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Sharkoman

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So my cousin is planning for me to watch over his husky for a bit, since he was gonna be gone for the weekend. 

Got any tips on how to prepare?
 
Huskies are not known for being handler focussed, or for having good recall. Is your dog a Chi? Do they know each other? I would be prepared to have them separated, just in case, so plan for two separate walks each time, separate feeding, separate sleeping areas etc.
 
He's a beagle, and will probably be the first time they meet if my memory serves me right.

Thanks for the info :D
 
Did the guest-dog arrive & depart already?  - How did it go?

If the guest-dog didn't come yet, try to introduce the dogs on neutral ground - not in Ur house or garden, but walking distance away.  Also, a brief follow-me walk as a virtual introduction often makes face-to-face intros less fraught --- Both dogs are on leash, & one dog walks ahead, while the other walks behind at a distance that allows the front dog to relax & engage in sniffing, etc, rather than turn around periodically & stare at the stranger behind, or lunge, bark, etc.
After 5 or more minutes, the dogs & handlers turn around IN PLACE & go back the way they came, but the dog that was behind, is now ahead. Again, no set distance, but far-enuf apart that they don't react to one another,  while remaining aware that there is another dog.


When U have both arrived at the starting point, the handlers stand relaxed & chat with each other from a distance, while the dogs sniff, pee, lie down, _______ .  If both dogs appear relaxed & unconcerned, reduce the distance slightly & keep talking. U don't want to let them rush toward one another, nor let one dog charge toward the other, who freezes in place & then freaks-out -
polite approaches to a dog by another dog are made in an arc, with lots of broadside body-language to indicate the approaching dog is not hostile, but is curious & friendly.


Head-to-head / face-on approaches with direct eye contact are human behaviors - for dogs, both of those are rude, & a very direct eye-to-eye stare is a threat.

That's why dogs so often get in trouble in face-on bottlenecks - doorways, a gate between inside & outside, narrow areas on a public sidewalk, 1 enters the dog-park airlock while another is exiting, slipping between cars in a crowded parking lot, & similar.  ;)
- terry
 

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