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Flexing adulthood or bad habits creeping in? Both?

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get the red out Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-02-11 07:52 AM
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Flexing adulthood or bad habits creeping in? Both?
Our dog, Layla, is now one year and one month old. She is a 32 lb Aussie mix (according to the DNA test we did). We have socialized her and trained her from the time she was a tiny pup and she has been the most loving, outgoing, welcoming little gal imaginable. But there have been two instances this week that I don't know exactly what to make of. The first was during our morning run Tuesday, I have had to work and work at training her not to run and pull on the leash to try to greet anyone we meet, but when an older lady walked toward us on her morning walk when I had stopped to watch a mother duck and her babies in the lake; Layla suddenly started barking at the lady and the hair on her back raised up when the lady just wanted to come over and pet her. This has never happened before, usually Layla is crazy to meet people. I kept her close and the lady went on. The second instance was at the dog park last night. I take her there often and the only time she has any problems is when she finds a tennis ball and another dog gets near it (she is possessive over stupid tennis balls and would rather play chuck it than to breathe), I usually scold her and remove the ball from the equation. This time though she nearly started a fight with a little female hound mix that she frequently plays with. I was petting the little dog and Layla ran up from another direction and jumped on her with her teeth bared. I scolded her and it stopped. She has put herself between me and dogs I was petting before but this type of outburst was a first.

I will definitely be watching her closely in these circumstances now for sure, but is this sort of increased intensity to her behavior something that happens as a result of getting more grown up? She's has been and still is just the sweetest dog and just loved at her doggie daycare and in our neighborhood.

I'm a confused novice dog keeper.
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TorchTheWitch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-07-11 04:10 PM
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1. She protecting you - or believes she is
This behavior toward other people (and in certain situations other dogs) is protection behavior that both male and female dogs can get into. And yes, it's because she's becoming more mature. Puppies and immature dogs tend to be loving and playful with everyone. When she does this you have to immediately correct her or it's only going to get worse. Her changes as you described in interacting with other dogs is dominance behavior, and that also needs correcting. Dogs are always going to arrange themselves in a hierarchy of who is dominant over who, but fighting behavior is excessive, so you need to teach her what is acceptable behavior with other dogs and what isn't (this is stuff a mommy dog would teach their offspring, and as people we need to take the place of the mommy dog and correct them the same way a mommy dog would). Because dogs can only understand dog-like behavior you have to adjust your methods of training to what the dog can understand... which pretty much means you have to deal with your dog like a dog.

You have to be the authority figure in the person/dog relationship, and ALL the time. Dogs - unlike people - won't follow a leader they consider to be an unstable leader. To a dog the leader is ALWAYS in control... leaders don't freak out, they don't temporarily delegate leadership responsibility, etc.

Hate to tell you, but your dog is not respecting you as the leader in your relationship, and this may be because of small things that you have no idea of but mean a LOT to a dog. The leader ALWAYS exits and enters first. A leader ALWAYS walks ahead of the pack (you're part of the "pack" to your dog). The dog can walk beside you, but if their head is getting ahead of you, you are no longer leading according to a dog. The leader ALWAYS eats the meal first (this only matters if you and the dog share the same meal time). A dog climbing on top of you is a display of dominance over you. They can rest their head on you or throw a leg on you, or manage to get on top of you during play, but if they actually put most or all of their body onto top of you when you aren't having a wrestling match, it's dominant behavior. I could go on and on about all the little seemingly insignificant things that mean something to a dog.

Good news is, dogs are born followers... they don't really want to be the leader but will always step into the role when no one else in their "pack" does. As long as your dog believes you are an acceptable leader they'll be quite happy with that and leave you to it with their blessing.

I really recommend The Dog Whisperer. His methods are the same ones learned dog people have known and practiced for a long time, but because of his show, you can get a lot of this info when it airs or from videos at the National Geographic website often and for free. It's also instructive to see how he teaches people to handle their own dogs... that's more important than watching him handle them himself because you can learn a lot more in seeing what works, what doesn't and why through the untrained people he helps.

Here's the page for National Geographic's full episodes...
http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/channel/videos/player.html?channel=60850
Choose "Dog Whisperer" from the list to view different episodes of the show. You can start by searching for the ones that may address your specific problems, but I'd recommend watching all of them because all of them will show you over and over that the same methods are applied in many different situations for many different kinds of dogs and their many different owners. I think there's something beneficial in every episode that's helpful.




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iscooterliberally Donating Member (228 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-07-11 04:25 PM
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2. Aussies are herding dogs.
They really do need to have a day job. You might want to look up other Aussie owners in your area. I have seen a few at the dog park where I go. One man there has his dog trained very well. He is a pro. You might want to try the puppy or beginner class at your local pet store too. I took my dogs to Petsmart for their beginner training. We went every Saturday for an hour. I think it cost me about $109 for 8 weeks. The training is more for you than the dog. Don't get discouraged, but Aussies are not really for novice dog owners. It sounds like you are doing good things by running with your dog and taking her to the dog park. Exercise is 90% of the battle for good behavior. There might be herding clubs in your area too. I have three large dogs, a Shepperd mix, a lab/husky mix, and a collie/chow mix. They usually misbehave when they are frustrated by something. For me it's usually a lack of exercise or not enough attention. Once I take care of that it works out. Your dog will get easier to deal with as she gets older too. You are probably at the toughest point. She's a teenager at a year and a half so hang in there. It will get better. :hi:
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