DPU
Posted : 6/28/2008 11:40:58 AM
Socialization Training gives the dog is the ability to handle any human or dog or human/dog social situation in a calm manner. You can take the dog all over with you and expose the dog to different settings but if the dog is not allowed to freely interact in that setting, then the exposure is naught. One needs to observe the dog in the new setting and then have control over the dog if the behavior becomes unacceptable. The control of the dog's behavior starts when you first bring the adult adopted dog into your home. Interrupting an activity is so basic because you can do it for both good and bad behavior. It is intertwined with your relationship with the dog.
This is the experience factor that Snownose was talking about. I bring in new fosters dogs all the time. Like you, I know nothing of their background other than their most recent experience was bad. I have very little expectation for the new dog except they be potty trained and I work on the COME comand. They are free to define their relationship with the other dogs and also free to get acclimated to their new home. My role is to provide for their basic needs of food, water, exercise, and human-dog relationship building, which by the way never includes playing with the dog. I work on being able to interrupt behavior. The fosters do not leave the property until they are nicely integrated with all the activies that occur at home. For fosters, it could be days, weeks, or even months before we venture into another new setting so I can observe the dog's behavior. My point is I provide the foster with a structured progessive socialization program.
Lesjie, you must know it is very hard for dogs to sometimes generalize. They need to be taught proper behavior in new settings and the owner has to be able to interrupt behavior. This is where I think you failed and you need to start all over. I don't why Coke reacted the way he did. I don't know how he interpretted being crated and forced to watch the other dogs have fun. I don't know what he was thinking when you finally released him out of his misery of being in that crate. I do know for myself I would have never taken Coke to a fun activity and then allow Coke to sit on the sidelines and watch Kenya have fun.
A dog not responding to COME or HEY is unacceptable behavior.