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Quote:
Melon!!!!
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Quote: Me too!!
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I have to clean the coop first....(and I haven't been to bed yet. Gonna be a l-o--n---g day.)
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it was hot and humid and nasty out there ughhh

Happy Sunday everybody!
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Okay, well here's one I made last week when my girls were still free ranging. There was a daytime predator and now they are locked up, so no more knocking at the door! I'm gonna miss that...
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do the dogs bark?
 
My dutch was a mix with possibly basenji as there was another dog from the same rescue as mine that was the perfect mix of the two. He was the 'runt' grew to 65 pounds & thought he was a chihuahua! Loved to get dressed up, hopped over the chair arm to sit in your lap, etc. He also saved his 'nite nite' treat from going into his crate until he was let out after work or in the am....funnies thing. Then he'd carry it around for a bit....big, sweet goofy clown. That could've been him though. 

Remember too that the giant breeds mature at a slower rate than even large breeds. Plus, what some take as being slow/stupid is just a difference in how they learn. Example, danes. During obedience training an exercise is to practice loose leash walking by walking around a store...basically circles. Well, most dogs will happily go along. A Dane will think that you've gotten lost & lead you to the exit (other dogs will too)....it's not what's being asked, but it's also not their disobeying or being lazy because they don't get it/don't want to do it. They do...they're just over it & figuring out a solution to the problem they think exists. Danes & other breeds need to have only 4/5 repetitions max before they hit the "ok, i got it & i'm done showing you" point. Could be same with your dog.  Distraction....go slow. Add 1 thing at a time. For leash/dog reactivity it's acclimation...lots of exposure. Again, a little at a time. It's tough, but worth it. You've got the right thought for boredom. Give him a job....picking up things, carry, etc.

Also, what you think/feel goes down the leash to him. So he knows you're scared. Which means the reactivity could be him thinking he needs to take the lead/save/protect you versus counting on you to be the leader & save/protect him. If you don't use one try a martingale collar & pull to the side if walking or up if standing/sitting for correction when he reacts. Also, at the sight of another dog have him sit until you release him after the dog passes you. If needed, have him turn around & face the other way. A head halter can help too. 

Sorry, off thread topic. Hope it helps a bit.


He certainly sounds like a funny boy! Gator mostly likes to sleep but he also loves pillows. He will carry them around or like when we go to watch TV he grabs one and jumps on the couch with it in his mouth. Has to hold one. And he carries treats around too at first. Not milk bones or instant eating treats but like bully sticks or when we used to give rawhide etc. And a brand new toy. He prances around with it. And usually with the treats or bones he wants to bury it. Then finally when we don't let him he eventually eats it.

Yeah, I actually feel the same way. I did used to think he was disobeying on purpose like you said but then I realized he was just slow to move and also had to think about it. We had read early on that Pyrs have to think about everything and that they have to decide if it's worthwhile but I didn't really fully get it and start connecting till he was a year or two maybe a bit later. It finally hit me I just wasn't finding the right motivation. I also realized he responded much better to positive reinforcement. I've always tried to use positive reinforcement though but was more finding the right motivation etc. Anyways, once I realized it and also read more on training things went much more smoothly. It was just about the right treat and/or toy and being way more excited etc. Plus of course him maturing. Now he's excellent and does almost everything I ask. Of course he still has his limits with too many repetitions or too long of training sessions but he's great now. He's actually very very smart so that wasn't my issue, I knew he wasnt stupid, just that he was very slow to do things and has to think about everything. I actually think stubborn might be a better word. I thought he was stubborn. Turns out he likes learning but I just wasn't using the right motivation and tried to train too long or force some things. Now we stop when he's done. I also very quickly relaized the Lab in him makes him more food motivated and more willing to please so I think easier to train than maybe a pure Pyr. I had to figure out what would make him decide that listening was more worth it than disobeying. It's so much fun once you finally figure out/can understand and connect with the dog so we've done some cool stuff. I haven't really trained him in a year actually or barely but recently I've been a lot more. But he's 4 now so a lot calmer. He really calmed down at 3 but he was already starting to calm down some before that. He actually used to be a total terror as an adolescent. Wouldn't listen and was way overexcited, jumped and play bit, stole stuff to chew up, barked all night, etc. etc., total terror from maybe 6 months or a year to almost 2 years. I think most dogs the adolescent phase lasts like 6 or 8 months to around 18 months but I think his phase lasted till almost 2. He was so bad. But then he calmed down.

Sorry, got to rambling.

