Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind a less than 10 pound dog pulling the leash or jumping and I would never address that in training if it wasn't hurting either of us. Puppies always get a pass learning, they are usually chasing down leaves for fun while leashed so it looks like chaos.
As long as your dog never jumps on anyone else, fine.
+1, leash pulling is not a big deal to me unless it's clear the person with the leash can't control the dog (if the dog is big, strong, or the person is just particularly lax). I would work to train that out of my dog because it makes walks stressful, but if someone else's dog does that and they can keep the dog away from me and my dog, I just view it as their problem.
If your dog jumps on me, unless it's like a new puppy, I get annoyed. A dog should not be putting his paws on strangers on the street! That is totally unacceptable behavior, and when I see it in a dog over a year old, I know that owner is just bad. There is no excuse for that.
PP here. It is their problem, obviously - but do you stay in front of that dog and taunt and tease it? Because if so, when (not if) your little Muffy, Biscuit, Cupcake gets eaten in front of your very eyes - because you sat there and taunted a reactive dog - it won't end well for you.
Another bad dog owner blaming everyone else for what is entirely your responsibility. It’s your job to ensure your reactive dog is away from others. No one else’s. If you can’t do that, rehome the dog.
Disagree. The dog owner could see that the dog was being corrected after pulling and reacting. You don’t plant your dog right in front of another in a situation like that. SHE was the dog owner acting poorly in that situation, not the dog owner actively correcting her dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind a less than 10 pound dog pulling the leash or jumping and I would never address that in training if it wasn't hurting either of us. Puppies always get a pass learning, they are usually chasing down leaves for fun while leashed so it looks like chaos.
As long as your dog never jumps on anyone else, fine.
+1, leash pulling is not a big deal to me unless it's clear the person with the leash can't control the dog (if the dog is big, strong, or the person is just particularly lax). I would work to train that out of my dog because it makes walks stressful, but if someone else's dog does that and they can keep the dog away from me and my dog, I just view it as their problem.
If your dog jumps on me, unless it's like a new puppy, I get annoyed. A dog should not be putting his paws on strangers on the street! That is totally unacceptable behavior, and when I see it in a dog over a year old, I know that owner is just bad. There is no excuse for that.
PP here. It is their problem, obviously - but do you stay in front of that dog and taunt and tease it? Because if so, when (not if) your little Muffy, Biscuit, Cupcake gets eaten in front of your very eyes - because you sat there and taunted a reactive dog - it won't end well for you.
Another bad dog owner blaming everyone else for what is entirely your responsibility. It’s your job to ensure your reactive dog is away from others. No one else’s. If you can’t do that, rehome the dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind a less than 10 pound dog pulling the leash or jumping and I would never address that in training if it wasn't hurting either of us. Puppies always get a pass learning, they are usually chasing down leaves for fun while leashed so it looks like chaos.
As long as your dog never jumps on anyone else, fine.
My dog jumps on people as a way to be affectionate. Dog is harness. However, why are you getting that close to a dog who is jumping on you. You also need boundaries. Ours is just excited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very often they have no idea how. Or they think it’s mean to make the dog obey them, even though a hierarchical world is what a dog instinctively desires. Or they’re lazy. Lots of reasons. PP is correct that few dogs are untrainable. I knew a family that had an energetic and intelligent sled-type dog. The dog ran the show. They went to a professional trainer. The dog was fine with him, because it was the owners who needed to be trained first. They finally gave up and gave the dog to a person they worked with. I saw it a few months earlier and it was perfectly obedient. Because what mattered was the owner’s behavior.
+1
Everyone has a reason why their dog's behavior is okay and we should all be fine with it. But mostly it's that they don't actually have the time or energy, they think it's "mean," or they are lazy or overly indulgent. And entitled, because we're all supposed to LOVE their furbabies and if we don't we're the heartless monsters.
We don't currently have a dog because I think having a pet is a responsibility, and if you can't properly train your pet and provide them the exercise and attention they need, you shouldn't have one. But a lot of people don't feel that way. They get a dog because they or their kids want one, period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most dog owners don’t actually have the time needed to properly take care of a dog. They are over scheduled with work, family, etc. Dog training takes time and effort.
This - and they often pick the wrong dog breed for their family by focusing on size, coat, overall aesthetics instead of temperament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind a less than 10 pound dog pulling the leash or jumping and I would never address that in training if it wasn't hurting either of us. Puppies always get a pass learning, they are usually chasing down leaves for fun while leashed so it looks like chaos.
As long as your dog never jumps on anyone else, fine.
+1, leash pulling is not a big deal to me unless it's clear the person with the leash can't control the dog (if the dog is big, strong, or the person is just particularly lax). I would work to train that out of my dog because it makes walks stressful, but if someone else's dog does that and they can keep the dog away from me and my dog, I just view it as their problem.
If your dog jumps on me, unless it's like a new puppy, I get annoyed. A dog should not be putting his paws on strangers on the street! That is totally unacceptable behavior, and when I see it in a dog over a year old, I know that owner is just bad. There is no excuse for that.
PP here. It is their problem, obviously - but do you stay in front of that dog and taunt and tease it? Because if so, when (not if) your little Muffy, Biscuit, Cupcake gets eaten in front of your very eyes - because you sat there and taunted a reactive dog - it won't end well for you.
Anonymous wrote:This is the result of untrainable dogs being adopted by the aDoPt DoNt ShOp fools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind a less than 10 pound dog pulling the leash or jumping and I would never address that in training if it wasn't hurting either of us. Puppies always get a pass learning, they are usually chasing down leaves for fun while leashed so it looks like chaos.
As long as your dog never jumps on anyone else, fine.
+1, leash pulling is not a big deal to me unless it's clear the person with the leash can't control the dog (if the dog is big, strong, or the person is just particularly lax). I would work to train that out of my dog because it makes walks stressful, but if someone else's dog does that and they can keep the dog away from me and my dog, I just view it as their problem.
If your dog jumps on me, unless it's like a new puppy, I get annoyed. A dog should not be putting his paws on strangers on the street! That is totally unacceptable behavior, and when I see it in a dog over a year old, I know that owner is just bad. There is no excuse for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most dog owners don’t actually have the time needed to properly take care of a dog. They are over scheduled with work, family, etc. Dog training takes time and effort.
This - and they often pick the wrong dog breed for their family by focusing on size, coat, overall aesthetics instead of temperament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mind a less than 10 pound dog pulling the leash or jumping and I would never address that in training if it wasn't hurting either of us. Puppies always get a pass learning, they are usually chasing down leaves for fun while leashed so it looks like chaos.
As long as your dog never jumps on anyone else, fine.
My dog jumps on people as a way to be affectionate. Dog is harness. However, why are you getting that close to a dog who is jumping on you. You also need boundaries. Ours is just excited.