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#1 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 1
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Hi. I'm new to this website.
In June, my girlfriend Erica and I adopted Flash, a young adult basset hound. They told us he could get a little food aggressive every now and then. He doesn't get along with other dogs that are bigger than him. With smaller dogs, he is usually okay. Nothing was known about him when the rescue got him. They found him emaciated wandering around a highway. They estimate he is 1 - 2 years old. Having owned a basset hound in the past, a very sweet one, I quickly established myself as the alpha. He respects me, submits to me, and constantly follows me wherever I go. I live with my fiance and her 11 year old son Liam. Ever since we got him, he has been jealous. If Erica and I are sitting next to one another on the couch, he will either try to get between us or get on the other side of her and climb across her lap (and he is huge for a basset hound). I Erica is alone on the couch, he will cuddle up next to her. If Liam is alone, he will cuddle up next to him. However, over the last few nights, his behavior has changed. A few nights ago, I was on the couch and he was next to me. Erica came over and Flash started growling at her and eventually aggressively barking. This happened again yesterday to her, and again to Liam. This morning, I was at my computer and Liam tried to come into the room. Flash started aggressively growling and barking at him. I grabbed him by the collar and he turned around and started chewing on my hand. Not hard enough to break skin, but it definitely hurt. As just an FYI, usually, the form of punishment we use is a squirt gun. It will make him bark aggressively, but he eventually runs and hides under my desk (his "safety spot"). I'm not really sure what to do at this point. I love this dog, as do Erica and Liam, and I REALLY don't want to get rid of him. I would be grateful for any suggestions. Jim |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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I think Flash is trying to establish himself higher on the totem pole than your fiance. It is important for one of you to be the alpha but everyone needs to be higher than the dog and it seems to me that right now Flash thinks he is 2nd to you in the pack order.
As far as what to do for correction I am not sure, but it seems to me that is the root of the problem.
__________________
Mom to Anabelle and Lila, rescued ladies and Harley, Corgi/Beagle/Basset/?? mutt ![]() "Saving just one dog won't change the world, but it surely will change the world for that one dog." - Richard C. Call |
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#3 (permalink) | ||||||
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Senior Member
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Quote:
see [url=http://www.pawsoflife.org/pdf/Behavior/Bradshaw%202009.pdf]Dominance in domestic dogs useful construct or bad habit[url] Quote:
Quote:
Lets look at the facts. We have a known resource guarder with food, (2) Resources guarder are known to have a tendency to touch sensitivity and (3) you are provider of most of the resources available to the dog. It is not uncommon for such dogs to guard the provider of resources as well as the resources themselves. The behaviors of the dog are simply an extension of the previously known resource guarding. the best reference for Deeling with resource guarding is MINE! - A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO RESOURCE GUARDING IN DOGS is a good place to start. One popular suggestion for those that believe dogs can and do form packs with humans is a NILIF program on the idea that it a dominance/rank reduction exercise. In case like this NILIF can be helpful not because it reduces the rank or dominance of the dog or elavates that of the humans but quite simply when the wife and her son also become major suppliers of resources as well there is little reson to guard another resource provider from them. This does not change however the dogs willingness to guard you or them from another human like the nieghbor or other friends. Quote:
Modification in Animal Quote:
Jack Palance vs. Fred Astaire and Punishment: How not to do it. Quote:
What is missing from the equation you present is teaching the dog the behavior that you do want. This is another area in which a NILIF program can help. By institutionalizing reward polite and correct behavior. To often People simply ignore the good behavior in their dogs while inadvertently rewarding the dog for the obnoxious behavior (like the dog walking over them to get where it wants) hence in the end they get more obnoxious behavior and less polite behavior. |
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