Anyhow as for distraction, yeah I definitely need to work more and I will try one thing at a time. He doesn't even like to work if someone is watching us. Or if someone comes home or in the room. He gets all flustered. He used to not even work when I was filming it but will now. As for reactivity, you're right about exposure. We didn't socialize him and he doesn't go on walks because he's gotten worse.

As for the added part, thanks for all the great info. I'll try all of that :) i think you're right about energy because my brother takes him and has taken him in the city etc and he doesn't react. And he's gone to beach and played with other dogs. He hated one golden retriever but according to my brother the owner was a jerk too so maybe he sensed it LOL but he's played with his friend's unneutered male mastiff and was roaming the beach with him so I think he loves other dogs. The issue might be me. But even in the car even with my brother he will freak at certain dogs. But I think exposure is his issue. And I'm not even necessarily scared but even when I'm not I've been known to yell at him to cut it out, pull him from the back with the choke collar which I don't think even works since he's lunging and probably doesn't feel it, start almost crying etc. Actually i only cried when he was truly going after the lab and they said to the neighbor as they were walking away oh he's not a very nice boy is he and they said no he isn't. Only cried at home (it was by our mailbox) but still. I later realized I would be scared if a 130 pound black dog was lunging at me too but it made me upset because he's the sweetest dog in the world, sleeps all day, cuddles, and they're saying that without even knowing him. Plus saying it right in front of me. When their dog was also doing the exact same thing to Gator. This was last year. Since then i just dont really take him. But so anywau, VERY long story short, that day my hysterical energy probably fed into his belief that this dog was scary and a threat. I don't like the choke collar but he slips regular collars to his neck shape (huge neck at the shoulder base/bottom, smaller head) and with his behavior I feel the need to have him under control and don't feel safe using anything else. I tried a harness because I didn't like it pulling his neck when he sniffs and that worked and I liked it but I was paranoid about the connections. I've always wanted to try a martingale so I may have to look into that. Having him sit did help some, I tried it once, and I had planned on trying LAT before I got too scared, but my dad seems to think that stopping and sitting may actually make him worse and draw attention to the dog rather than just walking right by it, keep walking and not stop. That's a good point too so I don't know. Thoughts? I think either way I need to remain calm and try not to get scared when a dog approachesor freak out and scream at him to stop it NO bad dog sit SIT NO and yank him away hard when he does it. I think remaining calm may be best. Which I do have issues with but it's for Gators sake. I think I mostly just need to get him out there. Thanks again.

And sorry for the rambling lol and spelling. This site seems to have slow reaction times especially on mobileand i find always hits the wrong key. I know it's the site cause i type just as fast on other sites and its fine.

Oh and also forgot to add but for the boredom thing, ive been bad about doung things with him lately actually but i plan to do more. One thing i did find is that i realized just this week actually as he was stealing stuff put of recycling that he is not a bad dog, he is simply a bored dog and we're just bad owners. I've known he's bored for a while but this big realization was recent. My first thought, as he finished chewing one thing up and went and got another to chew on the couch, was gosh why do we have such a BAD dog. Why is he always so bad, stealing stuff, he's terrible, trashes the house. My second thought was wait a minute. He is not bad. He's just bored. And we're bad owners. He needs things to chew or things to do. So I immediately went and got one of the bully sticks I just recently ordered, which i found out he loves, and gave him one of those to chew instead and that immediately resolved the problem. So I guess it's just another example of reaching an understanding with the dog. Even though he's 4 now we're still constantly learning and adapting.

The next big thing is getting everybody on board. No one is consistent. We all hsbe different rules and training methods and some of the rules I want to implement my dad thinks are mean and some of the ones ny brother wants I think are excessive and I don't agree with my other brother's methods. For example, I think he should be out of the kitchen when we are eating. He actually knows this one but I've stopped enforcing it. My dad thinks it's mean. My one brother thinks he shouldn't be allowed in whenever we are sitting at the counter, not just eating. That's where I think it's excessive because we're at the counter A LOT. so even the family needs to understand each other more haha

Sorry for this lengthy add on.

  Yes, that's how it works. :lau


:gig
ROFL :lau

lol


 Don't worry about being off topic, it was helpful.


 Good Morning!

Good Morning!


I agree, was very helpful.

We don't know, we suspect a coyote.    Something big enuf to quickly grab a large hen and run off, just leaving a sm. amt. of feathers in one spot.   We were home, heard nothing.  We have lived on this farm 10 yrs and this year is the first for daytime predators.     But certainly every kind of predator lives around here, and they all can come out in the day...we're way out in the country, lots of woods, etc. 



