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I really am at loss as to what to do with my 20 month old whippet dog Sidney. Around the house he is such a gentle, gentle soul. Very loving and follows me everywhere.
I have had him since he was 13 weeks old. He was castrated when he was nearly 9 months old. He has always been skittish around dogs and has danced around on the lead when other dogs come near him. I took him to puppy association classes and then to kennel club training classes and he passed both Bronze and Silver without much difficulty. He was always wary around other dogs however and would prefer to gravitate towards me.
He has been fine in the company of other people and is very friendly on most occasions although he did keep growling at my brother when he came to stay with us last xmas.
Like everything, you look for the time things might have changed. We added a whippet bitch puppy, Millie, to our family in September last year. From the off, they both indulged quite aggressive play fighting and although they have never drawn blood, they often vigorously bite each other's necks and legs to the point it seemed beyond just play. To a large extent, I have let them get on with and only intervened when things get really rough as I thought they were just sorting out who is boss.
Sidney pulls like mad when we go out to our recreation field where I usually exercise him. Millie pulls too butthey tend to be more at ease after exercise. He loves chasing after his Kong frisbee and is very adept at catching it and bringing it back to me. I also regularly run him on the nearby beach an and he enjoys doing the same.
He is much more relaxed off the lead and used to like chasing dogs (playfully) and then letting them chase him. He would hardly ever bark or become in any way aggressive. Three or four months ago he was chasing and being chased by a German Shepherd that I had not come across before. He suddenly pulled up limping and I thought he had pulled a muscle. It was only after checking him over at home that I realised he had a couple of deep bite marks on his rear thigh. He limped for days and i got the vet to check him but he was ok.
Millie, unlike Sidney, was always a much more barkey dog. She gradually startetd barking at other dogs and Sidney gradually picked up this habit when on the lead. When I took them both to the vets the other week Millie started barking at a Rotweiler in the surgery and Sidney ended up showing more aggression than the bigger dog. It got quite hairy.
My wife caught Sidney barking and lunging at the postman. Things got worse a couple of weeks ago when I heard a commotion in the garden after the window cleaner came to do the windows. I went outside to find that the lad was fending both dogs off with my plastic chair. He said that Sidney had "nibbled" his hand.
Things got worse the other day when I had them both out for a walk and Millie had a poo and I bent down to pick it up. Just as I did so, a lady wearing shorts passed by and I heard her shout out. When I looked up; she was clutching her calf and said my dog had bitten her. I apologised profusely but she said it was ok and thankfully did not make a big deal of it. I could only see what looked like slight scratch marks so I tried to convince myself it was a mistake.
When I took him on the field, he chased his frisbee for ages and then spotted a labrador in the distance and ran after it and proceeded to snap at it three times and the other dog yelped. I was horrified but the dog owner swiftly left.
Thinks got worse again tonight when i was out with both dogs on the lead. Again, i bent down to pick up a poo and at the same time a woman jogger passed by. I wasn't quick enough whilst juggling the poo bag, he lunged forward and I clearly saw him nip her on the leg. He drew a small amount of blood (a scratch on her calf) but, although it was not serious. It might as well have been a 10" wound!
Well, I was absolutely mortified, ashamed, sad and full of so many emotions I could hardly speak. I feel like I don't know my own dog any more. The jogger exclaimed that my dog had bit her and I again apologised but she seemed more interested in continuing her run, mutering, "well, I suppose it doesn't matter".
I worry what will happen next. Will he bite a child or cause a serious injury??
Does anyone have any suggestions? I think I'm going to have to put a muzzle on him. I have never had to muzzle a dog before. What sort of muzzle would be best?
I think he may be feeling he needs to protect his bitch so is being over-protective of her, She has just started her first season at the weekend but that does not account for his previous misdemeanors.
I feel that I am a complete failure as a dog trainer and rapidly losing my confidence in having them out together. I have now resolved to take Sidney out alone so that I can give him my full attention. I don't want it to end in the courts with my dog being put down as a dangerous dog. He hasn't even growled or barked at these people so I don't know where the need to snap has come from!
