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  • Overstimulation Training

    Hello, we just adopted our first dog, a three year old Golden Retriever. It’s an interesting case because the part of the city that he was found in would imply that he had to of been living indoors with some small amount of house training, but he has none. My only thought is that we was just tied to a chain in the yard for those years until he somehow got away. My point is that he isn’t socialized, house trained , or anything else.

    The main thing I’m posting about in here though is whenever he’s overwhelmed, be it fear, anxiety, happiness, excitement or whatever, if it’s enough of any one emotion he starts peeing. And at first we thought we could just be more calm and not react and slowly it would correct but it almost seems like it’s getting worse. It’s to the point that multiple times a day we have to mop because he pees everywhere.

    Today my wife got really good news and we just raised our voices at eachother in excitement and our golden retriever peed so much everywhere. One time I looked at him too quickly. One morning my wife turned on her bowl dryer while he was in the bathroom with her. Then sometimes we moan or groan at the sight of the new mess, and he knows we’re upset so he unleashes even more across the house while running away. We have no idea how we would train this out of him

    Please help!! And forgive me if I’m posting in the wrong subreddit or not properly following the rules of this one, I’m very new to this platform.

    submitted by /u/Common_Loser
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  • Looking for reliable GPS tracker

    Hello! I am planning to travel with my dog over this summer. We live in Asia & the destination we are planning to go does not have cellular coverage. If you have similar experience, please leave your advice. Thank you!

    submitted by /u/2aya
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  • help: barking + settling issues

    Hi everyone, looking for some advice with my new (had for 2 months) high energy, ~1yr old rescue. Previously a hunting dog that wasn’t cut out for the job and abandoned in a canyon. Not sure breed (just ordered a DNA test), but he’s likely hound/doberman/etc. mix.

    The main challenge I’m facing right now is demand barking. I don’t think this is learned from humans because he wasn’t in a family home before. Ignoring does not work (he figured this out quick and it started behavior loop of bark, leave, come back, treat) leaving the room and putting myself in time out works for a moment but once I return the cycle repeats. I’ve recently started putting him in his own timeout (in small kitchen w/ baby gate) until he settles down on his bed. I feel like this is reinforcing possibly because I am giving him attention by physically moving him to/guiding him to another room. His barking is getting increasingly worse, I’m sound sensitive and we live in an apartment so it’s really stressful. He often sometimes does other attention seeking behavior (stealing pillows, jumping on couch and bed, which he’s not allowed to do).

    He settles down for naps in the mornings typically but has been barking after finishing his puzzle toys in the afternoon mostly. I’ve been able to notice when he’s about to bark and try redirecting but I’m a consultant and my job is quite demanding despite working from home so the afternoons when he’s triggered are often busy.

    I think we need to work more on teaching him how to settle? I think he’s getting adequate stimulation (maybe too much after walks where he really doesn’t like a dog) but please lmk if not. Also plan on enrolling him in AKC events this spring (cat chase) and starting some tracking training.

    I have been capturing calm, working on Karen Overalls relaxation protocol, and know this will take time for him to grasp, but I think I’m more failing with immediate response when barking. I also have been trying to give him more alone time (kitchen time for an hour or so in afternoon) because he does follow me around the house / get up if I leave the room unless he’s exhausted.

    He sleeps in a crate at night no problem (although has recently started softly whining in the morning; stops after a “no”) and is fine when we leave the house (we keep him in small kitchen with baby gate rather than crate).

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    His daily exercise/stimulation:

    – 45 to 1 hr morning walk (loose leash, training collar, very sniffy) he’s very slightly dog reactive so working on sit and focus command if we encounter another dog. also work on recall/sit/down/stay on walks. occasionally do some foraging with kibble in grass on walks too

    – breakfast is split between snuffle mat, kibble for walk, and some other type of enrichment (kibble in box with paper, paper towel rolls, towel rolled and tied in a knot, hidden food around apartment)

    – 2x a day 10-15m of play. his toys other than solo chewing are kept in a closet with cues for starting and finishing playtime

    – puzzle toy feeder frozen, woof pupsicle, chews 1-2x a week (trachea, rabbit ears, bully sticks, cod skin)

    – 20-30m night time walk

    – dinner is about 35-45m of training

    – cuddles/pets on the floor at nighttime for 20ish m, cuddles and pets throughout the day when he’s being good (rewarding with attention for being in bed, etc.)

