brookcove
Posted : 1/28/2007 1:11:28 PM
I read this and Other End of the Leash the same weekend, during a clinic with Jack Knox, and the whole experience was like an epiphany. This was when I realized the key of what Jack was doing, and why I was such a miserable failure with all but the most empathic dog work. My work with my autistic brother gave me a certain feel for working with troubled dogs, but not straightforward training, and it was so frustrating until I compared Grandin's insight, to McConnell's, and watched Jack in action. Wow, what a weekend.
It's absolutely true that Grandin has less useful to say about dogs, and that black and white compartmentalizing is not helpful with dog training insights - this was my specific downfall with regular dog training - I was missing the give and take that behaviorists and Jack were describing.
But her description of how emotions interelate, and memory, in animal minds, is invaluable. Very similiar, only much more detailed and less chatty, to the Roger Caras books,
A Cat is Watching and
A Dog is Listening. I was surprised that her science wasn't quite as rigorous as I was expecting given her credentials, but it was still highly satisfactory and I can say that what she says about sheep and cattle is spot on.
I've seen before and after documentation of operations that put her systems into effect and the result is night and day - calm, quiet animals. Thanks to her the USDA has been able to put the 5% rule into effect - if 5% of animals are vocalizing at a kill facility, they must redesign to make it more animal-centered.