Help Please!!!

    • Puppy

    Help Please!!!

    I recently adopted a 6mo old female pitt bull from an animal shelter. She was fantastic very sweet and lovable and loved to play with my other dog who is a 1yr old fixed male pitt mixed with probably a lab. She has a skin issue and I took her to the vet and he put her on a steroid among other pills. Ever since then she has gotten extremely aggressive around food like when we are eating and things found on the floor not their food bowls though but she attacks my other dog and it is getting worse. She is a great dog otherwise. I called the vet to see if the steroid could be doing it the tech said yes but the vet said no he said it could be hormonal because she isnt fixed but I cannot fix her until she is done with the steroids for 2 weeks. I dont know if this is her personality now that she is comfortable in our home if its the steroids or hormonal like the vet suggested. In any case I need some advice on what to do to prevent this before someone accidently gets hurt. Thanks in advance for any advice
    • Gold Top Dog

    Considering how famished I am when I'm on steroids, and how grouchy if anyone gets near my food, I'd go with the vet techs answer.

    While she is on steriods, crate her while others are eating. 

    • Gold Top Dog

    glenmar
    While she is on steriods, crate her while others are eating.

    I agree and I'd crate her while others are eating even after she's off the steroids. 

    • Puppy
    I am going to crate her now but I want to fix this issue instead of having her crated all the time
    • Gold Top Dog

    We're not suggesting you crate her all the time.  Crate her when food is around.  Feed her in her crate.  She's resource guarding and that's completely normal but the more she practices the behavior the more severe it can become..  She's also a pit mix, as is your other dog, so she's predisposed to being dog aggressive. 

    Take some training classes and read some books on dogs and dog behavior.  Jean Donaldson. Patricia McConnell.  Sophia Yin.  These are all highly respected behaviorists who can offer a lot of insight into what you're seeing.

    • Puppy
    I was just looking on the net for side effects of Prednisone and they all say altered behavior and aggression. So since she didnt start thie until she was put on the steroid Im going with the fact that it is the steroid and she will be better when shes done with them.
    • Gold Top Dog

    um ... don't think everyone is getting up your nose -- they aren't. 

    YES, absolutely pred can make ANY being (human or dog or otherwise) MOODY as heck. 

     **HOWEVER** -- and this is the part you would rather not have be true, but it is so please please heed this and be forewarned.

    She has discovered a new behavior.  Yes, the pred makes them snarky BUT she **is** a puppy -- so she's learning every minute of the day.  She has made a huge discovery.  If I snarl at someone they BACK OFF!! 

    That is a powerful, heady thing to a puppy.  She has LEARNED someting.  Unfortunately yes, the pred is likely making her moody BUT she has acquired a new skill -- and it's an effective one and it makes the other dogs (who are bigger and older than she is) back off!!

    So the moody-ness will abate BUT she will not forget what she has learned.  In fact, she'll likely experiment with it and see how far she can go.

     This is why Jackie is - rightly - encouraging you to crate her **while eating**.  That doesn't mean all the time.  That means you are prepared for and will successfully AVOID an altercation.  Because you don't want her to gain any more "I can be snarky and it works" experiences.  It will keep her away from confrontation so you can then desensitize this and retrain her in a positive manner to not be so guardy. 

    Don't mislead yourself into thinking this is ALL due to the drug.  It was instigated by the drug?  PROBABLY ... **but** she's a puppy and she's learning all the time and this is one skill she would have been better off without so you will need to train to diminish this.

    If you separate her and crate during feeding and the behavior extinguishes you have averted disaster without harm.  But to ignore this?  Every time she responds with guardy behavior she LEARNS and reinforces her own bad behavior.  So by doing nothing you actually risk great damage.  Does that make sense?

    • Puppy
    Makes perfect sense. And that was my original question. I totally understand I need to crate her when we are eating but when I said I didnt want to crate her all the time I meant that I want to stop the behavior so I dont have to crate her when we eat forever. Any suggestions on how to train her would be greatly appreciated.
    • Gold Top Dog
    Go to the list of authors Jackie gave you -- you'll find it's a common problem being addressed. It's hard to just jump in and say "do this" because *you* have to be aware of how it starts **and** what to watch for. Dogs communicate in a big way by their body stance and how 'tense' they are in that stance -- other dogs "see" that and know it's information. WE humans have to work harder at it.