Anonymous wrote:My golden retriever senses people outside from well within the house, nowhere near a window, and will automatically start barking. It drives me nuts and we have tried everything to stop it but it's hard to overcome instinct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had no idea people were so annoyed. I view it as a dog’s instinctual behavior and if they are inside their home who am I to judge?
+100
The dogs are protecting their territory.
The right answer here is to walk on by and then the dog is a good boy who defended his turf. That’s his whole raisin d’être. Stop making this about you, Barb.
The 10 pound lap dog that goes insane when my 75 pound dog and I are across the street, two houses over and walking away doesn’t understand that we’re not in his territory, and he has provided no actual defense. We’re not a threat and if we were, that little fluff ball couldn’t stop us anyway. He’s barking at us because he’s reactive and stressed out by how outmatched he’d be if he had to take on my dog for some reason. Meanwhile, my dog is silently wagging his tail in an attempt to be friendly.
Loud, aggressive barking is always miserable to listen to, no matter where your dog is.
Anonymous wrote:Finally! Someone admits it’s because they like it!Anonymous wrote:Personally, I think its helpful.
1) I know when someone is approaching my house.
2) There's nothing like a barking dog to deter a break in
Now, would I prefer if she'd stop yelling at the mailman? Sure. But on the other hand, all she knows is that someone is approaching the house -- and then a whole bunch of stuff comes shooting through the front door at her nose. Can't blame her for thinking this is threatening.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people with 2-year-olds allow their kids to run loose and screaming around a store during a pandemic? Why don't they control their children?
I can play this game too, OP.
+100Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had no idea people were so annoyed. I view it as a dog’s instinctual behavior and if they are inside their home who am I to judge?
+100
The dogs are protecting their territory.
The right answer here is to walk on by and then the dog is a good boy who defended his turf. That’s his whole raisin d’être. Stop making this about you, Barb.
The 10 pound lap dog that goes insane when my 75 pound dog and I are across the street, two houses over and walking away doesn’t understand that we’re not in his territory, and he has provided no actual defense. We’re not a threat and if we were, that little fluff ball couldn’t stop us anyway. He’s barking at us because he’s reactive and stressed out by how outmatched he’d be if he had to take on my dog for some reason. Meanwhile, my dog is silently wagging his tail in an attempt to be friendly.
Loud, aggressive barking is always miserable to listen to, no matter where your dog is.
PP said don’t let the dog. So the dog is outside I’m guessing.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just walk on by. My dog barks like this for 10 seconds and stops. Unless you stand there talking to her. She doesn't find your voice calming or soothing. Do not attempt to pet her. Please just move on.
So, you want her to aggressively bark at people and then "win" because she scared them away. Good strategy.
You have issues. You are trying to do some power play on a dog inside of a house. Think about that. Think about your life choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had no idea people were so annoyed. I view it as a dog’s instinctual behavior and if they are inside their home who am I to judge?
+100
The dogs are protecting their territory.
The right answer here is to walk on by and then the dog is a good boy who defended his turf. That’s his whole raisin d’être. Stop making this about you, Barb.
Finally! Someone admits it’s because they like it!Anonymous wrote:Personally, I think its helpful.
1) I know when someone is approaching my house.
2) There's nothing like a barking dog to deter a break in
Now, would I prefer if she'd stop yelling at the mailman? Sure. But on the other hand, all she knows is that someone is approaching the house -- and then a whole bunch of stuff comes shooting through the front door at her nose. Can't blame her for thinking this is threatening.
That’s tough! Do you think it’s an energy issue? I used to have a golden, and when she was younger, we’d have to do multiple fetch sessions every day, plus walks, she had endless energy, but was an amazing dogAnonymous wrote:My golden retriever senses people outside from well within the house, nowhere near a window, and will automatically start barking. It drives me nuts and we have tried everything to stop it but it's hard to overcome instinct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just walk on by. My dog barks like this for 10 seconds and stops. Unless you stand there talking to her. She doesn't find your voice calming or soothing. Do not attempt to pet her. Please just move on.
So, you want her to aggressively bark at people and then "win" because she scared them away. Good strategy.