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Barking
by Jenny Turner

Julia H. & Muddy on their very first ski-joring outing on Christmas Day, 2002. They were on a small golf course in Chicago, where people often cross-country
ski. Muddy was barking at a couple of men who were trying to play golf, but
ended up taking this picture.
Barking
is part of our dogs' natural communication method, but sometimes it can
get out of hand and be annoying to us humans.
Dogs bark for a large number of reasons:
as part of their watchdog or herding duties, to defend their
territory, to seek attention or play, as a response to boredom, or from
being startled, excited, lonely, anxious or teased.
Start
Young
The best method to ensure your dog is not an annoying barker is to
start training when the dog is still a puppy.
Teach your dog “quiet”.
When you dog is being quiet and behaving, reward intermittently
and say the word “quiet”, or say “good quiet” to the dog, and it
will realise that being quiet gets rewarded too.
It’s also very important to expose your puppy too a huge
variety of people, situations, sounds environments; this will
dramatically reduce the occurrence of your dog becoming scared of new
things when it’s older.
Other
Methods
-
Drop/Down
– if your dog is barking frequently in your presence ask the dog
to drop or down. Dogs are less likely to bark when lying
down. Then reward them when they’re quiet.
This will work when dogs are barking to get attention or are
very excited.
-
Again,
you can teach the word “quiet” or “enough”, by saying the
word when the dog is quiet, and rewarding good behaviour. It’s not
unusual for dogs, especially puppies, to get really excited in
obedience classes and start whining and barking, if they know the
word “quiet” you can give that command to stop them barking.
-
Try
to distract or remove the dog from whatever is making it bark so
much. That may mean that during obedience classes you may have
to stand further away from the rest of the class and slowly increase
your dog's threshold, by decreasing the distance each week.
This same approach applies when building confidence in a dog
that barks out of fear. You’ll
need to set up a scenario where strangers approach from far off and
while the dog remains relaxed, give treats. Then slowly, over
days and weeks, decrease the distance that people can approach to.
Be sure that the dog always remains calm. If he gets
upset then go back one step. This
way the dog will associate strangers with good things happening.
-
Control
the situation: this
means that you may have to set up scenarios to train your dog.
For example, if your dog is an alert/warning barker, have
someone come to the house. After the dog gives a couple of
warning barks, give the “quiet” or “enough” command, then
reward when the dog is quiet. We
want the dog to know that it has been good for warning us, but now
we can take control of the situation.
Boredom
Barkers
This is probably the hardest kind of barking to modify because it
often happens when the owner is away.
The reason the dog barks is because it is bored. Its
usually just doing something to occupy itself.
The solution is to give the dog other things to do while you’re
out. Give him a more
stimulating environment and a lot more exercise.
Separation
Anxiety
This is always a bigger problem than just barking.
If you dog truly has separation anxiety, it is often accompanied
by other behaviours such as destructive chewing or desperation to
escape, leading to injury to the dog.
A couple of small steps you can start with are to act like you
are leaving, to the point just before the dog begins to get anxious,
then don’t actually leave. This
means grab your wallet and keys and walk towards the door, then go back
and sit down on the lounge and reward your dog for being calm.
Hopefully your dog will come to realise that just because you go
through the motions, it doesn’t mean that you’re about to leave.
Only when your dog is consistently calm during the first step,
should you try the next step. This
would be to go through the same motions as before then step out the door
for only a few seconds, then come straight back in.
Again reward your dog if he is calm.
If he is not calm, then you’re moving too fast and you
have to go back to the first step again.
Do not make a fuss of the dog when you’re about to leave or
when you return. The only
downfall with this kind of therapy is that it’s nearly impossible to
not leave your dog alone during the therapy, so it makes it a long hard
process. (Unless you can
find a way to take the dog with you every time you have to leave the
house to do the shopping or go to work.)
It is highly recommended to seek the advice of an animal
behaviourist for this kind of problem.
Not
Recommended
The next two methods may be suggested to you at some stage, but we
believe both methods are cruel and do not recommend their use:
-
Corrective
Collars – collars that emit an electric shock, an irritating
ultrasonic sound, or an offensive smell are all available on the
market. These methods
do not always produce the desired effects because the punishment for
barking is not sufficient to get the dog to stop. They’d
rather bark and be punished than not bark at all.
For dogs that bark when they are anxious, the collar is
likely to make them even more anxious and upset, therefore they’re
more likely to bark – it’s a vicious cycle.
-
De-barking
– this is a surgical procedure that removes the vocal cords.
Debarking will NOT result in a silent dog. The
dog will still attempt to bark and will make a hoarse sound, which
is sometimes more irritating than the original bark.
It also does not identify or cure the reason why the dog was
barking in the first place.
Points
to Remember:
Don’t
say “no” or shout back at the dog; the dog will probably think
you’re barking along with him.
Be
patient with your dog and yourself. Changing behaviour takes a
lot of time and you need to take it slowly one step at a time.
Reward
the dog for good behaviour.
If
these methods are not working, or you can’t figure out the reason
why your dog is barking, then take your problem to a behaviourist.
[ Up ] [ Aggression ] [ Alone Crying ] [ Barking ] [ Chewing ] [ Coming When Called ] [ Control Exercises ] [ Digging ] [ Great Dog Tricks ] [ Housetraining ] [ How To Use a Kong ] [ Introducing a New Baby to an Existing Pet ] [ Introducing Cats and Dogs ] [ Jumping Up ] [ Play Biting & Bite Inhibition ] [ Riding in the Car ] [ Separation Anxiety ] [ Socialization ] [ Using the Game of Tug as a Training Tool ] [ Walking on a Loose Lead ]
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