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Crouching like a heeler when on leash?

Basenji Talk
  • Agree with Pat, that is a basenji thing. And if you think of any hunting type of animal, this is similar to what they do as well.

  • Well, good to hear he is "normal" at least!

    Has anyone had any luck changing this behavior? He does it at the dog park too when he is waiting for another dog to come back with the ball (smart dog!) but it is a problem when he is on-leash.

  • Yup, totally normal. Both of my B's do that when they are at the dog park or sometimes when they are on-leash and want to play. Once the other dog gets closer then they bolt towards them and do the greeting or keep running to see if the other one wants to play.

  • I don't think that you will find anyone that has wanted to change that behavior….

  • Well, thank you for your opinion but I am hopeful that someone might be able to help me. If someone else's dog does it and they live in a city where they pass a lot of people and other dogs, they might also see it as unwanted behavior. Whether it is normal for basenjis or not, people and other dogs are not used to it, and I would like him to behave better on our walks.

    I should add that Mansa did not always do this–its been a recent thing.

  • You might just shorten the leash and keep walking quickly. Or try training an alternate behaviour, using the approach of the other dog as a cue. Clicker training would work well for this. I agree, the behaviour, although "cute", is undesirable on a walk.

  • I would adjust the leash higher on the neck to gain control of the motion to go to the ground and redirect into a sit….I second clicker training for this. Oakley doesn't do this behavior but he tends to lunge so this has been my method to gain control....I also use a martingale which works well for him

  • Mine does that every time. I just reel him in close to my right side, let them pass on the left to prevent his surprise lunge.

  • Give your Basenji the command to resume walking when they go into that behavior… instead of waiting for them to lunge. Keep their attention on you with treats or praise.

  • My B-mix tries to go down like that while walking occasionally but I don't let her accomplish it. I move her collar higher on her neck and just keep walking quickly past the oncoming traffic, be it other dogs or people, because I know her intention. She goes down like tht at dog parks so she can "charge" other dogs, especially her "sister," to play with them as they run by. That's fine when she's in the park playing. However, while walking with her alone one evening, she went down before I noticed it and began to charge a man who was walking toward us. I pulled her up close really quick because I'm not so sure she was going to "play" with him.

  • Thank you all so much!

    Yesterday I tried having him sit when we saw another dog approaching, which was difficult for him :) He did do it, but I think just to appease me, if that makes sense…he was still very focused on the dog, and for longer because we were at a stop. I will try to remember to bring treats with me tonight and do the resume walking command. Usually the only problem with that he doesn't watch where he is going at all as his nose is positioned up toward my pocket!

  • Blaze does it, too, as did Maxx before him.

    It does tend to freak people out who are not dog savvy or who know nothing about Basenji's because they think he's waiting to attack their dog. We try to reassure the other person that, no, Blaze isn't going to attack their dog…it's just something Basenji's do. Some people aren't convinced, though...we had one person in the RV park where we spend the winter go so far as to pick up his dog everytime they saw us coming. That dog, who started out being friendly, turned into a barking, growling dog everytime we'd walk by.

    Some people simply shouldn't be allowed to have dogs! ;)

14/14

30 Apr 2012, 14:23

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    @debradownsouth Oh yes, I hadn't thought of that. Thanks debradownsouth.
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    @eeeefarm said in How did you get your basenji to walk off leash?: What I find interesting is the change in attitude to dogs on leashes. At that time, many people walked their dogs off leash, and many left them loose on their properties all day long. First, and probably foremost, you're a excellent owner. We disagree on a lot of training things (like e-collars) but you are uber responsible. On the "in the old days"... I see parents talk about not how they roved the neighborhood or all over small towns and how safe. But I also worked with women over the age of 70 who had been sexually assaulted as children and never reported it. I am not sure kids were massively safer in the good old days except for the fact that back then, your neighbors DID look after your kids... they'd scold them or call you without being fearful of being called meddling... because it was about caring. We've lost that. As for dogs, yep... we're similar aged and I remember my grandmother's farm and the fairly steady stream of new farm dogs because they got killed by wild life/snakes etc or roving dogs. It was business as usual. Dog disappeared or dead-- get another one. I know many still feel that way. Rather have to dogs run free and happy and dead young than "cooped up." Our value for dogs as companions has dramatically changed, and our view of our responsibility for them. We always had cats and dogs who were allowed out, and like you, most stayed on the property. But I remember 3 dogs who didn't (one small, probably stolen) and cats didn't live long. We just took that as the norm. Obviously I have look back at that and am horrified. (Though there was an Irish setter who would NOT stay on his property and if the owners weren't there, he followed me about a mile to my house when I walked home from school. His owners laughed, would come get him when they got home if he didn't go back. I thought that was kewl back then but not so much then.) But my experience, and I lived in a very small town then, and a smallish one now, is very different. Then and now, dead dogs and cats on the road are incredibly common. The litmus test is research statistics. Cats who are even allowed out a few hours a day loose have dramatically decreased life spans. I haven't bothered to look about dogs, though a look at shelters should be enough to prove that dogs loose are often dogs lost. The number with electric fence collars demonstrates how ineffective even that is if prey drive kicks in. (for the record, your dog your choice. Loose cats however have an almost unimaginable impact on wildlife, so it IS my business if your cat runs loose.) Yep, times have definitely changed.
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    Maybe a look at the rest of the body and tail.
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    Hi Quercus! Tano's breeder was Maripat Webber of Etukon. I believe both her siblings went on to be show dogs. Tano took after her mom as far as coloring…being the only red and white of the litter. ^_^ I'll push up Tano's appointment for her physical and request the full thyroid thing. If this is all related to thyroid I definitely want to get it looked into asap! Thank you for pointing out that it could all be related! She really develops a thick woolly undercoat in the fall/winter. You'd think the house wasn't near 70 degrees all winter! If her hair was a little longer I could possibly clean it up and felt with it--she sheds that much! :D