Her
Dog Shows Two Different
Types Of Aggression…
By
Adam G. Katz
Dear
Adam:
I am writing about our dog Rudy, a three year old goldie
mix that we
adopted
five months ago from a shelter. We have received different
opinions on his mix. Some have said goldie/shepherd, some
have said goldie/chow. The latter is the opinion of the
[local dog training academy], where he is presently enrolled
in their one-month board and train program. We enrolled
him because one month ago he attacked a jogger. The jogger
was running by my husband, who had Rudy in a sit on a slack
leash. The jogger changed direction quickly, running straight
toward Derek and Rudy. Rudy lunged at the jogger, jumped
up on him, barking and growling aggressively.
He
tore the man's jacket by nipping at it, but he did not bite
the jogger.
[You
weren’t paying attention to your dog. If you were,
you’d have already been running the other direction
to execute the “attention getter” drill as outlined
in the book. – Editor ]
The
only other time he had displayed such aggressive behavior
was toward a UPS driver coming up the driveway, but he was
well under control that time.
He
has a very strong prey drive and dominant personality. He
had been doing very well these past three weeks at the Academy.
They were not able to elicit any aggressive behavior from
him, and his obedience training was going well. But last
Thursday, he bit a trainer. He apparently was being put
back into his kennel and ran off down a long hallway. He
was not leashed. When he got to the dead end, he first went
submissive, rolling over on his back. The trainer then reached
to grab his collar and Rudy gave her hand a good bite. She
then reached for the collar with her other hand, and he
did the same to that hand. He did not give her any warning
growl or snap. He did not move forward toward her, just
reacted to her reach toward him. After the second bite she
backed off, and another trainer was able to
coax
Rudy to go back with her uneventfully.
I
have read your book and believe that the trainer bite was
an example of fear aggression? (I don't know what to think
about the jogger, though.) The Academy seems to be saying
that they can't train that reaction out of him; that we
will just need to be vigilant and mindful of his triggers.
That goes without saying, and I now believe that being cornered
is one of his triggers. (Our vet had also mentioned that
when they cornered him to get him on a table, that he had
snapped out at them.) But your book and tapes led me to
believe that you can train such behavior out of a dog. Or
am I misunderstanding? Are you merely just getting the dog
to react to you instead of following his instinctual reaction?
Certainly that's a good thing, but what if he's with someone
else when he's triggered?
We
need some perspective on this situation. I love him and
want to give him every chance to learn correct behaviors.
But on the other hand, we live in a dense children and jogger
packed neighborhood. We can't keep him if there is reasonable
risk of this kind of thing happening again.
-
Mary Ellen
Dear
Mary Ellen:
Thank
you for the e-mail.
You've
got a couple of things to consider:
1.
The dog needs to be firmly corrected lunging. Going after
the biker is a prey-based aggression. Correct him for this,
as described in the book.
2.
Going after the trainer and the veterinarian is the result
of the dog being insecure and not trusting the handler.
Usually in these types of cases, he will not bite if he
is secure that you will not hurt him. Or if he knows that
he will only be fairly corrected for behavior that he understands.
With
aggressive behavior, we can never say 100% "All"
or "Never" that your dog will or will not show
a specific behavior.
Regardless,
your dog needs to be corrected for such behavior, and then
shown that if he is calm, he gets praise and nothing bad
happens to him. This can sometimes be achieved by placing
the dog in such positions while he is wearing a muzzle.
He cannot bite you, and ultimately learns that everything
ends up “A-Okay.”
It
is a process of deconditioning. Not so for the prey-aggression,
which can be fixed with a couple of well-timed and motivational
corrections.
For
more dog training
information, visit the following links:
Main
site: Dog Training
Secrets of a Professional Dog Trainer Book--
http://www.dogproblems.com/secretsbook.htm
Dog Training Articles: http://www.dogproblems.com/articles.htm
Dog Training products: http://www.dogproblems.com/products.htm
Dog Training Discussion Forum: http://www.dogproblems.com/dogtalk/
You
are welcome to use this article written by Adam G. Katz
for your web site or publication.
Our only requirement is that you must maintain the copyright,
byline, and link back to this site. Copyright 2002 By Dogproblems.com
All Rights Reserved.
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