briarandwillow
Chirping
Here's how I'm doing it:
Have the chickens in a secure location that the the dogs can't get into, and the dogs on leads.
Introduce the dogs one at a time. Have treats on hand as rewards for good behavior. Some interest is fine, but if they flip over into predatory interest redirect their attention and reward them handsomely with calming pets and treats. You want them to realize it's more valuable to pay attention to you than the chickens. Take the dog away on a good note (successfully refocusing on you and earning the treat).
Repeat this with the other dog.
Repeat this with each dog a few times a day. The only chicken time they get is supervised chicken time. They only get the reward when they ignore the chickens.
Don't let them both around the chickens at the same time until they've reliably been ok with the chickens for a week or so. You want to set them up to succeed and where one dog can focus, two dogs might amp each other up with these fun new squeak toys.
Supervise, control, and shape the behavior of your dogs and you'll have a dog you can trust with them. The most important part of the whole thing is don't allow them to get into a situation they can do the wrong thing. Will it happen anyway? Probably! And that's ok. As long as you've built that foundation your dog will learn, but don't forget your dog is a predator. You want to make sure they learn that your chickens aren't prey, so try to keep them from forming that association.
I'm working on this with my puppy currently. My older dog is currently amazing with the chicks. She's been very gentle and curious, and as long as she continues that behavior I reward her for it. Puppy has a long way to go! She's learning though
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Have the chickens in a secure location that the the dogs can't get into, and the dogs on leads.
Introduce the dogs one at a time. Have treats on hand as rewards for good behavior. Some interest is fine, but if they flip over into predatory interest redirect their attention and reward them handsomely with calming pets and treats. You want them to realize it's more valuable to pay attention to you than the chickens. Take the dog away on a good note (successfully refocusing on you and earning the treat).
Repeat this with the other dog.
Repeat this with each dog a few times a day. The only chicken time they get is supervised chicken time. They only get the reward when they ignore the chickens.
Don't let them both around the chickens at the same time until they've reliably been ok with the chickens for a week or so. You want to set them up to succeed and where one dog can focus, two dogs might amp each other up with these fun new squeak toys.
Supervise, control, and shape the behavior of your dogs and you'll have a dog you can trust with them. The most important part of the whole thing is don't allow them to get into a situation they can do the wrong thing. Will it happen anyway? Probably! And that's ok. As long as you've built that foundation your dog will learn, but don't forget your dog is a predator. You want to make sure they learn that your chickens aren't prey, so try to keep them from forming that association.
I'm working on this with my puppy currently. My older dog is currently amazing with the chicks. She's been very gentle and curious, and as long as she continues that behavior I reward her for it. Puppy has a long way to go! She's learning though
