corvus
Posted : 5/29/2010 11:57:24 PM
huski
How well can you really know your dog and how capable it is of 'bouncing back' when it's a puppy you've only had for such a short time?
There are tests you can do in the safety of your own yard to get a good idea. I knew with Kivi by 12 weeks and Erik pretty much straight away (knew what I was looking for, that time). Erik behaved as though he was in a fear imprint period a couple of days after we got him. I still got going on the socialising, just didn't let him out of my arms for the first few weeks, at least until he was ready and we had somewhere quiet to do it. My point is not "go ahead and risk it", it's "treat every day like your puppy is in a fear imprint period". Because how do you know until you've already seen it trigger? Better IMO to just go carefully all the time. They don't need fear imprint periods to learn to fear something.
It has felt like Erik has been in a fear period for the last 11 months. The more he experiences the better he is at coping with new things and I will be socialising madly with him until he's 2 years old. You bet I take things easy with him. He learns from one repetition so we have to be super careful. But that doesn't mean we wrap him in bubble plastic to avoid the risk of exposing him to something scary on the off chance he learns to be phobic. We just talk about what we'll do before we take him somewhere new that we think might be challenging for him and make sure we are prepared with a plan, even if that means bailing on a holiday early (thankfully, it didn't) or staying up half the night with him (have done that one). It's not the fear itself that is potentially so damaging in a fear period, but the way people handle it (or fail to). I reckon address it then and there and you've done more good in teaching him to cope than bad in letting him get scared in the first place. Although there are exceptions, of course. A certain pathologically anxious little dog with an aggressive coping style comes to mind.
huski
Why risk it?
IMO, because fear periods are about more than just learning to fear things.