My pet hate: dogs in cafes | pets

Nell Frizzell’s article is true in every respect (Why are pet owners more popular than parents?, April 4). I appreciate that food outlets have suffered or closed since the pandemic, but canines of any size are apparently now most welcome. I tread warily through cafes, worried I will step on a dog’s tail or paw and incur the owner’s fury. And woe betide you if you challenge a cafe owner or dog owner – totally terrifying.
Julia Edwards
Winchester

A friend from the US attended St Catharine’s College, Cambridge, in the early 1970s. He and his wife came on the QEII and brought their pet skunk (Pass notes, 29 March). It had been de-skunked – that must have been legal then. I presumed it needed to be rabies-free.
Sheila Bradford
Cheadle Hulme, Greater Manchester

Your footnote on Terence Smith’s article (4 April) describes him as a “former armed robber”. Does that mean, then, that we should describe all convicted criminals in the past tense, eg a “former murderer”?
Ken Pugh
Powys Service, Vale of Glamorgan

The war against wee (The war against wild toileting: is there any way to stop people weeing – and worse – in the street?, April 5) has biblical authority. See 1 Kings 21:21: “Behold, I will bring evil upon thee, and will take away thy posterity, and will cut off from Ahab him that pissed against the wall…” There are several other references in Samuel and Kings.
Meic Goodyear
Lewes, East Sussex

Next time you meet someone who doesn’t like “sharing plates”, or tapas-style meals, ask them if they are an only child (Letters, April 4). They usually are.
Davina Jones
Durham

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