As Kelly and I have said in the past our estate is overloaded with Chavs and staffs, for most of them their idea of training their dog to obedience is to kick it and punch it in the head for the slightest infraction.
Whilst this may teach the dog to fear its owner, it leaves the dog with a lot of pent up aggression (against the owner) which it has to released somewhere, and that's usually someone elses dog.
Because they think it is absolutely hilarious and great fun for their dogs to fight they stand back and let it happen.
Our first White GSD "Bear" (sadly gone now) was out with me in the park I was throwing the ball and he was doing his best not to let me have it back (lol)
A young couple came towards us two very young children in a double buggy and two staffs one on a harness and the on the collar.
As soon as they saw Bear they started barking and lunging (no problem coz they are secure) Until the one on the harness snapped the linkage and was on Bear in a Flash. The other one pulled so hard that it unclipped it's collar (you know the clicky in plastic type) and shot forward.
So now I'm legging it across the field and these two staffs are on Bear.
Bear was Quite a shaggy dog and the Staffs went for his neck, so all they got was mouth fulls of fur but Bear could and did get them around the neck, shook them and threw them away.
By the time we both got control of the dogs, Bear was out of breath and the Staffs had gashes in their necks.
The owners then went off at me for not having control of Bear . . .!!!????
He was running around and playing. . .
It was their aggressive dogs that kicked off and attacked in the first place, If they hadn't attacked Bear he wouldn't have had to defend himself.
These people don't want pets, they want fighting machines.
I'm glad Kira is ok, it looks like Roxy was just jealous that Kira was getting food,and had probably had to fight other dogs in its original home for food. If you don't fight for it you go hungry.