[nagdu] Barking at Other Dogs

Cindy Ray cindyray at gmail.com
Wed Jun 10 21:19:53 UTC 2015


I have always had this problem. I have used the gentle leader. I kind of
doubt it is adding to the stress, but it could be. I have not tried treats,
and I have had nothing to do that worked so much. I've tried dogfgie push
ups, which is down, sit, down, and got the dog to rest. I have had a couple
of instructors come here. Actually there were three. Anyway, for me there
has been o resolution. I hope you get more positive information from
somewhere else. My guy is a good guy, and this is his most major flaw.
Cindy


-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Alysha via nagdu
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2015 4:16 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Cc: Alysha
Subject: [nagdu] Barking at Other Dogs

Hi all,

My new dog, Xylon, has unfortunately developed the bad habit of barking at
other dogs if they pass too close. I usually work him with his gentle leader
because he struggles with dog distractions, and I can generally keep him on
track when the other dog is across the street or far away. But if a dog is
passing us on the sidewalk or walking toward us and acting excited, Xylon
will give out a loud bark and sometimes lunge toward the dog. He only barks
once and hasn't ever tried to hurt another dog, but for obvious reasons,
this behavior is not good! I called the school, and the trainer I talked too
told me to keep one snap of the leash connected to the gentle leader and one
to his collar and to correct him when he barks. I tried that, and it did not
work. In fact, I'm now wondering if the corrections are adding to the stress
and tension that are causing Xylon to bark in the first place. Some advice
I've read online suggests using treats to help associate the sight of other
dogs with positive instead of negative feelings for your dog. The articles
suggest moving away when the other dog comes closer than your dog is
comfortable with and slowly work on reducing that threshold with the use of
the treats. I'd like to give that a try, but it's difficult to do this on my
own since I'm not always sure when a dog is coming or what it's doing. The
school is going to send an instructor out to work with us, but in the
meantime, I was wondering if any of you have dealt with this problem and
successfully overcome it. I'd love to hear any tips or advice. Xylon is a
great worker and a friendly, happy little guy, so I'm confident we'll find a
way to work through this.

 

Thanks,

Alysha

 

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