Gaci - New Strange Behaviours

    • Gold Top Dog

    Gaci - New Strange Behaviours

    Lately Gaci has been exhibiting some new strange behaviours.

    The first is a recent anxiety-overreaction to when my partner comes home. Up until a few weeks ago, her normal reaction would be to alarm bark when she hears the door open, bark one or two more times, and then resume with a happy, wiggly greeting. Lately she can't seem to calm herself down nearly as quickly. She will alarm bark when the door opens, but she has a hard time calming herself down. She continues to alarm bark for a few minutes, and will not approach him right away when he bends down to greet her (ignoring her doesn't do anything different). She does an approach-and-retreat behaviour that almost indicates fear, however once she calms down from the greeting she displays no fear to him whatsoever, she really likes him and seeks out affection, attention, and is otherwise quite her confident self.

    Along those lines, though, she has on a few occasions gone to the door at night barking when there is nothing there. Other times I have found her watching the door on alert, even though she is quiet, or lets out a low grumble from deep in her chest, as though she believes there is a threat present. I can call her away easily, but if I don't distract her onto something specific she may stand there watching for some time, or goes back to check now and again *just to be sure*.

    The other issue I've been noticing is that she is developing a sensitivity to certain sounds. She's never been sound-sensitive, but it was seemingly triggered not that long ago by two events - the power going out in the middle of the night and the smoke detector going on the fritz, and my partner's new Blackberry alert. But she has started to become frightened of other noises as well. The timer on the toaster oven has bothered her - one morning we were making breakfast and I was on the computer checking emails in the office and I heard the "ding" of the toaser oven. About three seconds later I felt Gaci jump up against my lap, and she was shivering quite mad. I invited her into my lap but otherwise ignored her while I finished with my emails. She calmed down within a few minutes but when I went to the kitchen she visibly sat under the table (she never used to do that), although she wasn't shivering.

    I'm admittedly not super comfortable with her recent hypervigilance about the door and sounds, and I'm keeping an eye on things. I don't know what has brought these recent behaviours on, and I have a plan I'm going to set in place when my partner comes home to try to recondition her greeting to him and bring it back down to normal. Her annual exam is coming up soon so I'll be having her checked out to make sure there's nothing wonky going on with her health. She is turning seven, and I realize that sound sensitivity is age-related and age-triggered, but I'm hoping to get a handle on it sooner than later. Her hypervigilance at times has me concerned as those were some of her youth symptoms when I had ended up putting her on Clomicalm to help ease her anxiety. It's been four years since she's had the prescription, and I'm going to do what I can to avoid that route, but I know in my heart she's not enjoying herself during those times either, and I'll do what's best for her needs.

    She's always been a special needs dog, but we had been on a great routine for so long now I almost forgot that she once experienced the high anxiety that she did when she was young.

    • Gold Top Dog
    I wonder if it's something with her sight? Just my first thought.
    • Gold Top Dog

    I can understand your concern and wanting to see if you can change her behavior while you explore the possible causes and or medical issues.  Hearing and sight loss you've already thought about and also the possibility that something scared her at the door. That's always a creepy thought.  If you and your partner are more stressed and busy lately, due to the upcoming changes, that may have added to her anxiety level in general.

    I'm sure you'll get a handle on it and I'm sending you and Gaci good vibes.

    • Gold Top Dog

    Thanks for your thoughts everyone! I have considered the options of hearing and/or vision, and am not ruling them out although I'm not confident that that is the culprit either. Right now it's a lot of unknowns.

     

    JackieG
    and also the possibility that something scared her at the door

    We have gone over this to consider this as a possibility, but I actually don't think this can be the case, which is why I'm stumped as to the possible cause. When we are not home the dogs are all in the bedroom at the other end of the house, the farthest room from the door, so even if she heard something I don't think it would be associative enough to know that it happened at that door. The door she is watchful of is not directly linked to the outside, it is linked to the garage, which then has another door to the outdoors. So anybody coming to the house would only be knocking on the outside door. We don't have a doorbell, so that option is out as well. And there are no recollections for either of us of any situation that would have been upsetting or startling in the slightest when were are home.

    Of course we've got some stresses with the upcoming move, which is why I'm not jumping to any big conclusions yet. We do our best to keep things as routine as possible at home, but we all know our dogs read us better than we do at times. We move in a month, so I want to get everything settled back in to the new home and see how she adjusts in the new home for a bit before I start worrying about permanent changes. But on the other hand I am expecting a puppy this spring, and want to be sure she's relaxed and feeling more in control again before that happens so that the transition for everyone is stress-free.

    Feel free to keep throwing out ideas though, as I'm always open to the possiblity that I haven't considered something.

    • Gold Top Dog

    I would certainly not hesitate to have her hearing, sight, and thyroid checked. I recently went through something similar with Bean, and her health checked out just fine, so we've done a lot of reconditioning and going back to very basic training to build her confidence. It's worked, great. I have no idea what triggered it.

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    • Gold Top Dog

     Bugsy is not sound sensitive at all - but our smoke alarm goes off when DH cooks bacon under the broiler and it freaked B out the first couple of times.  He has gotten better with it but he still doesn't like it.  After it first happened he was sensitive to the toaster oven beep, microwave beep, and the text alerts. It wasn't anything bad but I was super surprised that he showed any sensitivity to it. Now he is fine with all of them but still doesn't like the smoke alarm - however he used to want to run outside when it went off, now he sort of clamps down his ears and goes in another room - its unpleasant but not freaky, if that makes sense.

    So I suppose I am saying that the sound sensitivity may be due to the smoke alarm and she needs to become more used to the other sounds again.

    no ideas about the door and your SO

    • Gold Top Dog

    Kord also goes batty when the smoke alarm goes off. It is painful to watch, because to me it is causing him pain.

    Some very good advice. Maybe wait and see what happens after the move, and of course that will bring a whole new set of issues.

    • Gold Top Dog

     Perhaps something happened when you weren't home?  Someone tried to get in, pounded on the door, maybe a strange did walk in?.... something that frightened her makes her feel insecure with the door/sounds, maybe?

    ETA: Saw Jackie's post in review.... and saw your reply. Guess great minds think alike! :)  Hope she's doing better soon.

    • Gold Top Dog

    Thanks guys, I appreciate the input and discussion!

    We haven't had any more sound incidents since the last one, and we have had breakfast a couple times where I made a point to pair sounds of toaster oven, microwave, etc, with "good stuff" and it seemed to help. We'll see if any other incidents occur but thankfully have had no problems.

    The door greetings are underway. They are not perfect yet, but they seem to be coming back to normal. I haven't been as on top of it as I would like, so that is part of it, but we are seeing some progress and she's calming down quicker.

    No other quirkiness, so here's to hoping that there was maybe just *an incident* and we'll get it all fixed up in no time.