Working With Aggressive And Reactive Dogs ~ #dogtraining #dogtips #doglovers #fyp #foryou

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Published 2022-07-07

All Comments (21)
  • Well said, Eric. Dogs are dogs and as much as mine are family, they are dogs not people. If we treat them like humans at all, let us love them enough to provide boundaries and fair, consistent consequences. I have a rescue who is definitely not Lassie, a high drive dog who has taught me so much about what happens to a dog who has no boundaries! Keep up the great work.
  • @484fakeme
    Look at how much happier she is without all that fear. This is why I love training dogs… You can’t reward fear and aggression out of dogs
  • I'm a groomer and its astounding how many people anthropomorphize dogs. I've only been grooming for about a year or so. I wanted to train and started taking classes online. They were positive reinforcement trainers. I just saw so many holes in a lot of the techniques. I'm sure some of them work but every dog is different.
  • Sniffing deactivates aggressive feelings. Increasing dog’s self confidence by playing up, off etc. is an essential part of the key to gain its respect. Trust and love will follow automatically. I really respect this guy’s competence. 👍🏻 On the other hand, I will never understand the wording “Mum, Dad, Brother, Sister” when talking about humans and dogs.
  • So true. Even for people like me who like dogs more than humans, I find myself making that mistake often. The first shiba I had, after he'd run off and return I would be so full of fear adrenaline from being scared of him getting hurt or worse, I would still be freaking out and saying it was bad. It took years of good boys whenever he returned to finally believe me. When I got my second, the minute she ran off I pretended we were playing a game and it was fine (instead of freaking out) and when she returned to the house she got good girls and treats (despite having run off after she escaped a new harness or slipping by a gate etc). Night and day. It was me all along 😂
  • @oshitaiya3651
    I think positive only training is only good for puppies. If you adopt from a shelter they can potentially have both behavioral and neurological issues. Do they really think positive only is actually going to help dogs like that???
  • Do mother dogs only praise their pups? No. Correction is important so they understand wrong, positive is important so they understand what's right. So much more clear to the dog. A friend told me not to tell their dog "no" when he was biting me. Uh.... Ok so what do I do? Let him gnaw on me until he's done and then reward him for stopping? Unhealthy mindset.
  • The fact that ppl let their dogs get to this point is really disgusting. You can’t just get a dog and decide not to both socialize and train them extensively!
  • Great job.. Aurora needed to be trusted and mingled .. many people don't understand how important is to walk a dog, introduce em to a whole other world besides home.. we don't necessarily have to socialize em with other but for them to know others share space with us and most can be friendly and not a threat to them.. when we isolate em cause they're snippy etc, we are punishing em from a whole world. I notice a lot of this situation in owners of bigger dogs.. owners seem to worry their dog may hurt others, that's a valid point.. but OWNER work on your fear , don't ground your pet for doing what it hasn't been taught. . @eric you make a strong point in your videos, in which it's my first time watching you.. you have a new subscriber in *💕ME*❤️ You will be greatly recommended , I ❤️ your strong points and firm guidance.) But as I started saying Eric the great point which hooked me is you saying How it is easier for you to say no , be firm cause you separate the human & beast . And has nothing to do with beliefs, You just seem to know your place, which I think many of us forget, specially when we start letting our pets sleep on our bed, eat what we eat, warm their food, put shoes on cause WE say it's too cold or Hawtttt! ""Dang it!!!" you're giving me a psychological evaluation without knowing it"!!.. lol. . Your teaching and interaction is clear youre the Loving Master.. so thank you for the session & self evaluation.... But yes aggressive dogs need to be worked, to unwind their energy,, they want to work and please you, So Work,Work! MAKE A DOG SMILE TODAY!! T. Y 💕 Miriam 🐕‍🦺🐩
  • LOL like one of my favorite dog pages posted @polotherescue “You don’t like being choked?? I do. Now what?? Stop anthropomorphizing dogs.”
  • @beenice2204
    Your the real 🐕 whisperer just joined ya show
  • My dog is totally fine with humans, but will bite other dogs that get too close to him. Can I get him to be neutral around dogs? If so, what would that look like?
  • My puppy's looks almost identical to this one just a big more chubby since he's a male and has a double coat
  • @martinvdv5970
    Agree, dogs are dogs treat them like that and as a mate. Let them work, tease them, challenge them, spoil them.
  • @Mendes16-125
    I'm not sure what you did to train. Did you use a the slip and correct aggression with a snap to get the dog to listen/focus? I think this technique is unnecessarily dangerous, if I understand it correctly.. Do this on the wrong Dobe or cane corse and you're finished (based on the part the dog bit the sleeve). The dog easily could have dropped low or redirected straight to the face. I've seen dobes and cane corsos feel nothing even with a prong on when they are mad enough and will cause major damage overpowering you and tearing into everything. I've unfortunately seen it happen due to this type of harsher training. Surely it's less dangerous to desensitise with treats and build trust first to ensure long-term change? I don't see how the dog built the confidence needed to stop using aggression out of insecurity. How is forcing the dog to interact better than allowing the dog to build the confidence needed to chose to interact and be secure in the situation? Not hating, just don't see the reason behind the method: if being a bit more patient yields the same result with less confrontation and risk of injury. No hateful replies please, being honest and would love an informative and helpful response
  • @ueeees1861
    I have a 7 year old American shaffordshire terrier and she will attack any dog. Any advice
  • @gulillal5085
    IT' most lost trust and bad experience. My Rotti from a kill shelter from Rumania gone through hell. She also does not like to be touched.