What about a hawk (or other bird of prey)? That's a pretty common daytime predator I know, and they can certainly carry a bird away...

- Ant Farm


I agree, maybe hawk? We had a hawk attack once and thankfully it didn't manage to catch anyone but did manage to pull a large pile of feathers from one hen. And it was silent too. Swoop in and grab one. I would think with a coyote the hens would make a big ruckus.
 
I shouldn't have brought up predators in this thread, they've got their own threads. This is such a fun thread, I think I'll get back to that.....
 
He certainly sounds like a funny boy! Gator mostly likes to sleep but he also loves pillows. He will carry them around or like when we go to watch TV he grabs one and jumps on the couch with it in his mouth. Has to hold one. And he carries treats around too at first. Not milk bones or instant eating treats but like bully sticks or when we used to give rawhide etc. And a brand new toy. He prances around with it. And usually with the treats or bones he wants to bury it. Then finally when we don't let him he eventually eats it.

Yeah, I actually feel the same way. I did used to think he was disobeying on purpose like you said but then I realized he was just slow to move and also had to think about it. We had read early on that Pyrs have to think about everything and that they have to decide if it's worthwhile but I didn't really fully get it and start connecting till he was a year or two maybe a bit later. It finally hit me I just wasn't finding the right motivation. I also realized he responded much better to positive reinforcement. I've always tried to use positive reinforcement though but was more finding the right motivation etc. Anyways, once I realized it and also read more on training things went much more smoothly. It was just about the right treat and/or toy and being way more excited etc. Plus of course him maturing. Now he's excellent and does almost everything I ask. Of course he still has his limits with too many repetitions or too long of training sessions but he's great now. He's actually very very smart so that wasn't my issue, I knew he wasnt stupid, just that he was very slow to do things and has to think about everything. I actually think stubborn might be a better word. I thought he was stubborn. Turns out he likes learning but I just wasn't using the right motivation and tried to train too long or force some things. Now we stop when he's done. I also very quickly relaized the Lab in him makes him more food motivated and more willing to please so I think easier to train than maybe a pure Pyr. I had to figure out what would make him decide that listening was more worth it than disobeying. It's so much fun once you finally figure out/can understand and connect with the dog so we've done some cool stuff. I haven't really trained him in a year actually or barely but recently I've been a lot more. But he's 4 now so a lot calmer. He really calmed down at 3 but he was already starting to calm down some before that. He actually used to be a total terror as an adolescent. Wouldn't listen and was way overexcited, jumped and play bit, stole stuff to chew up, barked all night, etc. etc., total terror from maybe 6 months or a year to almost 2 years. I think most dogs the adolescent phase lasts like 6 or 8 months to around 18 months but I think his phase lasted till almost 2. He was so bad. But then he calmed down.

Sorry, got to rambling.

Anyhow as for distraction, yeah I definitely need to work more and I will try one thing at a time. He doesn't even like to work if someone is watching us. Or if someone comes home or in the room. He gets all flustered. He used to not even work when I was filming it but will now. As for reactivity, you're right about exposure. We didn't socialize him and he doesn't go on walks because he's gotten worse.

As for the added part, thanks for all the great info. I'll try all of that
smile.png
i think you're right about energy because my brother takes him and has taken him in the city etc and he doesn't react. And he's gone to beach and played with other dogs. He hated one golden retriever but according to my brother the owner was a jerk too so maybe he sensed it LOL but he's played with his friend's unneutered male mastiff and was roaming the beach with him so I think he loves other dogs. The issue might be me. But even in the car even with my brother he will freak at certain dogs. But I think exposure is his issue. And I'm not even necessarily scared but even when I'm not I've been known to yell at him to cut it out, pull him from the back with the choke collar which I don't think even works since he's lunging and probably doesn't feel it, start almost crying etc. Actually i only cried when he was truly going after the lab and they said to the neighbor as they were walking away oh he's not a very nice boy is he and they said no he isn't. Only cried at home (it was by our mailbox) but still. I later realized I would be scared if a 130 pound black dog was lunging at me too but it made me upset because he's the sweetest dog in the world, sleeps all day, cuddles, and they're saying that without even knowing him. Plus saying it right in front of me. When their dog was also doing the exact same thing to Gator. This was last year. Since then i just dont really take him. But so anywau, VERY long story short, that day my hysterical energy probably fed into his belief that this dog was scary and a threat. I don't like the choke collar but he slips regular collars to his neck shape (huge neck at the shoulder base/bottom, smaller head) and with his behavior I feel the need to have him under control and don't feel safe using anything else. I tried a harness because I didn't like it pulling his neck when he sniffs and that worked and I liked it but I was paranoid about the connections. I've always wanted to try a martingale so I may have to look into that. Having him sit did help some, I tried it once, and I had planned on trying LAT before I got too scared, but my dad seems to think that stopping and sitting may actually make him worse and draw attention to the dog rather than just walking right by it, keep walking and not stop. That's a good point too so I don't know. Thoughts? I think either way I need to remain calm and try not to get scared when a dog approachesor freak out and scream at him to stop it NO bad dog sit SIT NO and yank him away hard when he does it. I think remaining calm may be best. Which I do have issues with but it's for Gators sake. I think I mostly just need to get him out there. Thanks again.

