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Question:

I bumped in to a car in front of me at low speed leaving scuff marks on the rear bumper. bodily injury claim?

Earlier this year I bumped in to someone's car leaving scuff marks on her bumper. she claimed 3000 dollars from my insurance company for repairs. Now she has a lawyer and is asking about 10,000 something dollars for bodily injury of I don't know what kind.My question is would my premium go crazily up if insurance company settles the claim to her demand? it has already gone up by 10 dollars. What are the other consequences? I have a liability insurance that covers bodily injuries.

Answer:

This is normal for some males. If it bothers you or if his marking of public things gets you in trouble simply walk him round in the same area and he will empty his bladder. If you have an area which is not a public property item like the fire hydrant such as an area in your allowed dog walking area where you live he will catch on to his favorite area to mark and empty his entire bladder. Also try not walking him out of his immediate area until he empties his bladder. Walk him round in your immediate area until he empties and then go for walk down street. He will learn to empty to get a walk. good luck
someone has to scrub the toilets. just sayin.
Just thought I would put in my two cents (now that our money is so deflated, I guess my two cents is worth less than it would have been years agoanyways). Something that helped me was this thing called The Secrets to Dog Training. It's created by a professional trainer, so you pretty much learn to be a 'dog whisperer' without paying someone huge bucks to train your dog for you. I hope it helps you.
Hey I see you need some sort of guide that will give you tips and tricks to help your dog become fully trained and more healthy. Recently one of my friends really needed some advice on how to train his dog. He followed the dog training course to successfully have a full trained dog in a few weeks.
You don't need to let him do that all the time - a walk should be on your terms not his. Let him pee as much as he obviously needs to, but if you think he is just marking territory, just give him a tug on the leash and make him keep walking. By controlling his actions you are telling him you are charge, and he needs to know that. They will always try, but less so if you teach him it's not his decision. It's what dogs do, like little kids dancing in the parking lot - you just need to tell him no.

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