BG1
Hot Topics Subscriber
I have seen same in Bonnie. As she got to the 2.5 yr old mature stage she showed more self confidence but with restraint in declining the interest of a knucklehead puppy that wants to play. She still likes to play but is selective. I watch the interactions carefully- when I sense a dig is a bully I step in fast and deconflict, decisively, calmly and with praise for compliance. I notice a bit of shock in some other dogs eyes as if they have not rxperienced many corrections, and also some soft ears and eyes for the praise- as if not hearing that as well.I'm going to share an experience I had today. Flint is being introduced to a bite pillow. He does not bite hard on it like he does with a tug toy made of jute or a toy rope. He just kinda puts his teeth on it and soaks it, no tugging at all. Granted this toy is still very new, but I started to wonder if he had enough drive to bite something that made him open his jaw wider than he is used to.
Today I took him to a public park, not a dog park, where we go every day and we play. He doesn't bother other people or other dogs and has only the ecollar on the whole time.
Some idiot teenagers had a black fluffy dog about 30lbs going nuts at the end of the leash. I put Flint in a heel and we were walking to the other end of the park to give them space. The teen holding the leash lost their grip on it and the dog charged Flint. There was tense sniffing, then as the boy picked his dog up it started to snap at Flint and lost its mind. Flint moved forward and his hackles went up, but I called him back into a heel with an ecollar stim.
We walked to the end of the park without incident. I didn't want to end it on a bad note, so I took out the ball on a rope and we tugged. I hear the teenagers cussing up a storm, and when I looked, that same dog was charging us again, dragging the leash behind it. I thought the kid was going to be able to catch it before it got to us, so again I told Flint to "down" so he wouldn't try to charge, just in case. Despite seeing a dog and person run at us, he obeyed.
The kid fumbled his dog and it got to Flint a second time. Flint showed his teeth and chest bumped the other dog. They snapped at the air, but no injuries. The boy grabbed his dog finally, and again I told Flint to down once I knew we were in the clear. Again, Flint obeyed.
At that point I walked with the kid, leaving Flint where he was, and I explained very calmly that an ecollar might help if the leash wasn't working out. I was trying to be calm and give them slack since they were teenagers and teens are empty headed as all hell.
When we were done talking, I told them have a nice day, returned to Flint (still in a down despite being 50 paces away or so) and put him in a heel. We went home.
I've never seen Flint show his teeth in a serious manner the entire time I've had him. I didn't think he had it in him to stand his ground like that.
Idk if this is insight at all or just a story. But I was certainly surprised to see him on the defensive when his typical behavior was avoiding conflict as much as possible until today.
I dont want Bonnie to be a bumky so I check her, if it looks like she is tempted to go after the other dog once stood down. I've read somewhere that if dobes realize their power it can be abused.
Always always in a social interaction if in doubt I want her to return on recall, like NOW. That saves things from getting too out of control and besides we are usually doing our own thing together training which she prefers anyway.









, but then only IF UDC/DPCA has given the assurance that yes, they have your scorebook proof that you passed. I cannot show AKC my scorebook and ask them to add BH to Ashas titles, it has to go through the chain. Probably gun dog sports have to go through each breeds parent club to AKC in a similar way. It's complicated, and like one person said to me here - just train & trial and have a good time,