Why Does My Dog Growl at
Me?
by: Marc Goldberg Guarding is an instinctual
behavior for dogs. It is useful to us when they warn strangers who intrude on their (and
our) territory. One of the earliest benefits dog provided to man was to serve as an early
warning intruder alert system.
Territoriality is, simply stated, guarding space. It is the dogs way of saying
this space has value and it belongs to me and my pack. In fact, dogs guard all
sorts of things, some tangible, such as food, others intangible such as space.
When they guard these items from outsiders it can be helpful. I leave my home knowing my
dog will be alert to an inappropriate intrusion. Dogs also guard tangibles and intangibles
from one another. You shouldnt expect to see a submissive dog take a bone or scrap
from the alpha or dominant dog. Should he try, hell face a swift correction. But
thats rarely necessary because in the structure of the dog pack, it is clearly
understood who is entitled to what and when.
But what happens when that clear understanding is lacking between a dog and members of his
human pack? The results can be a disaster
a dog who guards something against his very
owners.
In this article well concentrate on space guarding behaviors. In the dog pack, if
the dominant dog wants to walk from point A to point B, he will do it even if he has to
nudge a lesser dog out of his way. If the more submissive dog protests, what he is
actually doing is challenging the authority of his leader by trying to guard the space he
occupies.
The same event may transpire in our homes. Your dog helps himself to a place on the sofa.
You either sit down next to him, or try to take his collar to pull him off. Your own dog
growls or snaps at you. Hes guarding space. Moreover, hes stating in dog
language that he believes he is dominant to you.
You need to open a cabinet and the dog is blocking your way. You take his collar to move
him, and he growls or bites. The same thing may occur when you want to push the dog out a
door, pass him in a narrow hallway, or get too close to him laying in his favorite spot.
In many households, the human occupants do not realize that their dog is guarding space
until the dog becomes completely out of control. In fact, we excuse the behavior.
Thats because too often people apply human standards to canine behavior. Among our
species it is impolite to pull someone out of a chair or shoulder them aside when you need
something. So if the dog growls when you sit by him on the couch, many people wrongly
think the dog is just being grumpy, or that he was too comfortable to be disturbed.
I have actually seen adults chastise children for being impolite to a dog for
sitting next to him on furniture, or for wanting to remove the dog from their place.
People subconsciously try to accept these problems as quirks of the dog. Many
owners try to just work around the issue by not disturbing the dog under whatever
circumstance causes the dog to guard.
Unfortunately, this sends precisely the wrong message to the dog. Humoring him confirms
that he is dominant, and is, therefore, entitled to guard more and more space. Thats
why guarding behavior escalates for many dogs. Often, I hear from owners whos dog
began to growl at them under very limited conditions, say when being pulled off the sofa.
But eventually the behavior escalates to the point where the dog growls when they even get
near him on the sofa.
The owner thinks the dog is getting worse. The dog simply thinks hes getting
stronger. For some dogs, dominance is a self-rewarding behavior. You want to remove him
from the couch. He growls. You back off. The behavior works. So eventually he growls when
you even look at him on the couch. They just dont seem to get it, the
dog is thinking. Ill have to warn them earlier.
This can become very problematic for some pet owners, particularly those with young
children in the house. Kids often dont realize that theyre not supposed
to bother the dog. They just figure they have liberty to safely toddle wherever
their little legs will take them. And if you ask me, they should have that right.
Older children must be taught to respect dogs. And younger children must be observed very
carefully when they interact with a dog, to be sure they do not accidentally pinch him for
example. But no one can expect a two year old child to understand she should avoid Rover
when hes laying on the sofa.
Willy is a three year old German Short Hair Pointer. His owner, Lisa, called me very
concerned. Willy had been growling at her baby every time the child approached him in his
dog bed. Sometimes Willy would climb on the couch, and he would also growl at the baby on
those occasions. Apparently this behavior had been going on for over a month. And just
recently, the dog had growled at Lisa when she sat near him on the couch. Lisa was very
confused because this entire set of behaviors was only about a month old, but it was
getting worse fast.
Did your baby start walking about a month ago? I asked her. The answer was
yes. That made it all clear to me. Willy always felt Lisa was dominant to him. So he never
growled at her before. But when the baby started walking, this impudent little human would
intrude on his space, and Willy did believe himself dominant to the baby.
