brookcove
Posted : 10/15/2008 3:59:34 PM
I'm guessing that Mr. Riggs has some behavioral issues perhaps? He was the brown spotted dog.
He showed some signs of anxiety about the meeting (sniffing and turning away, lowered tail), but I feel, like some others, that there was more of an issue with his owner being too tense. It's possible there's a reason for the tension - it's hard to untangle that without a context. By the end, both dogs were highly anxious. I too have no idea why we are doing the leash lunging thing. Either we
are going to trust these dogs to interact, or someone needs more work
on social skills.
I watched a couple other videos with this dog. In one he apparently spends many nursing (literally) a Bad Cuz. In another he is being courted to play by what appears to be a younger dog, and he shows many characteristics of the "dog nerd" - behaviors that would earn him a "kick me" sign if courted similarly by a more confident, higher ranking dog. Ie, he's very rude to the other dog.
Finally, there's a vid where his owner, bless her heart, shows off his obedience while he's playing with a big plastic egg toy, which he obviously enjoys greatly. In it, she uses the same recall and release cues that she used when she was shown asking her dog to interact with the other dog in the first video.
In the egg video, here's what I saw:
(Mr. Riggs plays with purple egg ehtusiastically)
OWNER: OK!
Mr. Riggs returns to heel position.
OWNER: Good boy! Good boy!
Mr. Riggs looks pleased with himself.
OWNER: BISH (or whatever that was - some type of release)
Mr. Riggs goes and plays with his egg.
OWNER: Good Boy! Good Boy!
Okay, so what I'm seeing is that the release word, to Mr. Riggs, means go and attack something. I don't mean aggressively, but one of my favorite herding trainers would point out that what we've done is taught the dog a command for "Go be brainless." What I would focus on with this dog is ask him to do something with the egg - probably several somethings, plus some oddball commands like distance downs, directionals and so forth.
Notice now when you look at the two dogs interacting, that the owner uses that same "Go be brainless" command when asking her dog to go interact with the dog asking to play.