Anonymous wrote:Small dogs were bred as lap dogs largely. A lot of them have a breed instinct to attach to someone and get pissed off if someone else tries to get between them and their special someone. A male friend dated a woman with a Maltese — if the Maltese was in the woman’s lap, the dog would get super pissed if the guy even sat in the couch next to them and would growl a back off warning. It may be the dog is perceiving your husband as a threat to his attachment to the kids and/or you, who he now perceives as his new “lap” in the absence of his regular owner. I’ve met chihuahuas with the same issue.
Anonymous wrote:We dogsit an approx 10 year old male dog who is not fixed. At night, this dog growls at my husband. Only at night, and only my husband. The dog will run to my husband and get into the crouch he does when he's going to be pet, and let my husband pet him, all while growling at the same time. Or my husband will get ready to walk him, and the dog is growling while husband puts the leash on. I wonder if he was abused as a puppy by someone who looks like my husband? But then why is the dog fine during the day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).
Perhaps your husband carries in a smell your dog doesn't like. Does his workplace allow pets, or does his coworkers have animals at home? My dog does a sniff inspection on all of us when we come in to find out where we've been and who we've been withHe gets particularly interested after we come home from the weekly violin lesson, because DD's teacher has 3 cats.
Or perhaps the dog just doesn't like to be disturbed at night. Does he react the same way if YOU walk him at night?
Maybe he does smell differently at night. That's an interesting theory that might get at it. No animals in workplace but I do not know if his coworkers have animals. I hope he's not getting close enough to coworkers to start carrying their animal scents, though! However, he does take the metro and the bus. I don't try to walk the dog after the kids go to sleep. But I did walk the dog last night a bit earlier than that and while we were out we saw my husband coming home. Dog goes up to my husband and crouches down for a pet, while growling. The common denominators are that it's directed at only my husband, and only at night.
Crouching down is not typically a solicitation for petting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).
Perhaps your husband carries in a smell your dog doesn't like. Does his workplace allow pets, or does his coworkers have animals at home? My dog does a sniff inspection on all of us when we come in to find out where we've been and who we've been withHe gets particularly interested after we come home from the weekly violin lesson, because DD's teacher has 3 cats.
Or perhaps the dog just doesn't like to be disturbed at night. Does he react the same way if YOU walk him at night?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).
Perhaps your husband carries in a smell your dog doesn't like. Does his workplace allow pets, or does his coworkers have animals at home? My dog does a sniff inspection on all of us when we come in to find out where we've been and who we've been withHe gets particularly interested after we come home from the weekly violin lesson, because DD's teacher has 3 cats.
Or perhaps the dog just doesn't like to be disturbed at night. Does he react the same way if YOU walk him at night?
Maybe he does smell differently at night. That's an interesting theory that might get at it. No animals in workplace but I do not know if his coworkers have animals. I hope he's not getting close enough to coworkers to start carrying their animal scents, though! However, he does take the metro and the bus. I don't try to walk the dog after the kids go to sleep. But I did walk the dog last night a bit earlier than that and while we were out we saw my husband coming home. Dog goes up to my husband and crouches down for a pet, while growling. The common denominators are that it's directed at only my husband, and only at night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).
Perhaps your husband carries in a smell your dog doesn't like. Does his workplace allow pets, or does his coworkers have animals at home? My dog does a sniff inspection on all of us when we come in to find out where we've been and who we've been withHe gets particularly interested after we come home from the weekly violin lesson, because DD's teacher has 3 cats.
Or perhaps the dog just doesn't like to be disturbed at night. Does he react the same way if YOU walk him at night?
Not an expert on this but I've always heard that small dogs are more likely to react aggressively because they are worried about being stomped on. We have had large dogs in my family for years but my kid got bit by a pouffy little dog at a friend's house when the kids were running around and somehow the dog got excited or felt threatened. You gotta worry just as much if not more about small dogs and kids.Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).
I agree. I love dogs but I would also be careful about this.Anonymous wrote:I’m a big dog person but I don’t think I’d let a dog cuddle up with my kids if I didn’t 100% have a handle on their dog psychology and whether/when they are upset/angry.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).
He gets particularly interested after we come home from the weekly violin lesson, because DD's teacher has 3 cats.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is interesting. Other than this, dog is not aggressive. It's a small dog and it hadn't occurred to me that dog is not ok with kids. Clearly, a bite from a small dog is no good, but I hadn't thought that was a possibility. Dog is totally find around everyone else and fine around husband during the day. It's just when husband comes home from work at night (often/usually the rest of the house is asleep by then and husband is trying to do the last walk of the night).