@Tayda_Lenny:
Of course I love basenjis, and I'm not going to trade them in for labs, nor do I want him to act like a lab. I want him to act like a good basenji. I do think that I can work with them more than I have been and thats why I posted. I'd prefer not to get responses that focus around what I "could have done" yesterday. It was a mistake and I want to move forward. I was just looking for some advice for how to move forward, not for how to feel guilty about what happened yesterday. I don't need help with that. I obviously don't plan on returning to the dog park anytime soon.
I'm not giving up on them, I was just hoping to get some advice from all you experienced folks out there as to how to point us in the right direction. I'm prepared to do a lot of work with him. I have seen postings about people who can have their basenjis off leash and are trustworthy in the house without a crate. Now, thats not necessarily my goal, but I do want to improve things from where they are now. And I believe it is possible.
So, no rolling over, no dog park, no NILIF for this situation, lots of walks on leash with stop/sit practice….I can and will do that.
Quercus - you mentioned "attention" work. What exactly does that involve?
I am sorry if I came across harshly. I can tell that you wouldn't want to trade in your Bs for a lab
You want to train your dog to pay attention to you in all circumstances…it is more valuable than sits, downs or stays. Once a dog goes into that other part of their brain associated with chase/catch/kill they can't hear the commands you have trained anymore. Kind of like someone trying to give you driving instructions when you are in the middle of avoiding an accident. Anyhow..you can train this by rewarding your dog for looking at your face. At first you will use a bridge (clicker or word), and then a food treat any time he looks your way. You don't prompt them by saying anything, you wait for them to pay attention...it puts the responsibility on the dog. Once you have your dog paying pretty good attention somewhere easy (kitchen) you start to take them to places with more distractions...they will be distracted, then as soon as they look at you click/treat. It is a lot easier to show than write. Later, once they get the behavior, your can alternate a treat reward with a smile, good-boy, or scritch. And you can start to add a word in like "watch me".
Those are the basics...it is a beyond wonderful behavior to teach. It still might not solve issues at the dog park. But at least it will give you a little more control. I think in the situation with the dog park, I might train a "stop" behavior (meaning stop what you are doing)...used when he is heading off towards a dog in "that" way. And then a really strong recall.
Dog parks are often bad news because dogs get so riled up, and so few owners have the ability to really control their dogs. Basenjis rarely do okay with that level of stimulation.
Good luck...try "Click to Calm" by Emma Parsons...it is more about dog-dog aggression, but will give you the basics for attention work.