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Old 03-09-2008, 09:03 PM
lengel lengel is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Lancaster MA
Re: Influence of older dogs in the household?

I spend one and one time with each of our dogs every day and each has their own particular activity (agility, obedience training, puppy kindergarten). All training is one and one. Almost all of our walks are one on one etc. I love though that our adult dogs teach Zooey how to interact appropriately with her own species and allow time for them to interact every day.

I think that what I am trying to explore is how the interaction with our adult labs will affect her behaviors ultimately. I've been told on this board that she is "soft" but she was by far the most dominant puppy in the litter. When we brought her home she could be an absolute brat :) and I think it was the combined efforts of the entire household that helped her integrate so successfully. I have a home office but pretty much abandoned the business for her first two weeks with us. She is now a very social, attentive puppy. I was told by one of the people who helped with the litter that Zooey was "in a world of her own" when it came to her littermates and it was always "her way or the highway". This is the perception of just one person but I can see where that may have been true. There is a definite change in Zooey's basic assumptions in interacting with both people and dogs now and I wonder how much of that has to do with what the adult dogs of a different breed might have taught her. I also actively use them to teach her sometimes. One example is that I walked Zooey with our Nikki after Zooey was spooked by a truck and refused to return to the sidewalk. It was just the fastest way to get her past that particular fear so that we could get on with it. It took exactly two walks with Nikki and Zooey hasn't shown fear or hesitation again. Now we can work on walking on lead without slogging through our (now) very muddy field out back.

Anyway, just babbling on here. I spend a lot of time thinking about my dogs, the influences on them and what they might need in their lives and the topic of this thread occurred to me. I'm fascinated by what does it for my dogs . . .
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