i walk the lab and isis at the same time one on hand and one on the other, the lab seem to have a major drive to sniff out anything and track blindly and of course isis will be doing the same, the b is easier to control cause she lighter but the m1 tank of the lab well.. we've came across little furry friends on our nitely walks i need to stay very focus on my surroundings, one thing the b does if theres someone walking behind us doesnt matter how far , she walk ahead stop and turn to look back, she'll keep doing this repeatedly like she warning me these something there,im sure its instinct on her end to,of course i confirm whats shes doing but yeah those b's dont miss a trick
Barking and lunging towards people during walks, help!
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Hello!
We adopted a Basenji Shepherd mix 3 days ago and she is calm and wonderful in every way, except when we are outside she barks, lunges and even growls at literally every person we see. She never barks or lunges inside or with me and my son. She does not calm down outside, even with people we know! She is clearly protective of me and my son, but this is not a safe behavior. Advise please! -
Doesn't really matter the breed, a dog who is "protective" is a bad thing (unless trained to be)... it means they see you as their possession. Ideally you want your dog to look to you to protect it.
I usually have good search skills.. there are some good articles on retraining this behavior. I can't find them, though this article below applies to humans as well as dogs.
First I would suggest a trainer.
However, you can work on this. Take the dog and a friend (if your son is old enough, not if a child) to an area with people. Enlist the people to stay back, not look at you or the dog, toss a tiny treat to him. Keep this up day after day, several times each trip, until seeing people no longer puts him in attack mode.
Next, have them come a little closer, toss the treat and say "Hi" without looking at you. Same process.
Next, have them stay at safe distance, face you and toss treat then go on.
Next, have them look at the dog and say "good dog", toss treat and go on.
Next, have them stand and talk to you, tossing a small treat when they arrive and as they leave.For many dogs, this process can help stop the reactive behavior.
Other than in those very controlled, you dog needs a muzzle in public. Do not risk him hurting someone or being put down.
https://positively.com/dog-behavior/aggression/leash-aggression/
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CARE is another good resource for desensitizing a reactive dog such as this: http://careforreactivedogs.com. Good luck!