SoCalGalcas wrote:Good Morning, I haven’t posted for a few days. Hazel and I are getting along fine. I wish I knew what to do about her barking at dogs we meet on the street. She acts like she will kill them. Most of the time the other dogs just look at her. Yesterday a Bernese Mt dog pulled on his leash to respond to her! What I have been doing is stopping the cart and getting her up on it and holding her collar and saying soothing words until the other dog is past. Her being a Chihuahua I expect is part of the problem. Any suggestions out there? Tina?
Lyn
Well, I'm not Tina, but I will jump in here. If you pick her up and put her on your cart, or maybe even in your lap (I'm assuming that your cart is a mobility device that you use, but I'm not sure) all the while saying soothing words, you are rewarding, and thus reinforcing, the barking behavior.
So long as a specific behavior (barking at other dogs) results in a pleasant reward (you picking her up and saying pleasant, soothing words) the behavior will not improve, and will likely get worse.
In other words, she has discovered that when she barks at other dogs, something nice happens.
Since you are mobility impaired, this might be a difficult thing to deal with. I would suggest a training collar (I assume that she is on a leash when you both are out and about - a six-foot leather leash is best, easy to grip and long enough to give you some maneuvering room), when the unwanted behavior occurs, give a sharp "NO!" (only say it once) followed by a quick correction and immediately turn around and go the other way - whether she agrees to turn around or not.
Another thing you might try is a spray bottle with water. When the behavior occurs, give a quick correction together with a strong spritz of water (do NOT pick her up and soothe her). After the spritz, continue on as though nothing has happened - whether she wishes to "continue on" or not.
I have trained dogs in the past, many years ago I trained my own American Pit Bull Terrier to work with hand signals, totally off leash. At the time, there was a local man who trained police dogs for a living, and he also trained companion dogs for people in the area. I trained with him (he did not train my dog for me) and learned quite a lot from him.
When my Big Joe (a 45-pound Staffordshire Bull Terrier) came to me at almost three years old, he had been a kennel dog. On our first few walks around my neighborhood, I soon discovered he had a "thing" for cats (and my neighborhood was awash in feral cats, and still is). Whenever he would see a cat, he would instantly, and vigorously, give chase. The first time this happened it surprised me a bit (although it should not have done) and I was dragged along behind this bounding 45-pound dog straining at the end of my leash, trying to get him stopped.
After that, I used the training technique called "about-turn" (this may sound harsh, but it is not). What I did first was to do a little bit of teaching him to walk on heel in my largish back yard before we ventured out again. Once he had the concept (Joe is a very smart dog, he learned the rudimentary "heel" command in less than a day) we ventured out, with me aware that a cat could appear at any moment, and Joe would try to give chase.
What I would do is hold him on a fairly short (but loose) leash, holding most of the six-foot leash in my hand as slack. As soon as he began to bound after a cat, I would release the slack in the leash (holding firmly to the loop in the end of the leash) and run in the opposite direction as fast as I could. Without saying a word, nor did I look back.
Of course, what would happen when Joe reached the end of the leash (as I was running in the opposite direction) is that he would lose his footing (and forget all about the cat). As he scrambled to regain his feet, I would just keep going, still saying nothing.
This taught him two things: 1., that I was in charge and 2., that he needed to pay attention to me - at all times - (instead of local distractions, like cats) if he wanted to stay on his feet.
I think I needed to do this maybe twice. This was several years ago. To this very day I can walk Joe by a cat that might be sitting in someone's front yard, only feet away, and he will not give the cat a second glance.
I realize that this kind of maneuver might not be possible for someone with mobility issues, because having a cart and a boisterous dog on the end of a leash to deal with at the same time is problematical.
But the concept is the same. Don't - ever - reward bad behavior.
Anne