Anonymous wrote:Your dog is not a person who "makes friends" or "just says hi" to people or other dogs.
Your dog is a territorial pack predator with defense and aggression instincts that are either under your supervision and control or not.
If your dog is off leash you are NOT in control of its defense and aggression instincts.
Voice control is all well and good in theory. In practice almost nobody can actually do this when it matters. LEASH IT. Screams of "Fluffy, noooo!" are stupid, useless and preventable.
YOU are the pack leader and YOU are 100% responsible for what YOUR dog does. That includes affection, correction, and everything in between.
If you aren't sure if you have control over your dog, you DON'T have control over it.
LEASH IT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This are all extremely unhelpful comments. I recognize it’s a problem and am asking for suggestions, not to be told how terrible the behavior is. I’m not defending the behavior.
You got a specific, actionable suggestion that solves the problem -- LOCK THE DOG UP.
But this is not good advice. Teaches the dog nothing and often causes more problems. So step off unless you know what you're talking about
Anonymous wrote:Your dog is not a person who "makes friends" or "just says hi" to people or other dogs.
Your dog is a territorial pack predator with defense and aggression instincts that are either under your supervision and control or not.
If your dog is off leash you are NOT in control of its defense and aggression instincts.
Voice control is all well and good in theory. In practice almost nobody can actually do this when it matters. LEASH IT. Screams of "Fluffy, noooo!" are stupid, useless and preventable.
YOU are the pack leader and YOU are 100% responsible for what YOUR dog does. That includes affection, correction, and everything in between.
If you aren't sure if you have control over your dog, you DON'T have control over it.
LEASH IT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This are all extremely unhelpful comments. I recognize it’s a problem and am asking for suggestions, not to be told how terrible the behavior is. I’m not defending the behavior.
You got a specific, actionable suggestion that solves the problem -- LOCK THE DOG UP.
But this is not good advice. Teaches the dog nothing and often causes more problems. So step off unless you know what you're talking about
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This are all extremely unhelpful comments. I recognize it’s a problem and am asking for suggestions, not to be told how terrible the behavior is. I’m not defending the behavior.
You got a specific, actionable suggestion that solves the problem -- LOCK THE DOG UP.
Anonymous wrote:You need people to come over who will help you train her.
They knock/ring bell.
You open door and visitor steps in, facing you and dog.
You close the door.
Dog goes crazy.
Visitor needs to turn their back to the dog (facing the front door) and cross their arms, so the dog can't nudge or lick their hands.
You say, "Dogname, Sit!" Wait a beat or two for the dog to listen before you say it again.
When dog sits, praise.
Visitor turns around to face you and dog.
Dog gets up, and you immediately say "Dogname Sit!"
If dog doesn't sit, visitor turns around again, back to dog, arms crossed.
Lather, rinse repeat.
This may take MANY repetitions - and the dog may learn at first "Oh, when JANE comes over I have to be calm, but when ANYONE ELSE comes by, all bets are off," unless you do this with several people. Train the dog that the people say hello to people first, THEN dog.
Anonymous wrote:This are all extremely unhelpful comments. I recognize it’s a problem and am asking for suggestions, not to be told how terrible the behavior is. I’m not defending the behavior.