Barking
by David the Dogman
Barking at night
The simple answer is to ignore the dog. By barking, it is training you
to respond. You might have a few noisy nights but you will be showing
it that barking is not productive. Certainly do not respond by shouting
or scolding. If you do so the dog will only know that its barking has
been productive by making you bark as well.
Barking, excessive
The reason for excessive barking in one word is FEAR, and it is frightened
because it has not been socialized. It is nervous of every sound it hears
and barks in a futile attempt to send the perceived threat away. Sometimes
a dog which constantly whines, cries, barks, or is destructive, suffers
from skin problems brought about by scratching and licking themselves
because of the stress of being left. Generally this is not a problem with
dogs which have been socialized through training classes at an early age.
The solution is socialzation through obedience classes and home management.
Barking when the owner is out
This is a big problem caused by bad owners. The dog is a pack animal and
if, as a member of the family pack, it is given the freedom of the home
by being allowed to rest on the furniture and sleep in bedrooms, then
it will suffer a form of stress when the pack goes off to work because
it expects to go with the pack. When people leave home they should not
look, touch or talk to the dog for about 10 minutes beforehand. The same
applies when coming home: ignore, no talking, no patting, no looking,
nothing. This way, the dog understands that its barking has not brought
the owner back. If it has been barking while you were away and is rewarded
by your attention when you come back, it then thinks it was its barking
that brought you back to the house. A dogs bark is said to be worse
than its bite. It certainly is for the neighbors of a constantly barking
dog left alone for too long, unsocialized and with uncaring owners. Hopefully
no readers would permit their dogs to be such a community nuisance.
Barking at the postman
The postman or any kind of regular deliveryman is regarded by your dog
as an intruder and so it barks and is immediately rewarded by the postman
going away. It thinks it has frightened off the intruder and done its
duty. Talk to your postman and try to get him to cooperate. Tell him you
will leave a tit-bit outside the door and ask him to push it through the
letter-box before the letters. The tit-bit will be a better reward for
your dog than chasing the postman away.
Barking when the telephone rings
If you shout (bark) at your dog when it barks at the telephone ringing,
you are encouraging it to bark more. It feels there is danger if you react.
Get a friend to phone you at several agreed times. When the phone rings
do not move and do not speak. After your friend has done this a few times
your dog will no longer bark when the telephone rings.
Barking from balconies
When a dog barks from a balcony at someone passing by, it is simply asserting
its dominance, firstly by looking down on humans and secondly by successfully
telling them to shove off. As far as the dog is concerned, it is objecting
to someone invading its territory. And even more pleasing, its barking
is rewarded by the passerby walking away. Answer: ban the dog from the
balcony.
Barking deterrent
Abistop is a French invention resulting from chemosensory research into
the dog barking problem. It is attached to the dog´s collar and
automatically emits a small spray of citronella whenever the dog barks.
Brief exposure to cintronella immediately distracts dogs but does not
cause them distress and even smells pleasant to humans. It is effective
but expensive at £90. A cheaper method might be a quick squirt of
water from a plant spray bottle or putting a bit of food in front of the
dogs nose. It cannot eat and bark at the same time.
Commitment, Firmness, but kindness.
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Do you have any problems with your pet? Then why not send your problem
to DAVID THE DOGMAN.
David has his own radio and TV shows, and writes for many newspapers and
magazines. David has been working with dogs for many years and started
his career in Israel, working on the Border Police. He has been involved
in all forms of training, including air sea rescue, air scent work, and
has trained dogs for finding drugs. David has devoted the past 10 years
to studying behaviour and the very passive approach. He does not use choke
chains, check chains, or any form of aggression.
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