[nagdu] Barking - revisited?

Nicole Torcolini ntorcolini at wavecable.com
Mon Dec 22 18:38:40 UTC 2014


Usually, I would say that barking is a bad thing and should not be allowed.
Lexia was not a barker. However, I think that this is very different. I do
not know if Jenny is doing it primarily for herself or for both of you, but
I would not try to stop the behavior. I would not even tell her to stop the
first time as allowing her to bark may prevent the people from petting or
talking to her. If she is uncomfortable, then she needs a way to show/tell
it. It sounds as though she sometimes to do something else before barking,
such as moving away, but some people are not taking the hint. As already
said, our dogs are trained to not be aggressive, but every dog has him/her
limits, and, pushed to far, might lunge or bite, especially if the dog felt
threatened. You could try to move her away from the people, but I would also
continue to pay attention to the people as well as they sound like the kind
of people that I would not want around me. If certain people continue to
bother you, and you think that things are getting out of hand, you might
consider getting the police involved. Are there other people at the bus
stop? If so, try to stand near them as people who are alone are more of
targets than people in a group.

Nicole

-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Daryl Marie via
nagdu
Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2014 6:48 AM
To: nagdu at nfbnet.org
Subject: [nagdu] Barking - revisited?

Hi, guys!
I just wanted to discuss barking in harness... again.  This does not often
happen, but it happens enough that I think I need more than a "Quiet"
command.  Let me start off by saying that the barking is not constant, but
it is 1-3 "Woof!"s.  based on what I can piece together from her body
language, Jenny is not overly friendly, but not overly hostile when she does
this...

Occasionally, Jenny will bark in harness.  This almost always happens when
we are waiting for a bus.  it seems to be only if someone is making
prolonged eye contact with her (just a guess on my part), and this seems to
be primarily done by members of the homeless population in this particular
neighborhood.  She will bark once or twice, I say "No" or "Quiet", she
quiets down, but then the person will try and talk to her or pet her, which
causes her to either bark again or move away if she can.  It is usually a
quick exchange, but I can't seem to find any further patterns than what I
have described, except this tends to happen more after work...

but last night I was having supper with a friend in a mall food court, when
someone who was definitely under the influence of alcohol - perhaps
something else as well? - approached our table.  Jenny is not normally
affected by intoxicated people, but he bent down to her level.  The minute
he touched her, she tried to back away, and let out a bark when she couldn't
move any further away.  I told him to not pet the dog, Jenny quieted down,
but then he started talking to her, which got her barking again.

I am not sure what to do here... would love any suggestions.

Daryl

_______________________________________________
nagdu mailing list
nagdu at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nagdu_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for nagdu:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nagdu_nfbnet.org/ntorcolini%40wavecable.co
m





More information about the NAGDU mailing list