calliecritturs
Posted : 11/19/2010 7:35:33 PM
What I told you in the email is the start. *you* have to devise ways to handle her. And just letting her drag a long ribbon (not even a heavy leash -- you can do the same wtih a 6-10 foot long piece of pretty wide satin ribbon)
The problem is once a dog has bitten you then YOU get nervous about handling them. So devising ways of keeping hold of her is important. It sounds like she's VERY hand shy -- every time you get your hand in front of her face she bites you so you will likely have to devise a different method for getting her attention and disconnecting her from a potentially negative situation. She's probably been hit -- very likely for barking and yet probably at the same time she was probably put IN a situation where she was made into being a barker. So she doesn't realize you are trying to stop the noise -- she perceives you are trying to hurt her for protecting herself.
If you don't think you can GET a leash on her you may need to muzzle her and you may need to wear a thick pair of garden gloves/leather gloves to get your hand around her muzzle so you can PUT a muzzle on her long enough to get a collar on her with a ribbon tied to it. In this particular case, I might suggest a Gentle Leader rather than purely a muzzle (so it's touching that dominance trigger point but it allows her to open her mouth, eat, etc. and yet when you grab the other end of the leash/ribbon you will have control of her head from far away.
THEN you can take her outside to eliminate just in a routine manner. You can get her out from under the bed.
I wouldn't let her have free access to a room where you then can't retrieve her (like if she goes SO far under the bed you can't get hold of her ribbon).
In order to help her brain return a bit to normal you may want to use something to calm her. Either something like Hylands Calms Forte (which is a homeopathic and not habit-forming) or even something herbal like St. John's Wort (which is a relaxant but which also has some emotional soothing overtones). Another really good one would be Oat Seed tincture (HerbPharms is very good). Any of these things can be mixed into peanut butter or into her food so you don't have to pill her.
I'm also betting from what you've told me/us that she may also have issues with you bending down in front of her face while putting your hand in front of you -- the fact that you are "over" her boxes her in and then makes her feel "trapped". It could also -- with a fear biter -- get you bitten in the face! But more goes into fear-biting than JUST being hand-shy. it can be a whole complex series of events (like you walking up from *behind* her when she's AT the door barking and you THEN bend over her and put your hand in front of her to show a quiet/no type of command and she thinks you're going to strike her). In other words -- analyze the physical aspects of where you are and how you have approached her before she nailed you.
Will she let you touch her at all?? I'm thinking T-Touch might be a good thing to use on her. If you've never used it you can do an internet search for "T-Touch" and "Linda Tellington-Jones" -- it's really incredible stuff and works very well on nervous animals.
If you want to chat with me about her I'm happy to help you -- don't just dismiss something and think 'Oh I couldn't do that because I can't get my hands ON her' -- if I know more what the situation is, we can then figure a way around it so you CAN put it in motion.
AT this point she's likely effectively boxed YOU in so you don't dare touch her -- and she's protecting herself by staying in a place where you can't reach in to grab her.
So -- you set down her food with something as a calmative IN it, and you go and shut all the bedroom doors and gate her into the kitchen or into an area where YOU can't be avoided.
Because at this point you can't train her until you can put her in a situation where you can manipulate the situation so she HAS to make good choices and CAN'T make bad ones. Does that make sense to you?