I’m constantly frustrated with the other dog owners in my neighborhood. literally, almost constantly.
I found out from steve at my last training session that my block in gloucester city is notorious for bad, loose dogs. steve suggested I either get a tread mill or a long walking stick for the summertime because he gets so many calls about stray or loose dogs that he’s down on my block at least once a week!
I came across a loose dog a few weeks ago. he was huge… looked like a mastiff mix. and he ran out into the middle of the sidewalk in front of wally and me one day when we were out on a walk. thank god for my dog whisperer obsession, for many reasons, but this time because cesar taught me how to deal with an unfamiliar dog. I immediately put wally behind me, and turned sideways from the dog. I didn’t turn my back to him, but just turned sideways and didn’t make eye contact so that he knew I wasn’t trying to threaten him, but I also wasn’t going to back away. after he barked at me a few times, he ran off into what I learned was his back yard. wally and I finished our walk uneventfully.
a couple of weeks ago, joe told me he heard that dog got out again. this time, though, he attacked a guy and his little chihuahua. we found out last week that the chihuahua ended up dying from the attack. since then, I haven’t walked down that way for fear of him getting out and decided that he gave us a free pass last time. I haven’t gotten a walking stick yet, but I have invested in pepper spray just in case I do end up coming across a dog that doesn’t decide we’re too much trouble to take a piece out of.
this is just one isolated incident, though. I have neighbors all along my street who have dogs and never put them on leashes. most of the dogs are harmless, but with wally’s dog aggression it’s just not safe to have other dogs coming up to him without a leash to pull them away on. nothing is more annoying than an owner shouting from 20 yards away, “oh, he won’t bite you!” well, that’s good to know, but what if my dog decides to bite?! jeez, it’s so frustrating!
I hardly ever see anyone out actually walking their dogs on leashes, most of the time I see dogs in their yards. they bark incessantly and aggressively as we walk by and all I can think is how sorry I feel for those dogs. they don’t get enough exercise or mental stimulation, which is why they go absolutely ape shit when they see people walk by. it’s the only outlet they have! so I try not to take it personally when dogs bark at us like that, but it still makes me sad.
it figures that I moved onto the most notorious bad dog block known to camden county animal control… that just seems to be the way my luck is sometimes.
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
wally’s dog aggression
I haven’t really had any other dogs around wally. I noticed that he growled and snapped at my neighbor’s dogs, a pitbull and a Rhodesian ridgeback, who are never on leashes and never listen to their owner when he gives them commands. they would swarm him and get in his face, and he would snap. I thought this was relatively normal. these dogs had no doggie manners! they went straight for him, right in his face. that’s pretty damn rude in the doggie world – it’s pretty much a sign that you’re looking for a fight.
then, I asked gina’s mom to come over and help me learn some techniques for training wally. she brought her german shepherd, willow, over with her. again, I thought he snapped at her because she did the same thing as the other dogs – she went right into his face.
however. I was out walking with mr. bear one afternoon and a guy was also out with his dog (I love how now that it’s nicer out I see all these people out, but when it was the dead of winter there was NO ONE out!). they were walking on the sidewalk coming towards us. we owners did the right thing, we moved to the middle of the sidewalk with the dogs on the outside. well, even unprovoked wally went after this other dog. that was when I realized I had a dog who had dog aggression.
I had one session with steve where the first thing we did was take a nice walk with another dog. this makes the dogs feel as though they’re migrating in a pack, so it usually lessens any aggression. sure enough, once we walked for about 15 minutes and THEN let the dogs smell each other, wally was fine. he wasn’t “happy” with the other dog by any means, but he could at least sniff the other dog and be sniffed by the other dog without incident.
the only problem I face with trying to rehabilitate wally with this particular problem is that I don’t know anyone with a really well-behaved dog who lives nearby that I can really practice with. :(
then, I asked gina’s mom to come over and help me learn some techniques for training wally. she brought her german shepherd, willow, over with her. again, I thought he snapped at her because she did the same thing as the other dogs – she went right into his face.
however. I was out walking with mr. bear one afternoon and a guy was also out with his dog (I love how now that it’s nicer out I see all these people out, but when it was the dead of winter there was NO ONE out!). they were walking on the sidewalk coming towards us. we owners did the right thing, we moved to the middle of the sidewalk with the dogs on the outside. well, even unprovoked wally went after this other dog. that was when I realized I had a dog who had dog aggression.
I had one session with steve where the first thing we did was take a nice walk with another dog. this makes the dogs feel as though they’re migrating in a pack, so it usually lessens any aggression. sure enough, once we walked for about 15 minutes and THEN let the dogs smell each other, wally was fine. he wasn’t “happy” with the other dog by any means, but he could at least sniff the other dog and be sniffed by the other dog without incident.
the only problem I face with trying to rehabilitate wally with this particular problem is that I don’t know anyone with a really well-behaved dog who lives nearby that I can really practice with. :(
Monday, June 7, 2010
my best friend bear had a seizure last tuesday.
wally needed a haircut, so I decided to take him to a groomer that a neighbor recommended to me, a plus grooming in gloucester city. I cannot say this enough… DO NOT GO HERE. ever! when I got him back, one of his nails was cut so short that it was bleeding, and they shaved him so short and carelessly on his belly that they nicked his little warts and his belly was covered in blood! the entire ride home, he was licking, licking, licking himself all over. I don't know if this was from stress, or from the shampoo they used drying his skin out since he kept licking for a few days.
as I had him lying on his back so I could try and clean the blood off his belly, all his legs started shaking. then he started drooling a lot and was doing a little of the running in place thing, all the while still shaking. joe and I were just holding him up so he wouldn’t fall or hurt himself, and when the shaking started getting less, joe called the vet while I stayed with wally. the entire episode was probably about a minute, give or take a few seconds.
the vet said it was probably stress-induced, but I should still check with the groomer just in case he could have gotten into something while he was there. the woman I talked to on the phone acted like I was the lawyer cross-examining her in a murder trial. I explained to her what happened and asked a couple of questions, and she just kept saying, “that happens sometimes, it’s not our fault!” god! I kept saying that I just wanted to give the vet an accurate description of what happened when we took him in… the way she was acting completely made me disregard anything she may have told me.
once we got him to the blackwood animal hospital, his overall exam went very well. the doctor said his heart sounded good, his reflexes were excellent, his pulse was steady… then explained that about 90% of the dogs he sees with epilepsy are little white dogs with curly hair. three strikes on my buddy bear! since he didn’t have a grand mal seizure (no loss of control of his bladder or bowels, no eye-rolling, no yelping, etc.), the doctor suggested we simply keep an eye on him for now. if wally gets them more frequently or if they become more intense, we can think about putting him on phenobarbital, but the vet said that for now the side-effects of the medication would probably outweigh the benefit if he doesn’t have seizures often. he also assured me many times that wally is not in pain or scared when he's having the seizure, he just needs someone to help him not accidentally hurt himself since he won't be able to stand on his own during it.
so that’s what we’re doing – just keeping an eye on him and trying to keep him out of situations that are very stressful. I will never, EVER go back to that horrible groomer. yes, they were about $20 cheaper but I’d rather pay the extra $20 at petsmart and get a dog back that isn’t covered in blood and so shaken up that he has a seizure!
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