Dog Training - A Dog's Nature
Dogs are surprisingly complex
creatures.
Some official estimates of the number of breeds reaches as
high as 800 in Western countries alone. Even given that
distinguishing one breed from another can be carried to absurd
extremes, the variety is astonishing from a human perspective,
who have, perhaps, a dozen 'breeds'.
Complicating the picture still further is the well-known
fact that dogs have descended from wolves but began domestic
interaction with humans over 10,000 years ago. As a
consequence, there are behaviors that develop regardless of
circumstances and some that are as unique as the human the dog
is paired with. Still, some common traits stand out.
Dogs are predators.
That doesn't mean they necessarily hunt and attack every
passing cat or rat, but the capacity is always in them. With
acute hearing and head muscles that allow precise orientation
of their ears, dogs can pick up a range of sounds and locate
the source quickly and with high accuracy.
A dog's field of vision is higher than that of humans. Their
field of view has been estimated from 180-270 degrees, by
comparison to a human's 100-150 degrees, allowing them to track
events better.
And, of course, there's that famous sense of smell. Citing
figures such as having 25 times as many scent-receptor cells or
being able to sense concentrations 100 million times smaller
than humans conveys the fact one way.
Another is to report behavior. Golden Retrievers, for
example, can smell gophers through two feet of packed snow and
a foot of frozen earth. And, they'll dig through it to get to
the gopher. That's predatory behavior.
Dogs are social animals.
That's common knowledge, of course. But, though known, it's
often ignored. Individuals will often lock a lone dog away in a
garage or pen, or on a rope in the yard for long periods. This
isolation from contact with humans and other animals invariably
leads to fear and/or aggression and other forms of
maladjustment. Dogs need companionship in order to develop
healthy behavior.
Isolating a dog for brief periods can be a useful training
technique. Fear of expulsion from the pack can incent overly
assertive, alpha-status seeking dogs into alignment with the
trainer's goals. In any human-dog pair, the human must be the
alpha (leader). The alternative is property destruction, human
frustration and unsafe conditions for people and dogs.
But excessive time devoid of social interaction with another
dog, the human, or even a friendly cat harms the dog's
psychology and leads to unwanted behavior. Even guard dogs have
to be able to distinguish between external 'threats' and
members of its own 'pack'.
Dogs are exploratory.
Like the two-year-old humans at roughly their same mental
level, dogs learn by exploring their environment. And like
those humans, they can engage in destructive behavior. Dogs are
no respecters of property. Training and an appropriately
selected set of objects and suitable area can channel that
behavior into something acceptable to humans and healthy for
the dog.
Providing toys with characteristics very distinct from human
property, such as rawhide bones rather than rubber balls that
are hard to tell from children's, leads to less confusion and
misbehavior. In many cases, however, the problem is solved by
scent. The dog's toys may look like the child's, but smell very
different.
Some amount of digging may be inevitable as part of the
dog's exploration. Be prepared to patch holes in lawn if the
dog is unsupervised for very long. Plants can usually be
protected with cayenne pepper paste, bitter apple and other
preparations.
Dogs are scavengers.
Dogs will eat deer droppings, even when they have perfectly
sound and ample diets. They'll chew on dead rats, eat grass and
ingest a wide variety of things that their own experience shows
causes upset stomachs. And they'll repeat the behavior day
after day.
Acknowledging their limited ability to connect cause and
effect when those are separated in time is a must in order to
keep them healthy and safe.
Recognizing a dog's nature, and working within in it rather
than against it leads to less frustration for both human and
dog. Enjoying the beneficial aspects, such as spontaneous dog
hugs (leaning into a leg), paw offering and a head laid on the
lap are just a few of the rewards.
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