
Children, Dogs, and Safety
Family pets should be safe and reliable around children. Aggressive dog behavior like guarding of food or bones must never be tolerated or excused. It’s important to take the time to teach children how to behave appropriately around puppies and dogs. It’s also important to teach your puppy from an early age to view the approach of a child as a positive thing, not as a threat to his resources.
Sometimes, in a misguided attempt to teach a dog to share, an owner will reach into the puppy’s food bowl and play with the food while the puppy is eating. This does not teach the puppy to share. Instead it teaches him to view the approach of a human as a negative thing. It’s an annoyance - an interruption to the puppy’s meal.
Instead, approach the puppy while he’s eating and add more kibble, and occasionally some yummy treats, to the bowl. This trains the puppy to regard the approach of a human as a positive thing. More tips on preventing resource guarding are covered in our Puppy GoodStart program, done in your home.
If your dog or puppy has already started growling, snapping or biting to guard his food or bones, then do not try the above method. Instead, a different approach must be taken. Those techniques are covered in our aggression intervention program and behavior modification program, done in your home.
Dogs and Babies
The arrival of your new baby is an exciting, joyful moment! Life changes in lots of ways for everyone in the family. You’ve got a million things to think about, but there’s one thing you might not have considered – introducing the baby to the family dog.
Expectant parents with dogs at home are almost always given 2 pieces of advice from well meaning friends and relatives – sometimes even from healthcare providers. Unfortunately, these 2 myths are at best ineffective, and at worst, dangerous.
MYTH #1
“Bring home a doll and start treating it like a baby so the dog will get used to having a baby at home.”
On the surface, this sounds like it makes sense, but there’s a huge problem with this piece of advice: a baby doll is not a baby. Dogs are hunters, with highly evolved senses. They can smell mates, prey and predators from miles away. They have eyes that can detect the slightest movements. They can hear the sound of a twig snapping deep in the woods. Their very survival depends upon these keen senses. Thinking that a baby doll smells, moves and sounds anything like a baby is ridiculous.
What does a baby doll smell like? It is usually made of vinyl and cloth and it smells a lot like a dog’s toys! Exactly the wrong association! You don’t want your dog thinking that the baby is a toy, do you?
MYTH #2
“A few days before baby comes home, bring a blanket home from the hospital with the baby’s smell on it.”
Is looking at a post card of Paris the same experience as visiting Paris? The advice to bring home a blanket does absolutely NOTHING to prepare a dog for the arrival of an infant.
Think about this: many dogs have been in fights with other dogs. Is that because they did not smell another dog before the fight began? Does smelling something teach the dog to feel good around something?
So what should you do?
If your dog has not experienced the sight, smell and sound of a human baby during his early socialization period (prior to 5 months of age), he is going to have a problem adjusting. No one can guarantee that every dog will be safe around every baby, but fortunately Canine Dimensions certified dog trainers have excellent training protocols that can be very helpful. Contact us for more information.