Please help me help my dog.
I have had him since he was 13 weeks old. He was castrated when he was nearly 9 months old. He has always been skittish around dogs and has danced around on the lead when other dogs come near him. I took him to puppy association classes and then to kennel club training classes and he passed both Bronze and Silver without much difficulty. He was always wary around other dogs however and would prefer to gravitate towards me.
He has been fine in the company of other people and is very friendly on most occasions although he did keep growling at my brother when he came to stay with us last xmas.
Like everything, you look for the time things might have changed. We added a whippet bitch puppy, Millie, to our family in September last year. From the off, they both indulged quite aggressive play fighting and although they have never drawn blood, they often vigorously bite each other's necks and legs to the point it seemed beyond just play. To a large extent, I have let them get on with and only intervened when things get really rough as I thought they were just sorting out who is boss.
Sidney pulls like mad when we go out to our recreation field where I usually exercise him. Millie pulls too butthey tend to be more at ease after exercise. He loves chasing after his Kong frisbee and is very adept at catching it and bringing it back to me. I also regularly run him on the nearby beach an and he enjoys doing the same.
He is much more relaxed off the lead and used to like chasing dogs (playfully) and then letting them chase him. He would hardly ever bark or become in any way aggressive. Three or four months ago he was chasing and being chased by a German Shepherd that I had not come across before. He suddenly pulled up limping and I thought he had pulled a muscle. It was only after checking him over at home that I realised he had a couple of deep bite marks on his rear thigh. He limped for days and i got the vet to check him but he was ok.
Millie, unlike Sidney, was always a much more barkey dog. She gradually startetd barking at other dogs and Sidney gradually picked up this habit when on the lead. When I took them both to the vets the other week Millie started barking at a Rotweiler in the surgery and Sidney ended up showing more aggression than the bigger dog. It got quite hairy.
My wife caught Sidney barking and lunging at the postman. Things got worse a couple of weeks ago when I heard a commotion in the garden after the window cleaner came to do the windows. I went outside to find that the lad was fending both dogs off with my plastic chair. He said that Sidney had "nibbled" his hand.
Things got worse the other day when I had them both out for a walk and Millie had a poo and I bent down to pick it up. Just as I did so, a lady wearing shorts passed by and I heard her shout out. When I looked up; she was clutching her calf and said my dog had bitten her. I apologised profusely but she said it was ok and thankfully did not make a big deal of it. I could only see what looked like slight scratch marks so I tried to convince myself it was a mistake.
When I took him on the field, he chased his frisbee for ages and then spotted a labrador in the distance and ran after it and proceeded to snap at it three times and the other dog yelped. I was horrified but the dog owner swiftly left.
Thinks got worse again tonight when i was out with both dogs on the lead. Again, i bent down to pick up a poo and at the same time a woman jogger passed by. I wasn't quick enough whilst juggling the poo bag, he lunged forward and I clearly saw him nip her on the leg. He drew a small amount of blood (a scratch on her calf) but, although it was not serious. It might as well have been a 10" wound!
Well, I was absolutely mortified, ashamed, sad and full of so many emotions I could hardly speak. I feel like I don't know my own dog any more. The jogger exclaimed that my dog had bit her and I again apologised but she seemed more interested in continuing her run, mutering, "well, I suppose it doesn't matter".
I worry what will happen next. Will he bite a child or cause a serious injury??
Does anyone have any suggestions? I think I'm going to have to put a muzzle on him. I have never had to muzzle a dog before. What sort of muzzle would be best?
I think he may be feeling he needs to protect his bitch so is being over-protective of her, She has just started her first season at the weekend but that does not account for his previous misdemeanors.
I feel that I am a complete failure as a dog trainer and rapidly losing my confidence in having them out together. I have now resolved to take Sidney out alone so that I can give him my full attention. I don't want it to end in the courts with my dog being put down as a dangerous dog. He hasn't even growled or barked at these people so I don't know where the need to snap has come from!
Please help me help my dog.