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#1 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: West Yorkshire U.K
Posts: 3
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Hi all.
Any help or information you could offer is much appreciated. Hobbes our 18 month old Dog when out walking on the leash on 3 occasions over a two week period has crossed in front of me to launch himself at a passerby when he does this he also growls and tries to snap as it is not expected by me i find myself pulling him away in shock and after the matter i tell him off and apologies to the other pedestrian. please advise as i am worried as to his behaviour and need to stop this soon. many thanks Amanda |
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#2 (permalink) | ||||
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Senior Member
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Keep in mind if the dog intent was to cause injury it would not be growling or even snaping these are all means for the dog to comunicate stay away Quote:
Canine Concepts Quote:
AGGRESSION: A Case History with Harry T Help! My On-Leash Dog Barks and Lunges at Other Dogs! keep in mind if it is dog or people the cause of the behavior and how to correct the behavior are not different. Quote:
Nick Jones of Alpha Dog Behaviour discusses aggression when on the lead, and how to cope with it includes video resource FEISTY FIDO - HELP FOR THE LEASH REACTIVE DOG, 2ND EDITION Keep in mind if you observe similar reaction or behaviors in situation in which the dog is not on a leash the the treatment needs to take a different approach. Last edited by Mikey T; 06-09-2011 at 10:19 AM. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: West Yorkshire U.K
Posts: 3
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Mikey. Many thanks for your reply ,
Hobbes is fine off the lead when he meets other dogs he assumes they are all his friend ( whether on the leash or off it ) Sometimes when off the lead and we meet a human he does approach them but no aggression is shown he has a sniff then goes on his way but other times he will jump up at them. ( he jumps up a lot to greet visitors ) This does not happen all the time today we have walked a good 2 miles on and off the leash and with lots off passersby and had no problems at all. ( somebody said he was protecting me ? but like i said its not with every stranger ) ( somebody else said it maybe his coming of age ? ) I will take all your ideas / information and thank you again. |
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#4 (permalink) | ||||
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Senior Member
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Quick Fix for a Jumping Dog Quote:
I tend to dislike this explaination also not because it may not be correct but because the conotation for the future and how humans react at the explaination. That is oh he just portecting me so the behavior is not so bad, heck it is sort of a good thing. Keep in mind you need not know what the dog is thining or the cause of the behavior in order to change it. Teach a more appropriate behavior and reward it and the inappropriate behavior goes away. Quote:
Toughy see avitar on two occasions in his life acted extremely fearful at the approach of strangers. On case occured on a walk in the wood behind the house when approach by a neighbor down the street. The other on a very Urban boston china town street when approach by what appeared to be to individuals just getting off working "the oldest Profession" the common thread. All were female. but then again he great 100's if not 1000's of other females without cowering and hiding behind me. The ages and dress of the females were obviously very diferent as well as how they walked and approached, sneaker vs 6" stilleto cause women to walk very diferently. the one common demoninatior perfume. Can say the scent/brand etc was the same but let us just say you could smell both of them approaching long before you could see them. Was the heavy perfume the cause of toughy's reaction posiibly but with only two incidents hard to pinpoint but I think it is likely. You just never know what will trigger a dog but it is likely some asspect of a human the did not have much or any contact with in the early socialization period. Quote:
Canine Adolescence What you are dealing with is on lead aggression, it is fairly common and the result of a complect ineteraction between triggers, dog and owner but not that difficult to deal with via distraction and rewarding an incompatible behavior like remaining calm., It does help emensely houever if you either know what the triggers are or can read the dog well and act/react proactively to the first sines of arousal instead of waiting until the dog is growling, lunging and snaping. In this regard learn Calming Signal and doggy boddy lanquge can be exptremely important as well as The fine are of Observation ON TALKING TERMS WITH DOGS - CALMING SIGNALS, 2ND EDITION BODY POSTURE & EMOTIONS - SHIFTING SHAPES, SHIFTING MINDS CANINE BODY LANGUAGE - A PHOTOGRAPHIC GUIDE |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Edmonton, Alberta
Posts: 692
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I had a normally very friendly to submissive basset lunge and bark and snap at a new neighbor once. It was all I could do to keep him from sinking his teeth in the man's leg. It really scared me. I had no idea why it happened. Two weeks later I discovered he had just gotten out of jail, and was a convicted pedophile. I guess the dog could smell something I couldn't.
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