Xerxes
Posted : 11/14/2006 8:35:35 PM
ORIGINAL: espencer
What do you think it really is? that term is used most of the time when the dog has an unwanted behavior only when it has a leash on, but the rest of the time he is a happy dog
It seems that at the moment the leash is in the dog's neck then the leash has some "weird" effect on the dog that makes him beheave bad
And i agree 100%, it has an effect but thats because the owner is at the other end of the leash, the dog is a "mirror" of the owner, the feeling that the owner has at that moment go thru the leash and affects the dog
I've seen a nervous owner (of course not like shaking or anything) that is nervous because is in front of a large crowd having a dog on a leash and the dog is also nervous, but when the leash changes hands to a person that is completly calm it seems that they switched dogs too because the dog is completly calm also
The leash is like an extension of yourself that makes the dog "be part" of you too
What do you think?
I think you're way off base here. I have a leash aggressive dog. I didn't make her that way, she came with the baggage. I also have a non-leash aggressive dog. He was socialized often and early.
What causes leash aggression? In my dog it is fear of being trapped. She was raised with mastiffs and developed a "best defense is a strong and loud offense" philosophy which we're trying to break right now. She has the scars to prove that faster, quicker and smarter doesn't always win the fight. And trust me, she has no problem fighting with another dog-she's tried to start a few of them even when off lead.
But ok, let's take your idea and explore it...If it's the person at the end of the lead that causes the leash aggression then I'd have two leash aggressive dogs, right?
Apparently you haven't been around sighthounds too much. Sighthounds and hounds in general aren't mirrors of their owners. They will pick up some personality traits, but hounds are tremendously independent. So much so that at times, you-the owner, don't matter on whit.
Does snapping a leash on a dog have an immediate effect? Yes it certainly does, in some cases. My male could care less, but putting the collar and lead on my female (they don't wear collar and lead inside) gets her very excited and the adrenalin starts pumping. At the point where she's on lead she's ready to hunt, or dare I say it, to kill. She's happy, tail wagging with excitement, jumping up and landing in a play bow and very vocal. All that from snapping on a leash. And again the male doesn't act any differently.
Whether I project a calm demeanor or am nervous Gaia will demonstrate some leash reactivity, it is sometimes less when I am calm. On the other hand, sometimes it's worse. I've learned that yellow dogs, brindle dogs and small black dogs are bad for her. Big black dogs are ok, if they are in profile or walking away.