- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 0
Hello there,
A Question you get a lot of on this forum no doubt.
My parents have had a problem with a dog that their neighbours acquired (they didn't buy him and I think they took him after a friend of these neighbours said they were going to give him to a shelter). He seems like a nice enough dog, a bichon frise that the neighbours LOVE to bits. Trouble is he is becoming a bit of a nuisance. This dog barks at the slightest thing you do. Quite often my parents just need to walk into their garden to set him off and sometimes even pottering around the kitchen as normal upsets him. But it's not just humans; squirrels, cats and foxes all get him barking too. Obviously, this dog is getting a bit annoying and can easily ruin an afternoon in the garden minding your own business. As I say, you only need to simply be out in the garden for him to bark at you.
The bark is usually a string of three short sharp barks, not particularly low (at a guess it is high pitched but it could be just a normal pitch for a bichon frise) but is usually started with a growl before hand (I'm not sure whether the growl is present with the animals but it seems to be the same string of three barks for them). He can go on for hours. The neighbours seem to be a bit clueless about training him and even though my dad has put some angry notes through the door the only thing they seem to do when he's set off barking is just gently call him back into the house or if he's really transfixed pick him up and bring him in.
It seems to me that if he is frightened (which is what they claim) what these neighbours are doing are only putting a plaster on a more serious underlying problem. Being interested in dog training myself, I wondered what the right method for correcting him was since, now a year later, the current method clearly isn't working. The barking is so common that the magpies in the garden have started to mimic the dogs barking LOL.
Thanks
~Scribbled
A Question you get a lot of on this forum no doubt.
My parents have had a problem with a dog that their neighbours acquired (they didn't buy him and I think they took him after a friend of these neighbours said they were going to give him to a shelter). He seems like a nice enough dog, a bichon frise that the neighbours LOVE to bits. Trouble is he is becoming a bit of a nuisance. This dog barks at the slightest thing you do. Quite often my parents just need to walk into their garden to set him off and sometimes even pottering around the kitchen as normal upsets him. But it's not just humans; squirrels, cats and foxes all get him barking too. Obviously, this dog is getting a bit annoying and can easily ruin an afternoon in the garden minding your own business. As I say, you only need to simply be out in the garden for him to bark at you.
The bark is usually a string of three short sharp barks, not particularly low (at a guess it is high pitched but it could be just a normal pitch for a bichon frise) but is usually started with a growl before hand (I'm not sure whether the growl is present with the animals but it seems to be the same string of three barks for them). He can go on for hours. The neighbours seem to be a bit clueless about training him and even though my dad has put some angry notes through the door the only thing they seem to do when he's set off barking is just gently call him back into the house or if he's really transfixed pick him up and bring him in.
It seems to me that if he is frightened (which is what they claim) what these neighbours are doing are only putting a plaster on a more serious underlying problem. Being interested in dog training myself, I wondered what the right method for correcting him was since, now a year later, the current method clearly isn't working. The barking is so common that the magpies in the garden have started to mimic the dogs barking LOL.
Thanks
~Scribbled