Then I suspect at sometime you have encountered THE TERRIER BARRIER! Where by you seek to get close to your spouse and find out the terrier has placed themselves in the intervening space!J.R.@A&M wrote: ↑Fri Jul 19, 2019 12:19 pmWe also have a terrier task force.crazy2medic wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2019 7:43 pmWe have 4 big dogs and several terriers, two of the big dogs a black lab about 60lbs and a shepherd mix she's pushing 70lbs, those two are a force to be reckoned with, the other two,a yellow lab 70lbs and the Chocolate lab he's 105lbs, they are an unknown, the terrier their hearing is amazing, I believe they could here my neighbor sneeze if he was outside, my wife she sleeps hard, doesn't wake up easy, as for me all my years of firefighting I don't sleep hard at all and I don't wake up groggy, my P14 is cocked and locked on the nite stand, two spare 14rd mags and my tactical flashlight, if my wife did get up in the middle of the night it would wake me up, plus the dogs wouldn't alert! If it was a stranger the terrier would hear them outside, and definitely if they tried to break in and they would go nuts!pushpullpete wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2019 5:01 pmSome people are truly unprepared or grossly under prepared. I'm sorry for the family and hope this really was an accident.crazy2medic wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2019 3:02 pm I'll repeat a previous statement, who does not recognize their spouse's form in the dark? I seriously doubt anybody who claims "I didn't know it was my wife" REALLY? the fact she wasn't laying beside you in bed?
My wife really likes cotton pjs so, recognizing her form in the dark....it's not her form. It's the way the material falls & could be anyone
that is her approx size or someone taller squatting down. I've taught myself when I wake to put on glasses, pick up light in right hand,
pistol in left & visually check for wife. Visually because once asleep she prefers not to be awakened by touch. One bloody nose 35+ yrs
ago was all the learning I needed. I make it a point to never turn on a light at night unless absolutely needed. It familiarizes you to the
shapes & shadows in your own space so you're more likely to notice when something isn't right. We have four dogs (totaling 245/250 lbs)
that sleep within the house. Each has their own favorite spot & will alert to the grandkids if they happen to be sleep walking w the
largest at 108 that sleeps about 8 ft away from me. If a BG is close I know I have precious seconds to protect my loved ones.
Training & practice, you can't do too much.
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Return to “MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder”
- Fri Jul 19, 2019 4:56 pm
- Forum: Never Again!!
- Topic: MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder
- Replies: 13
- Views: 10683
Re: MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder
- Mon Jul 15, 2019 7:43 pm
- Forum: Never Again!!
- Topic: MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder
- Replies: 13
- Views: 10683
Re: MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder
We have 4 big dogs and several terriers, two of the big dogs a black lab about 60lbs and a shepherd mix she's pushing 70lbs, those two are a force to be reckoned with, the other two,a yellow lab 70lbs and the Chocolate lab he's 105lbs, they are an unknown, the terrier their hearing is amazing, I believe they could here my neighbor sneeze if he was outside, my wife she sleeps hard, doesn't wake up easy, as for me all my years of firefighting I don't sleep hard at all and I don't wake up groggy, my P14 is cocked and locked on the nite stand, two spare 14rd mags and my tactical flashlight, if my wife did get up in the middle of the night it would wake me up, plus the dogs wouldn't alert! If it was a stranger the terrier would hear them outside, and definitely if they tried to break in and they would go nuts!pushpullpete wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2019 5:01 pmSome people are truly unprepared or grossly under prepared. I'm sorry for the family and hope this really was an accident.crazy2medic wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2019 3:02 pm I'll repeat a previous statement, who does not recognize their spouse's form in the dark? I seriously doubt anybody who claims "I didn't know it was my wife" REALLY? the fact she wasn't laying beside you in bed?
My wife really likes cotton pjs so, recognizing her form in the dark....it's not her form. It's the way the material falls & could be anyone
that is her approx size or someone taller squatting down. I've taught myself when I wake to put on glasses, pick up light in right hand,
pistol in left & visually check for wife. Visually because once asleep she prefers not to be awakened by touch. One bloody nose 35+ yrs
ago was all the learning I needed. I make it a point to never turn on a light at night unless absolutely needed. It familiarizes you to the
shapes & shadows in your own space so you're more likely to notice when something isn't right. We have four dogs (totaling 245/250 lbs)
that sleep within the house. Each has their own favorite spot & will alert to the grandkids if they happen to be sleep walking w the
largest at 108 that sleeps about 8 ft away from me. If a BG is close I know I have precious seconds to protect my loved ones.
Training & practice, you can't do too much.
- Mon Jul 15, 2019 3:02 pm
- Forum: Never Again!!
- Topic: MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder
- Replies: 13
- Views: 10683
Re: MI: Man shoots kills his wife mistaking her for an intruder
I'll repeat a previous statement, who does not recognize their spouse's form in the dark? I seriously doubt anybody who claims "I didn't know it was my wife" REALLY? the fact she wasn't laying beside you in bed?