    – note: we do not have a backyard, i take him on hikes about 1x a week on weekends

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    commands he’s learned in the last 2 months:

    – sit, down, up, recall, step up (for pivots on stand), center (between legs), heel (working on this), working on search (for food)

    – place (more go to place, some duration + distance: can walk across apt and he stays but not at the point where he can consistently settle)

    – stay / don’t eat food, can leave him in a room alone with food in front of his face (or even on paws) in a down stay and he won’t eat it

    submitted by /u/ImpressNumerous
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  • Request for a meeting with dog trainers – energetic adult pitbull and newborn

    Hello everyone, I'm writing to ask for a discussion with dog trainers/behaviorists, because I'd like to verify that the management we're adopting is correct and understand if there's room for improvement.

    Context • Premature baby, recently returned home • Dog: Adult male pit bull, energetic, with no previous experience with children • Recent cohabitation, managed with great care and supervision

    Observed Behaviors

    The dog: • Remains calm and at a distance • Sniffs without exaggerating • Remains calm when the baby cries • When the baby is moved (e.g., changing table → crib), raises head and ears and observes, remaining still • Breaks gaze, changes position, and often chooses to lie down next to me • Communicates with me (paw, soft vocalizations such as "uuu," soft wagging tail), not directly with the baby

    Does not exhibit: • Body rigidity • Prolonged fixations • Impulsive attempts to approach

    Current Management • Constant supervision • Distance Safety (~1 meter) • No mouth-to-baby contact • No calling the baby toward the newborn • Reinforce calm • The dog has a kennel/safe area

    We made an initial mistake (calling him while I was holding the baby), which led to a slight pinch of excitement with no consequences. From there, we made the management more structured.

    Questions for educators 1. Should the attentive observation with ears and head raised, but body still, be interpreted as neutral attention, or is there something that needs to be monitored more closely? 2. Does the fact that the dog chooses to move away and then seek contact with me indicate good self-regulation? 3. Is the safe distance appropriate, or would you recommend something else? 4. Are there early signs of overexcitement that I might be missing? 5. What would you strengthen or change in this management?

    Objective

    We're not looking for forced interaction, but rather a peaceful and safe coexistence with an emotionally stable dog and a protected newborn.

    Any constructive feedback is welcome. Thanks in advance to anyone who would like to share their perspective.

    submitted by /u/Professional-Page742
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  • Dog is an angel the first 70% of a walk – then turns nightmare

    I have a stubborn 4 year old Labrador. I don’t know what it is about winter, but she turns into a different dog in this season and we have to go back to our basic walking lessons.

    Anyways onto the main issue – I am retraining my dog to be better on a leash. I started with always keeping her on my left side, and making sure she only sniffs the ground when I give her the word. If I didn’t do these things my dog would be dragging me all over the place!

    Anyways, the crux of the issue is it’s as if she’s been so good for so long she cannot help but be bad at the end of the walk. And it doesn’t matter if this is a 30 minute walk, hour walk etc, it’s like she knows 70% of the walk is over no matter what direction we are walking lol.

    The main issue comes when I tell her “no” for ANY reason near the end of the walk. If she tries to eat something off the ground, if she sees another dog I don’t want her to greet, if I get her to move on from sniffing etc. she suddenly gets into an absolute frenzy and starts lunging at the leash, my mittens, my coat and it’s next to impossible to get her to stop. If I DO manage to get her to sit, she starts boot scooting and then launches into frenzy mode all over again.

    I am all ears on how to fix this issue. By the way she NEVER does this with my husband, but with me it happens nearly every walk.

    My dog has also been the one to abuse treats. For example when I taught her “drop it” and would reward her, she would then find anything to pick up in her mouth rapid fire, drop it, and the look to me for a treat. I am weary to use treats to get her out of the frenzy in worry it will train her to do the frenzy to get the treat if that makes sense.

    submitted by /u/Schrutebucks101
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