And sorry for the rambling lol and spelling. This site seems to have slow reaction times especially on mobileand i find always hits the wrong key. I know it's the site cause i type just as fast on other sites and its fine.

Oh and also forgot to add but for the boredom thing, ive been bad about doung things with him lately actually but i plan to do more. One thing i did find is that i realized just this week actually as he was stealing stuff put of recycling that he is not a bad dog, he is simply a bored dog and we're just bad owners. I've known he's bored for a while but this big realization was recent. My first thought, as he finished chewing one thing up and went and got another to chew on the couch, was gosh why do we have such a BAD dog. Why is he always so bad, stealing stuff, he's terrible, trashes the house. My second thought was wait a minute. He is not bad. He's just bored. And we're bad owners. He needs things to chew or things to do. So I immediately went and got one of the bully sticks I just recently ordered, which i found out he loves, and gave him one of those to chew instead and that immediately resolved the problem. So I guess it's just another example of reaching an understanding with the dog. Even though he's 4 now we're still constantly learning and adapting.

The next big thing is getting everybody on board. No one is consistent. We all hsbe different rules and training methods and some of the rules I want to implement my dad thinks are mean and some of the ones ny brother wants I think are excessive and I don't agree with my other brother's methods. For example, I think he should be out of the kitchen when we are eating. He actually knows this one but I've stopped enforcing it. My dad thinks it's mean. My one brother thinks he shouldn't be allowed in whenever we are sitting at the counter, not just eating. That's where I think it's excessive because we're at the counter A LOT. so even the family needs to understand each other more haha

Sorry for this lengthy add on.
I agree, was very helpful.



I agree, maybe hawk? We had a hawk attack once and thankfully it didn't manage to catch anyone but did manage to pull a large pile of feathers from one hen. And it was silent too. Swoop in and grab one. I would think with a coyote the hens would make a big ruckus.

WOW!
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How did you type all that? How long did it take?????
 
WO​W!:eek:  :th   How did you type all that? How long did it take?????





I don't know, I just did lol i type fast i guess. Plus what tends to happen is i have a reply thought out or mean to say one thing but then i get to typing it and it makes me think of other things to say and i forget the original point before finally getting back to it (or not) lol i didnt keep track this time but animal talk i usually type pretty fast cause i love them and have a lot to say fast. But sometimes between 10 to 20 mins for shorter ones but talking to my friend on Facebook Messenger can sometimes take an hour to type but with that we both type long messages and talk about lots of things (we dont talk that often so tend to reply to everything/say it all at once and reply when we can) and I have to scroll back up and look at and reply to each individual point so it takes longer. But yeah. I had to eat dinner so i think this one took shorter but i did write it in segments. I don't know. Haha
 
He certainly sounds like a funny boy! Gator mostly likes to sleep but he also loves pillows. He will carry them around or like when we go to watch TV he grabs one and jumps on the couch with it in his mouth. Has to hold one. And he carries treats around too at first. Not milk bones or instant eating treats but like bully sticks or when we used to give rawhide etc. And a brand new toy. He prances around with it. And usually with the treats or bones he wants to bury it. Then finally when we don't let him he eventually eats it.

