'Frenzied': Dogs attack car, kill cat

Flora Smith holds the remains of her destroyed right front mudguard while her car bears the scars...
Flora Smith holds the remains of her destroyed right front mudguard while her car bears the scars of the dog attack. Photo: Sally Brooker
A Christchurch woman staying with her sister in a quiet Oamaru street has had her car badly damaged by dogs that also left a stray cat dead at the scene.

Flora Smith heard what sounded like ferocious dog snarling for about 10 minutes in the early hours of Saturday.

When her sister’s caregiver arrived at the Exe St house on Saturday morning, she asked what had happened to Ms Smith’s car and did she know there was a dead cat nearby.

Ms Smith was astonished to find dozens of bite and claw marks above the right front wheel of her car. The heavy rubber mudguard had been torn in two, parts of it crumbled into small pieces, and one section was also riddled with many small holes.

Part of the damaged mudguard rubbed on the tyre when she tried to drive the car, so she had to get her great-nephew to remove it completely.

Ms Smith phoned her insurer to describe what had happened and to ask about repairs.

The paintwork above the right front wheel is badly damaged and the panels have been ripped apart....
The paintwork above the right front wheel is badly damaged and the panels have been ripped apart. Photo: Sally Brooker
Then she called the police, who said there was nothing they could do. But they recommended she contact the Waitaki District Council’s animal control department.

“I am sure there were at least two dogs and one of them sounded large with a deep bark and another a smaller dog with a lighter bark,” she said.

“Both sounded quite frenzied.

“I feel that if dogs are roaming the streets at night and can inflict such damage on a car, what can they do to an unwary human?”

She was also concerned about the penguins that came ashore nearby.

Ms Smith wondered if the stray cat had climbed on to her car tyre to try to escape the dogs, to no avail.

Her sister recognised the dead cat as one of a group of neighbourhood strays.

Council regulatory manager Andrew Bardsley said he spoke to Ms Smith and assured her he would follow up on the matter.

The council has asked its animal control officers to carry out evening patrols around the area.

It also reminded residents to make sure their dogs could not roam at nights and did not pose a danger to people or animals.

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