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Like I said go for a lie down and chill
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Like I said go for a lie down and chill
Growling is not aggression, it is a behaviour that indicates the dog is not happy in the situation, punishing a dog for growling eventually results in the dog not warning that it is uncomfortable & the behaviour will escalate to snapping & if that is punished too then upwards to biting.
Teaching a very strong focus on you is the way to go. Have you done any formal training with her?
Just a small different idea, in your original post you say she reacted differently meeting a male and a female. A lot of bitches tell a male off if she thinks its paying to much attention to her rear. And most males accept being told off, even a small female 'gets away with' telling a large male off. Now obviously I haven't seen yours so cant say this is right but its a possible.
Growling is not aggression, it is a behaviour that indicates the dog is not happy in the situation, punishing a dog for growling eventually results in the dog not warning that it is uncomfortable & the behaviour will escalate to snapping & if that is punished too then upwards to biting.
Teaching a very strong focus on you is the way to go. Have you done any formal training with her?
I agree with Hemlock here - if there is something in the vicinity that is making your dog anxious, she'll be a whole lot more anxious if she can't look at it. It can help if it gives your dog another option rather than watching the other dog, but your dog should be thinking 'Woo hoo, I see a dog - now I just look in Mum's eye and I get a treat - awesome!', not 'Aaargh, scary dog, have to look at Mun, what's the scary dog doing.....?' So the dog's emotional reaction has to come first, rather than the trained 'watch'.
So at first to walk away and once at a distance she’s comfortable and relaxed reward her then. So overtime when she sees a dog then she’ll just know to sit and look at me for a treat and not think of dogs as scary?
Yes, though I didn't ask for a sit (not a natural position for my dog) or a watch - I simply moved him away and then gave him a treat. Eventually, when he saw a dog he'd just look at me in expectation of the treat.
I did, though, use high-value stinky treats to distract him from the other dogs and lure him away - though in my case, he wasn't fearful as such, just wanted to put the other dog in its place (which comes from insecurity, like a playground bully).
Yes this makes sense. She definitely feels a certain way with certain dogs and I want to change that for her. She’s still young so if I keep doing this she eventually get the picture that ignoring dogs and coming to me equals treats. Thank you for the advice it makes it easier to understand.Yes, you are trying to create a positive conditioned emotional response (google +CER for more details) and note the use of the word emotional - it's important to realise you are trying to change her feelings, not just her behaviour. Behaviours are driven by feelings so her behaviour will change as a result anyway.
a dog offlead in a field goes to another dog and shows it’s teeth and growls! And you not reprimand it?
So let me understand, a dog offlead in a field goes to another dog and shows it’s teeth and growls! And you not reprimand it?
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