Do fences make good dog parks?
In Shoreview, where a fence is going up around a canine park along Rice Creek Regional Trail, dog owners are growling. They say that they take seriously the importance of self-policing, and that a fence would change the character of the park and the people who use it.
But Ramsey County officials say everyone has the right to use the trail without being surprised by an unleashed dog. A few people there recently told of tripping or even being bitten by unleashed dogs on a shared piece of the path.
Dog owners complain that their objections have fallen on deaf ears, while officials counter that the installation of a gated fence around the 20-acre parcel, begun this week, was never up for discussion. It had long been planned and wasn't in response to an incident, they said.
"We're trying to make it better for all users," said Greg Mack, Ramsey County's director of parks and recreation. The idea is to reduce the county's potential liability and decrease the chance that a non-dog owner will be surprised by an off-leash dog, he said. "I don't know how the boundaries take away from anyone else's experience."
This week, at the parking lot off Lexington Avenue, dog owners arrived mostly by car and either walked their pets on leashes or let them wander 50 or so feet to the fork in the trail leading to their park area. Joggers and bikers swept along, sharing the same length of trail that has been a point of human-canine convergence.
Jogger Mark Palen said he'd been knocked down by unleashed dogs on the path, and once been bitten by an old dog -- unleashed -- that didn't hear him coming on the trail and reacted out of fear.
He said he thought the fence was probably a good idea but added, "If people could control their dogs, you wouldn't need a fence."