years of domestic stock.
Can “wild” animals taken at birth be tamed to the point of being far safer and more tractable than adult “domesticated” animals allowed to go fully feral?
Absolutely. We can see that in every country, every culture, in every era, and with damn near every animal, from elephants to lions, from chimpanzees to cheetahs, from horses to buffalo, from camels to red fox, and from badger to wolves.
Some wild animals seem to tame rather easily, such as camels, horses, water buffalos, yaks, ducks, geese, hamsters, pigs, wild cats, and junglefowl.
These same animals, of course, have no trouble going feral.
Are they domesticated animals going feral, or wild animals made tame?
Does it matter?
It’s really a tautological word game isn’t it? Six of one and half a dozen of the other, as the old saying goes.
To be clear, imprinting and training *alone* will not make a wolf a bird dog or a good family pet.
Even if a “wild” animal is always friendly and safe, there will be other issues that remain; size, urine marking, denning behavior, food caching, and the like. And, in the case of coyotes, foxes, and wolves, their body movements and play behavior may not be dog-like.
But can a wolf stolen from the den at two days old be turned into an animal that is safer than a three year old poorly socialized and truly feral 120-pound dog?
Absolutely.
And so now we get down to it: “domesticated” does not mean much,
Despite being domesticated for over 15,000 years, pet dogs routinely kill sheep and goats, kill other dogs, and maul and kill people.
And what about cattle and horses? They’ve been domesticated for millennia, but woe be the fool that crosses the wire into a bull pasture.
If you go to Pamplona and find yourself running with four feet of horn and two thousand pounds of muscle bearing down on you, be sure to yell backwards, “But you’re domesticated!” I’m sure that will work wonders.
By the way, a truly feral dog is NOT the same as a stray or a village dog. Strays and village dogs generally have had quite a lot of experience with humans, early on, and these animals see people as potential sources for food handouts. A truly feral dog does not.
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RELATED POSTS:
▪️Konrad Lorenz Did Not Discover Imprinting >> https://terriermandotcom.blogspot.com/2025/11/konrad-lorenz-did-not-discover.html?
▪️The Wolf In the Dog House >> https://terriermandotcom.blogspot.com/2012/01/distinctions-without-difference.html?
▪️The Stolen Wolves of Kazakhstan >> https://terriermandotcom.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-stolen-wolves-of-kazakhstan.html?
▪️ Who Domesticated Whom? And Why? >> https://terriermandotcom.blogspot.com/2011/09/who-domesticated-whom-and-why.html?
▪️ The Wolves of Tbilisi Street >> https://terriermandotcom.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-wolves-of-tbilisi-street.html?






































