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How do you do that exactly.Our lab is fixated on them right now.He is a service dog,so I need to be careful.
I don't quite know what a service dog is but to dominate a dog you have to do "the roll" and use a firm tone of voice. If you are the pack leader and you approach quickly and with an aggressive tone of voice, he should hunker down and turn his throat to the side...I just continue that turning until he is on his back and my hand is grasping the skin at his throat. I give a little shake, firmly and loudly state "NO" and then let him go. When I used the chicken, I let him approach the chicken while I held it, let him give a cursory sniff....if he became more interested in the chicken or moved further in to get closer, I did the roll and held the chicken at his throat, repeated the "NO" and let him go. I let him know the chicken is mine by holding it and petting it, I let him know that he is not dominant over the chickens or me. He isn't scared of the chickens, but he won't look directly at one now and, if I approach him while holding a chicken, he will scurry away while looking back and tail tucked. No pain involved. No shouting. No trauma. Just letting a dog know that some things are just off limits.