Anonymous wrote:You (general public) can’t. An experienced trainer can read body language, but even they can’t prevent fights (just identify that a dog is uncomfortable).
Please, don’t go.
Dogs were bred to read the body language of similar breed dogs. You’ll notice herding dogs generally get along well, retrievers mesh, hounds have similar play styles, etc. A lab will read a border collie’s stare as rude, a border collie will interpret a lab’s body forward style as inappropriate, and all hell will break loose. These are stable, solid temperament dogs.
Add in dogs with sketchy backgrounds/breeding, clueless owners, and dozens of dogs and you have created a recipe for disaster.
It just takes one bad event to create years of reactivity you have to work through. Not worth it.
If your dog needs off leash play with other dogs, I suggest finding a friend/neighbor with a similar breed mix and known temperament and doing one on one back yard play dates. All the benefit with minimal risks.
If your dog is a baby puppy (<16 weeks) I’d suggest finding a supervised puppy play session at a local trainer. They’ll split the dogs into groups with similar play styles and help you learn to read and understand dog behavior.
—trainer
Anonymous wrote:You (general public) can’t. An experienced trainer can read body language, but even they can’t prevent fights (just identify that a dog is uncomfortable).
Please, don’t go.
Dogs were bred to read the body language of similar breed dogs. You’ll notice herding dogs generally get along well, retrievers mesh, hounds have similar play styles, etc. A lab will read a border collie’s stare as rude, a border collie will interpret a lab’s body forward style as inappropriate, and all hell will break loose. These are stable, solid temperament dogs.
Add in dogs with sketchy backgrounds/breeding, clueless owners, and dozens of dogs and you have created a recipe for disaster.
It just takes one bad event to create years of reactivity you have to work through. Not worth it.
If your dog needs off leash play with other dogs, I suggest finding a friend/neighbor with a similar breed mix and known temperament and doing one on one back yard play dates. All the benefit with minimal risks.
If your dog is a baby puppy (<16 weeks) I’d suggest finding a supervised puppy play session at a local trainer. They’ll split the dogs into groups with similar play styles and help you learn to read and understand dog behavior.
—trainer
Anonymous wrote:You (general public) can’t. An experienced trainer can read body language, but even they can’t prevent fights (just identify that a dog is uncomfortable).
Please, don’t go.
Dogs were bred to read the body language of similar breed dogs. You’ll notice herding dogs generally get along well, retrievers mesh, hounds have similar play styles, etc. A lab will read a border collie’s stare as rude, a border collie will interpret a lab’s body forward style as inappropriate, and all hell will break loose. These are stable, solid temperament dogs.
Add in dogs with sketchy backgrounds/breeding, clueless owners, and dozens of dogs and you have created a recipe for disaster.
It just takes one bad event to create years of reactivity you have to work through. Not worth it.
If your dog needs off leash play with other dogs, I suggest finding a friend/neighbor with a similar breed mix and known temperament and doing one on one back yard play dates. All the benefit with minimal risks.
If your dog is a baby puppy (<16 weeks) I’d suggest finding a supervised puppy play session at a local trainer. They’ll split the dogs into groups with similar play styles and help you learn to read and understand dog behavior.
—trainer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop going to dog parks. Meet a few friends dogs and meet at sniffspot or a tennis court or a yard if you have one.
Also. You were wrong in picking up your dog The other dog saw your dog as prey. Is your dog a little dog? If so did you go in the big dop part?
Thanks, pp! The other dog saw mine as prey and started attacking him. Once the attack begins, you need to separate the dogs as quickly as possible. Picking him up was the fastest way to do that.
You didn't do anything wrong. The way you usually tell is exactly as you did - observing and paying attention. But things can change quickly and you have to be prepared for that possibility. Only you can tell if the risks are worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop going to dog parks. Meet a few friends dogs and meet at sniffspot or a tennis court or a yard if you have one.
Also. You were wrong in picking up your dog The other dog saw your dog as prey. Is your dog a little dog? If so did you go in the big dop part?
Thanks, pp! The other dog saw mine as prey and started attacking him. Once the attack begins, you need to separate the dogs as quickly as possible. Picking him up was the fastest way to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Stop going to dog parks. Meet a few friends dogs and meet at sniffspot or a tennis court or a yard if you have one.
Also. You were wrong in picking up your dog The other dog saw your dog as prey. Is your dog a little dog? If so did you go in the big dop part?