I do this as much as I can. I never walk by his house, but he always walks his dog by mine, I yes his route. If I see him out the window I’ll close my blinds so my dog doesn’t get a glance. If I’m about to walk my dog I always check to see if he is walking by. If he is I’ll wait until I know he’s down the street and around the corner, and I’ll go in a different direction with mine. But yeah, it’s hard to completely avoid them as they are 2 houses down from me.Anonymous wrote:I have a dog who is super-friendly and loves all dogs except this one GSD who we occasionally see out on walks. They've never met or even been within 20 ft of each other, but my dog goes absolutely bananas when he sees that GSD. No idea why so we just avoid that dog. If we're out on a walk and see him in the distance, we do an emergency U-turn. Fortunately, that dog does not live next door to us (sorry, OP). Our trainer said that sometimes this happens and the best thing we can do is teach out dog to focus on us when walking.
This is the first dog I’ve owned so I’m learning as I go, so to speak. Honestly, these are the neighbors from hell and I could share many non dog related stories about their terrible and dangerous behavior. I shared what I did just to provide some context. For the last few years they have settled down though and I don’t really think about them or interact with them. Do you have any advice on what I can do to work on this behavior with my dog? I hate that this happened and I really want to figure out how to teach my dog not to react like that.Anonymous wrote:The previous pooping and off leash info is irrelevant so not really sure why you shared it. This dog has not been aggressive to you or your dog so you need to work on your dogs behavior. I know you know that but all the history you shared seems to show you have a bias against this dog and its owners. Maybe your dog senses this.
He barks a lot. If he sees the neighbors car pull up and they get out and walk to their house, he barks, if he sees someone walk down the street, he barks. From the living room window he can see the street behind our house, if he sees people walking down that street he barks. If he’s in the backyard and he hears voices (it’s a 6ft fence so he can’t see over it) he barks. If he hears another dog in the distance, he barks. If he hears someone walk by, he barks. But it’s only that one dog that I’ve seen such an extreme reaction to. Where he’s so worked up I can barely handle him.Anonymous wrote:Territorial aggression is not uncommon for poodles. You did fine by sending him to his place to calm down. Neuter will likely not affect this behavior. If it were my dog, I'd keep him away from the window for a while.
I hit reply too soon. In order to get him up the steps and into the house I had to get my fingers underneath the part of the gentle leader that was on his back. Which took me several seconds to do. I couldn’t just pull the leash, he was thrashing/lunging too hard for that.Anonymous wrote:I have that leash, and he was wearing it.Anonymous wrote:Get a Gentle Leader. Lead a dog by their head,. Not their neck.
I have that leash, and he was wearing it.Anonymous wrote:Get a Gentle Leader. Lead a dog by their head,. Not their neck.