Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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Your behaviorist probably mentioned some terms, like leash fear reactivity, or fear reactive? Look up the CARE protocol (http://careforreactivedogs.com/); I believe that is the training technique to which she is referring. Also, I have had quite a bit of help, which helped with success, from two web-based groups on Facebook: Reactive Dogs (closed group) and Fearful Dogs. You can find detailed help on how to go about the desensitizing and counter-conditioning. It is not as simple as throwing treats. You need to determine distance to keep below threshold, for example.
My Addie has always been a bit fearful; very much aware of what is in the environment and reactive to changes (like the wire reindeer with lights on my neighbor's lawn added a day ago!) Then, she was terrorized by a group of about 5 dogs when she entered a dog park when she was 11 months. They were not attacking but pawing her, barking, nipping and otherwise trying to get her to play and she was on her back yelping like mad until I could extricate her. Two years later, I still cross the street to put some distance between her and an unknown dog approaching. However, using ds/cc she can now play at the dog park, walk the neighborhood, go to classes with other unknown dogs, and she is intermediate level in Agility.
Also, a bark collar is a negative reinforcement tool which is especially bad for fear reactive dogs. Using it may create more problems than you really want to deal with. The idea is to train for the behavior you want, not train out the unwanted behavior. Negative reinforcement suppressed a behavior; it does not correct it.Tracer may find a new way to show that he is afraid, maybe even by biting.
Your parents sound like great people to be dedicated to Tracer. It can take a while, but they should be able to help Tracer overcome his fear. Best of luck to them and to Tracer. It can be frustrating because it is not a quick fix.
BTW, to ease their minds about the neighbor calling the police, perhaps they should check out the nuisance laws in the area. Barking for no more than 5 minutes at a time does not seem to me to warrant a call to the police.
So Tracer is 6 months old.. when did this behavior start?
If he is alone in the backyard, this is not a good idea. Have you tried keeping him in the house instead of in the backyard? This will give him some distance from the stimuli triggering the behavior.
Has he been socialized with other dogs? If you're able to, take him to an enclosed dog park close to traffic where he can see the cars/bikes go by but will have other dogs as a distraction and will be less prone to reactive behaviors. As much as arrange situations where the stimuli are present but he is not prone to barking.
And lastly, most behavioral problems can be alleviated with lots and lots of exercise.
"Socialization" for dogs has a different meaning than it does for humans; it means getting a dog comfortable with all aspects of human society, and that includes cars, bikes, walkers, trash cans, sirens, all of the sights and sounds that make up the society in which they live.
I adopted my labradoodle when he was 14 months old, and he was fine with people of all ages as well as other dogs and cats, but he was still quite undersocialized in general, because he was afraid of just about everything else outside of our home. Garbage trucks, skateboards, somebody's garage door going up or down, a bird flying out of a bush, a statue on someone's lawn, you name it, he was terrified. Our trainer (true "behaviorists" have post-DVM degrees) gave us the assignment to go out to a different public place at least 3x per week, so that he could get used to all of these things. We visited stores that allowed dogs, automotive repair shops, farmer's markets, even the police department. We walked through unfamiliar neighborhoods, we walked past school yards at recess time, you get the idea. It helped a lot.
The barking is something I can relate to. When we moved 3 years ago, we suddenly had windows the dogs could see out to the front yard and street. Our 3 year old (at the time) doodle decided it was imperative for him to bark his head off at anything going down the street (including nothing discernible to the human eye). It took me quite a while to figure out something that would help. I would give him the "quiet" command. If he stopped barking he would be praised exuberantly. If he didn't stop, I put on a slip lead (like you get at the vet). I would put the leash on, bring him to where I was, make him sit and stay. Every. Single. Time. Consistency is key. It got to the point that if he barked he would come running to me and sit. Then, we reached a point that if he barked twice, I just put the leash on him. We now call that leash "The Silencer". Hahaha. I hope you find a method to help your dog learn not to bark.
The leash idea came from BJ's discussions on tethering a dog to you. There are many ways this method is helpful while training.
You should be able to search for it in this group. I'm pretty sure this is where we discussed it even though it was a few years ago.
Here is a good one:
http://www.doodlekisses.com/group/trainingmindsets/forum/topics/umb...
I love my bark collar for Skadi. Elli hardly barks and responds to my commands for quiet. I worked and worked and worked with Skadi...and it didn't work for us...so, the bark collar. I love it. The intensity only rises if the barking continues. I have not had any issues with her wearing it when she is in my fenced backyard.
A few thoughts - as we have a barker and one of our neighbors called animal control (but we still have no clue who)
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