Outta Here
Songster
- May 17, 2021
- 462
- 1,690
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I was a professional career dog trainer, having had about 4,000 dogs come through my classes, plus operating a 50-dog kennel where thousands of dogs over the years ran free together in a park-like setting. Rehabilitating aggressive dogs was also my less fun job, and I was called as an expert witness in aggression cases by the police department. I know this isn't a dog forum, but I got to thinking about a similarity between dominant roosters and dominant dogs.
When I posted that my friendliest chick, my lap baby, turned into a vicious cockerel, several people answered that the most petted cockerels often turn mean. But now I'm wondering whether cuddling makes them mean or that the bold, friendly ones who seek cuddling are already the dominant ones?
Now petting doesn't make a dog mean, we all know that. They should be petted and loved many time daily, all their lives. But when you go to pick a puppy from the litter, the first one that runs boisterously out to greet you is Boss Puppy, the most dominant of the litter. The others, even if they could run to you faster, will hold back to let Boss Puppy lead and get first pets, which is his right in dog pack dynamics.
When that pup is taken to its new home, the next dominant one will be the one that runs to greet the next newcomers. I hate to burst the bubble people often have that the first pup that ran out "picked me!" The one that runs to you is just the most dominant of the group. Dominant dogs under a strong leader can be spectacular--or pushy and aggressive under a submissive owner.
Could it be that the more dominant cockerel chick is the one who rushes to be your lap baby?
When I posted that my friendliest chick, my lap baby, turned into a vicious cockerel, several people answered that the most petted cockerels often turn mean. But now I'm wondering whether cuddling makes them mean or that the bold, friendly ones who seek cuddling are already the dominant ones?
Now petting doesn't make a dog mean, we all know that. They should be petted and loved many time daily, all their lives. But when you go to pick a puppy from the litter, the first one that runs boisterously out to greet you is Boss Puppy, the most dominant of the litter. The others, even if they could run to you faster, will hold back to let Boss Puppy lead and get first pets, which is his right in dog pack dynamics.
When that pup is taken to its new home, the next dominant one will be the one that runs to greet the next newcomers. I hate to burst the bubble people often have that the first pup that ran out "picked me!" The one that runs to you is just the most dominant of the group. Dominant dogs under a strong leader can be spectacular--or pushy and aggressive under a submissive owner.
Could it be that the more dominant cockerel chick is the one who rushes to be your lap baby?
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