This was a lessons learned for me. One of the yuppie neighbors had a mid sized cutie dog that liked to snap at people. Yuppie neighbors though it was cute....I respect your position but that seems like an excuse over controlling the animal. It’s a dog and it doesn’t know any better. Make him know better.
Sometimes you get a bad one though, I’ll admit that.
Yeah. Go to town with an open hand with full force is cool. Won't fracture he's skull but could cause other issues. A dog understands dominance. You understand physical violence. Not the same things. May have worked for you but doesn't make it the right way to do it.It should have been dealt with in the moment, all you can do at this point is try to provoke him again to get a second chance at it. If it were my dog I’d have him by the collar with one hand and the other one an open palm going to town on his face for 15-20 seconds while yelling “no” as loud as you can and yanking him around by the collar.
You aren’t going to fracture his skull or any of the other dog training horror stories you hear about with an open hand, but don’t take it easy on him whatsoever.
A trainer I know does the same. Seems brutal, but it’s literally getting the dog to know their place in the pack.Instances like these I basically body slammed my dog and lay on top of them, it hurts their ego and reminds them of who’s alpha.
Never tried it again, I might would provoke him again with the bone and if he even growled a little I’d body slam him (lack of a better word) not trying to hurt him, not sure how else to describe it and be on top of him with a no command if he knows it.
Learned this from a trainer and it has worked for me
Its unfortunate that people can't differentiate when a dog is truly aggressive versus proper dog training. 99% of the time a dog that bites its due to its owner and its environment. I always got dirty looks with my pitbull but she was a sweetheart and never bit anyone.This was a lessons learned for me. One of the yuppie neighbors had a mid sized cutie dog that liked to snap at people. Yuppie neighbors though it was cute....
well their little kid started playing with the “cute and mostly friendly” dog as it was eating. It bit the little kid in the face and just about ripped his upper lip off.
speaking for nobody but myself, there are just too many negative implications from dogs biting people. One strike is all it takes.
Problem with that he is a hunting dog it’s job is to give you what’s in its mouth. What if he has a pheasant and it still alive you can’t drop that at distance it will run. Take the dog to some one who has force fetched before and it will fix this problem.Maybe if you need what he has in his mouth....tell him to drop it from 10' away and call him to you. Then tell him to down/stay....go pick it up. I had one shepherd that was bad news if you went near him when he was eating, put his German owner in the hospital. Great dog otherwise for an experienced person so we worked around it.
same exact here, and like anything, do drills... i would keep giving him the bone, get into his bone, and take it again.... a little proactive training now is huge. i would give him treats just to take them and test him... anything but a submissive reaction isn't ok. i have 5 dogs and don't let them get aggressive with each other either, and will purposely set up scenarios that test themI am never a fan of being overly physical with a dog. That being said, with a an episode like you described it may be required. A lightning quick grab, put him on his back, holding his mouth closed firmly should get his attention. It won't hurt him, but will show who the alpha truly is. I had my Weimeraner snap at my sin when he was young. I was on the couch next to him and did the pin/clamp maneuver. Never had an issue ever again. Another route is to run a training session with the Christmas bone. Simple sit, stay, drop will again put you in charge of him and the bone. Good luck!
The dog may give up a bird with no trouble and just be possessive of things he eats...the op did not mention trouble with getting birds from the dog. I agree that a hunting dog needs to be force retrieve trained thou and agree that the person doing that needs to be skilled.Problem with that he is a hunting dog it’s job is to give you what’s in its mouth. What if he has a pheasant and it still alive you can’t drop that at distance it will run. Take the dog to some one who has force fetched before and it will fix this problem.