Yeah, I actually feel the same way. I did used to think he was disobeying on purpose like you said but then I realized he was just slow to move and also had to think about it. We had read early on that Pyrs have to think about everything and that they have to decide if it's worthwhile but I didn't really fully get it and start connecting till he was a year or two maybe a bit later. It finally hit me I just wasn't finding the right motivation. I also realized he responded much better to positive reinforcement. I've always tried to use positive reinforcement though but was more finding the right motivation etc. Anyways, once I realized it and also read more on training things went much more smoothly. It was just about the right treat and/or toy and being way more excited etc. Plus of course him maturing. Now he's excellent and does almost everything I ask. Of course he still has his limits with too many repetitions or too long of training sessions but he's great now. He's actually very very smart so that wasn't my issue, I knew he wasnt stupid, just that he was very slow to do things and has to think about everything. I actually think stubborn might be a better word. I thought he was stubborn. Turns out he likes learning but I just wasn't using the right motivation and tried to train too long or force some things. Now we stop when he's done. I also very quickly relaized the Lab in him makes him more food motivated and more willing to please so I think easier to train than maybe a pure Pyr. I had to figure out what would make him decide that listening was more worth it than disobeying. It's so much fun once you finally figure out/can understand and connect with the dog so we've done some cool stuff. I haven't really trained him in a year actually or barely but recently I've been a lot more. But he's 4 now so a lot calmer. He really calmed down at 3 but he was already starting to calm down some before that. He actually used to be a total terror as an adolescent. Wouldn't listen and was way overexcited, jumped and play bit, stole stuff to chew up, barked all night, etc. etc., total terror from maybe 6 months or a year to almost 2 years. I think most dogs the adolescent phase lasts like 6 or 8 months to around 18 months but I think his phase lasted till almost 2. He was so bad. But then he calmed down.

Sorry, got to rambling.

Anyhow as for distraction, yeah I definitely need to work more and I will try one thing at a time. He doesn't even like to work if someone is watching us. Or if someone comes home or in the room. He gets all flustered. He used to not even work when I was filming it but will now. As for reactivity, you're right about exposure. We didn't socialize him and he doesn't go on walks because he's gotten worse.

As for the added part, thanks for all the great info. I'll try all of that
smile.png
i think you're right about energy because my brother takes him and has taken him in the city etc and he doesn't react. And he's gone to beach and played with other dogs. He hated one golden retriever but according to my brother the owner was a jerk too so maybe he sensed it LOL but he's played with his friend's unneutered male mastiff and was roaming the beach with him so I think he loves other dogs. The issue might be me. But even in the car even with my brother he will freak at certain dogs. But I think exposure is his issue. And I'm not even necessarily scared but even when I'm not I've been known to yell at him to cut it out, pull him from the back with the choke collar which I don't think even works since he's lunging and probably doesn't feel it, start almost crying etc. Actually i only cried when he was truly going after the lab and they said to the neighbor as they were walking away oh he's not a very nice boy is he and they said no he isn't. Only cried at home (it was by our mailbox) but still. I later realized I would be scared if a 130 pound black dog was lunging at me too but it made me upset because he's the sweetest dog in the world, sleeps all day, cuddles, and they're saying that without even knowing him. Plus saying it right in front of me. When their dog was also doing the exact same thing to Gator. This was last year. Since then i just dont really take him. But so anywau, VERY long story short, that day my hysterical energy probably fed into his belief that this dog was scary and a threat. I don't like the choke collar but he slips regular collars to his neck shape (huge neck at the shoulder base/bottom, smaller head) and with his behavior I feel the need to have him under control and don't feel safe using anything else. I tried a harness because I didn't like it pulling his neck when he sniffs and that worked and I liked it but I was paranoid about the connections. I've always wanted to try a martingale so I may have to look into that. Having him sit did help some, I tried it once, and I had planned on trying LAT before I got too scared, but my dad seems to think that stopping and sitting may actually make him worse and draw attention to the dog rather than just walking right by it, keep walking and not stop. That's a good point too so I don't know. Thoughts? I think either way I need to remain calm and try not to get scared when a dog approachesor freak out and scream at him to stop it NO bad dog sit SIT NO and yank him away hard when he does it. I think remaining calm may be best. Which I do have issues with but it's for Gators sake. I think I mostly just need to get him out there. Thanks again.

And sorry for the rambling lol and spelling. This site seems to have slow reaction times especially on mobileand i find always hits the wrong key. I know it's the site cause i type just as fast on other sites and its fine.

Oh and also forgot to add but for the boredom thing, ive been bad about doung things with him lately actually but i plan to do more. One thing i did find is that i realized just this week actually as he was stealing stuff put of recycling that he is not a bad dog, he is simply a bored dog and we're just bad owners. I've known he's bored for a while but this big realization was recent. My first thought, as he finished chewing one thing up and went and got another to chew on the couch, was gosh why do we have such a BAD dog. Why is he always so bad, stealing stuff, he's terrible, trashes the house. My second thought was wait a minute. He is not bad. He's just bored. And we're bad owners. He needs things to chew or things to do. So I immediately went and got one of the bully sticks I just recently ordered, which i found out he loves, and gave him one of those to chew instead and that immediately resolved the problem. So I guess it's just another example of reaching an understanding with the dog. Even though he's 4 now we're still constantly learning and adapting.

