Bugsy is very high prey drive, always has been. Doing some field work and retrieving work has helped to give him an outlet for this drive along with some control over it. They way I see it this is working with it instead of ignoring it.
I have never really tried to squelch his prey drive as it isn't problematic to us. We worked on changing his focus on walks successfully from puppyhood so that is controlled, he is not pulling and trying to catch everything he sees.
However I've been thinking about it quite a bit lately. We've tried from the beginning to get him to walk head up and not like a bloodhound without success. He hunts on walks. We live in an area with lots of wild open areas and TONS of wildlife so I can only imagine what he smells and knows. Just yesterday we were trotting along and he came to an abrupt stop, whipped around and went to a spot of grass. He pointed, his head tilted as if listening, then he pounced on the turf and ripped out a mole.
Last week after he slowed down and was intensely sniffing the ground, looking around then back to the intense sniffing (complete with puffing his jowls to increase scent collection) and we came upon coyote poop. Which he peed on
Also yesterday we were approached from behind by a woman running with a JRT and a schnauzer both on flexi-leads - this was while B was miles away mentally playing with a cicada. He reacted when they reached us - but not an aggressive reaction - it was predatory drift, for a short moment I could see they might as well have been a rabbit or a squirrel.
I had already been wondering if some of the reactivity problems we have had in the past were related to prey drive and this pushed me more in that direction. If he is 'hunting' everything and our neighborhood is rife with scents (as is anywhere I would walk him) could this be a factor in him being reactive at times?
There isn't much to consistently predict when he might react and he has been very good of late but I have noticed that on the days he is clearly in a hunting 'fog' he is more likely to get rigid and focus on someone running especially if they have a dog.
So is this a plausible factor?
How do I intervene on the days he is clearly overwhelmed by the scents around him?
Food will not work.
Doing sits or other training will not work - he will just sit but not pay any attention to anything
No toy will trump scents
Any thoughts on the association I am making and any thoughts on how to deal with appreciated