Not understanding the behavior, Lisa had spent an entire month showing Willy how dominant
he was by not correcting him and not letting the baby disturb him when he was comfortable.
The unintended message to Willy was that he was more dominant than he had originally
thought. Thats why he began to guard space from Lisa too.
While not all dogs progress from growling to snapping, or from air snapping to contact
biting, that does happen with some dogs. And its tragic because it usually
doesnt need to reach that point. Left untreated, most dogs who effectively guard
space will eventually scare or hurt their owners enough to be removed from their homes, or
be put down.
Willy became a client of the Chicagoland Boarding School for Dogs. In the time he spent
with us, we used our Forcefree Method to show him that space was not a resource he should
guard from his human family.
We taught Willy a series of exercises using a vibrating training collar delivering a
series of low level taps. The vibration, while not at all painful, was attention getting.
(Before we put the collar on Willy, we let Lisa feel the the collar on her hand so she
understood they were not painful. Lisa described the feeling as a mild tickle.) During the
initial phase of training, our goal was to teach Willy that when he felt the taps, he
could stop them by altering a behavior.
We started out with leash pulling, showing him that pulling on a tight leash turned on the
tapping sensation, and that walking nicely on a loose leash turned them off. Then we went
to the sit stay. We showed Willy that getting up when he was supposed to be sitting turned
on taps that he could turn off instantly by re-sitting himself.
The reason we didnt go right to the space guarding issue was simple. We didnt
want to overwhelm the dog by immediately training for the most difficult behavior first.
Also the guarding behaviors are very specific to the family. They might be tough to
reproduce without his sofa, his baby, and his owner.
But once Willy understood that he could stop collar taps by altering a behavior, we were
ready to confront the real issue, the guarding of space. By this point in the training, we
had established a bond of trust and affection with Willy. That was critical because now we
were teaching him to yield his personal space to us under the pressure of the taps.
In short, by sometimes invading Willys personal space, while tapping, we showed him
that he could turn off the tapping, as usual, by giving us a desired behavior
in this
case, moving out of the way. Starting on leash, we held the dog close to our body,
literally turning into him, and tapped as we moved through his space. Using a combination
of leash pressure and body movement, we moved Willy out of the way. The second he began to
yield his space, the taps stopped.
Willy began to understand very quickly. Space wasnt worth guarding anymore. In fact,
each time we asked him to give up space, he became very willing to do so at once. After
all, as far as he knew, any space we asked him for became slightly annoying anyway.
We brought this dog home at the conclusion of our ten day program, reoriented him to his
family and his environment, transferred the behavior modification techniques to his owner
over the course of two hours. Then we left.
Lisa called two days later. She reported that Willy was leaving his dog bed as soon as the
baby approached. We were happy with this report, but Lisa was concerned. She wanted the
dog and the baby to be friends and she was worried that the dog was now
fleeing from the baby.
We explained that this was progress given that the dog had modified a major behavior and
was now yielding space, rather than guarding it. We advised her to give it some more time
to see if the dog would eventually find pleasure in sharing space, time and bonding with
the baby in his new submissive role. We did warn Lisa that not all dogs bond with all
people, but that it was still a distinct possibility.
Two weeks later Lisa called again, and she was very happy. She found Willy and the baby
curled up together in the dogs bed. Apparently, Willy had calmed down enough to
realize that while he was no longer able to guard space, there was a wonderful pleasure in
sharing it.
Trust is something that grows over time, and with experience. Every day that passes as
Willy continues to show the right reaction is one more day in which the trust between he
and his family grows. Willy has been home for several months now, and all the reports are
good news.
Here is a dog who was at severe risk for re-homing and possibly might have injured a
child, curled up in bed with his little master.
| About The Author Marc Goldberg is a dog trainer specializing in the
rehabilitation of difficult dogs and improving relationships. He is Vice President of the
International Association of Canine Professionals (IACP) and Editor of SafeHands Journal.
The author also educates professional dog trainers in his techniques. Visit him on the web
at http://www.chicagodogtrainer.com
or http://www.dogtraininginchicago.com. |
|