Bring a fucking playpen or game at your house. Jeebus Christmas.
Absolutely this.
Maybe their house isn't as comfortable as yours, but if they don't like the 'impact' the resident dog has on their child, they could get a babysitter.
'Shells'
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Bring a fucking playpen or game at your house. Jeebus Christmas.
Absolutely this.
Maybe their house isn't as comfortable as yours, but if they don't like the 'impact' the resident dog has on their child, they could get a babysitter.
Um, maybe it's the southern in me, but when my kids were babies and we brought them somewhere, we assumed we were the ones having to make the accommodation, rather than asking the hosts to do so. (Would have never DREAMED of doing such a thing.) I think the most we might have asked is if someone had a quiet area we would be able to set up the Pack n'Play or whatever.
When I was kid my parents would occasionally ask for accommodation. Like if they visited the couple where the wife like to walk around naked, they would explain that they could not get a baby sitter, that if they came they'd need to bring the kid, and they'd need her to keep her pants on. (Even at six I told my parents they should not go to all that trouble on my account. ) But they would ask *before* they accepted the invitation, and if they could not be accommodated , they would just not accept the invitation.
Ollie does tend (still) to be barky, no? I could see if there was a way to keep him away from the baby if they were worried about the two of them working each other up, maybe. If it's just "ooh, dog germs", NSM then.
Years ago, I used to hang out with a group of friends who visited a beach house over New Year's Eve every year.
The first year with Bartleby was fine. The other two visiting dogs were massively laid back and everyone got on fine.
The second year, unfortunately, the householder's new girlfriend had a Jack Russell with appalling manners. She kept attacking Bartleby and the owner would giggle something like 'She's such a scamp.' At one point, (after he'd dug in between me and a wall to avoid her) I very calmly got our stuff together and prepared to leave. It was 10pm.
I wasn't angry but I also wasn't going to spend the night fretting about my dog's safety. They didn't see a need to restrain their dog and I didn't see a need to be upset about it.
It was their house, their rules. I had no right to ask them to do anything they did not want to do.
I guess I'm with Barb in that way. I would NEVER ask someone to behave differently in their own home.
We're a couple of hours into it and thus far we've been asked to:
* Put the dog away while the baby fed and
* Block the television because the baby isn't "allowed" to watch tv.
I am so very over this.
Ollie is still barky - which is for sure on us for being bad dog owners. But she had her husband walk in to the house, say "Baby is sleeping. Can you lock up Ollie so he doesn't wake her up?" Didn't say hi, didn't even come ALL THE WAY into the house.
Aims, that is bullshit. They should stay home.
Block the television because the baby isn't "allowed" to watch tv.
OK, this is ridiculous.
Wow. Just wow.
Well, that would be an invitation I would not extend again.
I ask everyone who enters my home if they have a problem with dogs. Clients get a mega-pass on issues such that the little guy does not come into the office. In 10 years, I've only ever had one person completely reject having him around.
BUT, if someone opted into a social event at my house, knowing that Bartleby is a resident, and asked me to 'put him away', I'd suggest that their legitimate discomfort would be immediately alleviated by their departure.