The next big thing is getting everybody on board. No one is consistent. We all hsbe different rules and training methods and some of the rules I want to implement my dad thinks are mean and some of the ones ny brother wants I think are excessive and I don't agree with my other brother's methods. For example, I think he should be out of the kitchen when we are eating. He actually knows this one but I've stopped enforcing it. My dad thinks it's mean. My one brother thinks he shouldn't be allowed in whenever we are sitting at the counter, not just eating. That's where I think it's excessive because we're at the counter A LOT. so even the family needs to understand each other more haha

Sorry for this lengthy add on.
I agree, was very helpful.



I agree, maybe hawk? We had a hawk attack once and thankfully it didn't manage to catch anyone but did manage to pull a large pile of feathers from one hen. And it was silent too. Swoop in and grab one. I would think with a coyote the hens would make a big ruckus.
Large breeds generally have the brain cells arrive (mature/stop acting like bratty teens/etc) at about 18months. Giant breeds, 3 years. So, Gator was being a normal boy. Plus, intelligent dogs do figure things out. They'll find a way to entertain themselves plus they really want to please. In general, dogs want structure and order. They need discipline, routine, affection, & stimulation--physical & mental. Pyr have been breed to work solo as guardians and labs are hunters, breed to be part of a partner/group in that sense. There's a reason labs are used by most service dog organizations. You've a combination. So, you have to look at both aspects & adjust as you have been.

You're right. Everyone has to be on board with the same rules. Find a middle ground. Jasper knows that when I say "out of my kitchen" he's to go to the end of the counter & not cross that line....even though I've a great room with no way to keep him out. It took work. Boundary training involves capitalizing on the stay/wait commands. Yes, positive reinforcement goes further than negative. Many giant breeds are very sensitive. I can't use a harsh voice with Jasper or it back fires. I have to be very calm, even. Harshness comes after all else. Pulling on a choke collar for a giant breed does nothing. As I described for correcting with a martingale is how to correct with a choke or even prong collar. If those don't work then you might consider progressing to a remote trainer that has a tone & buzz. The buzz is not harmful provided the collar is fitted porperly. All collars (choke, prong, buzz/tone, martinngale, whatever) should fit under the chin coming up behind the ears when you pull them. You only pull to correct. If a dog goes to charge, pull fast & hard then move to take the dog the other direction. You can combine a harness with the collar to help gain control....grab the harness to help move him away if needed.

Most trainers will have a reactive dog sit when another approaches as I told you about before. Look up reactive dog training or aggressive dog training....you should find some good sources. Even service dog training can help. I've been where you're at....Jasper was attacked during a fear period. Took a lot of work to get him out of being protective aggressive over me...he was worried the other dog would hurt me. A dog can be aggressive due to fear, the need to protect, etc. It takes a lot of work, but so worth it. I've heard the same thing about Jasper & other dogs just because of their looks. People don't think.It's hard, but do what you did...leave the situation then go home & cry while hugging Gator.

Boredom....lol I know what you mean. Jasper taught himself to open jars & bottles....so I find him on the bed with an open water bottle then when go to get it he moves & soaked bed. I've had him eat most of a bottle of fish oil capsules & peanut butter. He's so good that you can still use the lid again. He also carries things in & out. Had his 'wubbies' that he took everywhere. Still does. I had my first trainer tell me to give my dog a rope dog, a stuffed toy, & a rubber/chew toy at least. Then change them out every so often to help the boredom. Just to assure you...Jasper is my service dog, but he is a dog. He will take the smallest thing off a shelf or a crowded counter without anything falling off then carry it around to show me...go to take it & he backs up...comes closer, backs again...until he finally darts out the dog door before looking over his shoulder to make sure I'm chasing him. He's notorious for getting into the laundry (dirty/clean) & stealing socks, bandanas, hand towels, or dish towels then doing the same thing. He wants to play chase....which now means my youngest dog starts the tattling bark then the chase game is on between the 3. He'll be 7 in October.

Feel free to pm me if you like...it's way off topic & a book plus of information I'm sure.

I do try to apply some of this to the chickens by the way. I wish I could figure out how to potty train them...then I wouldn't mind so much to be surprised when they come in the house!!!!
 

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