Last year, Auckland Council alone received almost 17,000 reports of roaming dogs and more than 1300 reports of dog attacks on people.
In Te Puna, Wilson said residents had been wrestling with an increasing number of aggressive dogs for years.
“I walk around the road with my trusty four-iron.”
Tommy Wilson carries a golf club while walking around Te Puna to fend off roaming and aggressive dogs. Photo / RNZ, Nick Monro
Wilson said he had been forced to hit dogs.
“I’ll give them a good club and with my tokotoko. I’ll smack them ... yeah, I actually punched a dog in the face because that was the only way to get it to back off.
“It was just coming too close and snarling, baring the teeth, not looking cool. And I’m sure everyone can tell you a dog war story in this town.”
While Checkpoint was visiting Te Puna, a big dog wandered across the rugby club field, past our cameraman and up to a nearby playground where two mothers were chatting with three young children in tow.
One mother pulled a toddler close, and the other, who was carrying a baby, gave the dog a wide berth as it wandered around the playground before eventually trotting off in the direction it had come.
The roaming dog on Te Puna's rugby field. Photo / RNZ, Nick Monro
Wilson said he was not the only one to carry a weapon while out walking. He said a neighbour carried a large tokotoko (ceremonial walking stick).
“He refuses to stop walking. He’s one of the bravehearts, and I see him walking all the time, but he’s ready.”
Wilson worried he could fend off only one aggressive dog at a time with his golf club and feared for anyone caught unprepared.
“It’s when there’s more than one dog, that’s the problem. And I’m reasonably fit, even though I’m a koro. How does a little 4-, 5-, 6-year-old child fend themselves off against one dog, or a mother or an old kuia, a grandmother – they’ve got no show.”
Checkpoint's Natalie Akoorie interviewing Tommy Wilson. Photo / RNZ, Nick Monro
While there were no dogs on Te Puna Beach, where Wilson said they roamed in packs, there were dozens of paw prints.
“You can see, look, there’s dog prints there, dog prints there. If it’s just one set of footprints it’s okay, but if you see more than a set of footprints it’s usually time to U-turn and go back and go home.”
He questioned the need for owners to keep aggressive dogs, believing it was partly to guard against crime.
He said that, when his children were young, they “free-ranged” around the town.
However, it was different now, and his moko did not feel safe walking alone.
Instead, they were driven to school, which was not their local one, and would not walk 300m to their marae because they were scared.
“[There’s] usually a big bad dog sitting outside here. He’s okay for the people that live close, but he’s the one that chases and bites our car tyres and our kids are totally freaked out by him – he’s huge.”
Te Puna School principal Neil Towersey said wandering dogs sometimes appeared in the playground.
“Some of the children are terrified. I get a padder tennis bat and a cone or something noisy – go out and give it a bit of a clatter and a bang and do my best impression to scare them off, and they usually take off with their tail between their legs.”
Te Puna School principal Neil Towersey says wandering dogs sometimes appear in the playground. Photo / RNZ, Nick Monro
He said hunting dogs were particularly intimidating for the children.
“Some of them have had bad experiences with dogs. We’ve got a little boy at the moment who’s absolutely terrified of dogs, so it’s something we’re a little bit mindful of.”
That boy had been bitten by a dog.
He said the school had taught children about dog safety, and he believed the Dog Control Act “needs tightening up”.
At the town tennis courts, a German Shepherd wandered about opposite the chapel, and another dog sat and watched from afar before retreating home.
Jade, who did not want her surname used, had four dogs in her care at the town rugby field.
She said she did not live in Te Puna but went there regularly and rarely encountered aggressive dogs.
“We’ve come across some dogs that don’t look very friendly, but I can call mine back and they just come straight back, and I’ve never had any dog attacks or dog attack me out here, so that’s promising, touch wood.
A Western Bay of Plenty councillor acknowledged roaming dogs were a problem in Te Puna. Photo / RNZ, Nick Monro
She fostered rescue dogs for a charity, and the four dogs with her were not hers.
She was unsure what breeds they were.
She said it was not a dog’s fault if it was aggressive; it was up to owners to raise and socialise their dogs responsibly.
She recommended that anyone who came across an aggressive dog should not run away or show fear.
Wilson said he wanted a community effort to change attitudes, incentivise responsible dog owners and support struggling owners to provide appropriate care for their dogs.
“Let’s not leave it up to the people who don’t care. We care, and we want to do something about it.
“Hey, why should the dogs have the best beach in the world? How about us? We want our beach back.”
Western Bay of Plenty councillor and Te Puna resident Graeme Elvin said there was no doubt roaming dogs were a problem in Te Puna.
However, he believed it was a localised issue and said it had to be solved by a change in behaviour.
“It isn’t solved by throwing a whole lot of money at the problem.”
He met the council’s dog control officers on Tuesday to discuss the concerns and was impressed with their efforts.
Photo / RNZ, Nick Monro
Council general manager of regulatory services Alison Curtis declined an interview, but in a statement said that, in the past six months, the council had received 19 complaints about roaming dogs in the area, and two complaints about dog attacks, one involving a person and one involving another dog.
Both attacks were minor.
“Based on general observations, these numbers are low to average, compared with the rest of the district.”
Some of the complaints related to dogs roaming on the sports fields.