Showing posts with label A Dog in Wolf’s Clothing?. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Dog in Wolf’s Clothing?. Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2012

A Dog in Wolf’s Clothing? Part 2

Part 2: Dog in Wolf’s Clothing
What if your belief system regarding how a dog thinks and acts were incorrect? If dogs are like computers, Junk in = Junk out, it is little wonder why so many women are experiencing problems with their dogs.
For example, women tend to dread the puppy stage, especially the house-training phase and with good reason. Most of them are left with the task for housetraining the family pet. I will address this issue in future blogs. For now, if you follow the advice of most trainers, your puppy may take several weeks longer (if ever) to become reliable and trustworthy in your home. Using treats to house trained a puppy can be counterintuitive and cause it to have more accidents. Are you aware that staring at a puppy while it is eliminating outdoors may be misinterpreted by your pet as a threat? 
How many times have we heard an owner lament, “My dog flunked obedience class at Petdumb.” Worse still, “My dog and I were asked to leave before the course ended!”  Ladies:  It’s not your fault. It’s not the dog's fault. You have been working with the wrong information.
As preschoolers, most of us were introduced to the “Dick and Jane” series to help facilitate our reading ability. Dick and Jane run and jump and play with their dog, Spot. We delight in the fact that the dog is having a wonderful time with its human playmates. Unfortunately, for the remaining 12 or more years of our education, few of us receive any further information regarding dogs.
For centuries, some historians have perpetuated the idea that a cave man one day found a cute wolf puppy and brought it home as a companion for his mate and
children.  Survival was a daily struggle, it is pure conjecture and highly unlikely that the wolf puppy would have been regarded as anything less than a source of food and clothing. Wolves are also wild animals, not amenable to human contact or being confined and would require too much attention. If you were stranded in the Yukon and 1000 miles from civilization with limited shelter or food resources, would you go out and adopt a wolf puppy?
Research facilities focusing on wolf studies continue to report incidents of caretakers being challenged or attacked by a wolf that the attendant cared for since it was a pup. This is more likely to occur during the wolf's mating season or when vying for food or attention. A dog owner should never encourage or forcibly teach her dog to display wolf-like behavior.
Although wolves are capable of developing a lasting though perhaps unpredictable bond with humans and perform rudimentary tasks, they cannot pass this trait to their offspring. Wolf puppies, not unlike tiger kittens or bear cubs, are wild animals. They will not adopt their parents' passive behavior around humans unless imprinted at an early age or trained to do so. Many circus trainers and zoo animal handlers are mauled and killed every year by their unpredictable, wild charges. Even domesticated dogs that are one-quarter or more wolf stock must be considered potentially dangerous, because unlike their wild wolf, the hybrid has lost its fear of man.
Archeological research of primitive cave drawings provides no conclusive evidence that wolves ever mingled with humans. Sandia Cave in Las Huertas Canyon, New Mexico, one of the oldest sites to contain both human and wolf bones, cannot confirm that cave dwellers and wolves lived together. It would take another 100,000 years and the inception of agriculture and village life before the human-canine bond could develop.         
If the current theory that dogs are domesticated wolves continues to go unchallenged, dogs will continue to suffer the consequences. How many dogs have been abandoned, relinquished to animal shelters or euthanized by their owners because the dog couldn’t comprehend obedience instructions or behavioral modification directives based on wolf behavior? Your dog has no concept of pack order and is even less inclined to comprehend or obey the whims of that mythical creature, the alpha dog. No other domesticated animal (cat, pig) is compared with or expected to display similar behavioral traits as its wild (lion, boar) counterparts. What brought us to the belief that dogs are somehow domesticated wolves? 
Dr. Kohler, an internationally recognized and respected canine trainer and behaviorist during the late 1940s, developed a theory that dogs shared many behavioral commonalities with wolves. Although Dr. Kohler is to be praised for the significant contributions he made to the field of cynology (the study of dogs), he appears to have overlooked two important details: Dogs are not wolves. Dogs are not pack animals.  

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

A Dog in Wolf’s Clothing? Part 1

A Dog in Wolf’s Clothing?
How women who own dogs are being mislead.

Mr. Babcock, knowledge is power! – Auntie Mame

The erroneous theory that dogs are wolves must end because it has no foundation in scientific fact, and it supports the dominant-submissive approach to dog ownership and training that is counterintuitive to the way women create, maintain and nurture relationships. The whole wolf/dog theory premise can compromise some aspects of the human-canine bond.  
            Dogs are the oldest and most diverse domesticated animal. Their population today exceeds 400 million and comprises perhaps more than 1,000 breeds. Breed diversification will undoubtedly increase as new genetic dog mutations become available. Who would have predicted ten years ago the popularity of the Labradoodle?
Leave it to a breeder to become creative. What do you get when you cross a miniature bulldog with a Shih Tzu? Answer: Bull****!
            Despite the popularity of dogs today, many women simply do not understand how their pet perceives its world. Did you know that the most dogs, (with the exception of sight hounds) tend to have relatively poor eyesight and can’t clearly discern objects beyond 60 feet? They didn’t need to develop keen eyesight because the things they eat, small rodents, dried worms, insects, berries and grasses, are typically within 45 feet of their mouth. 
            Most dogs are also colorblind. They have had no need for color perception because a brown, white or black rabbit all taste the same. And when it comes to taste, dogs reign supreme with more than 250 million scent receptors in their nose. You read that right. A dog eats first with its nose because it has relatively few taste buds. This might explain why a dog will ingest objects or food we might find repulsive, and how commercial dog food manufacturers who add pallatants (chemical additives which smell like chicken or beef)) can create a feed designed more the digestive tract of a cow or horse, but dogs will also eat.
            A dog’s sense of hearing is acute (unless you are calling him to come to you). Many human devices, such as vacuum cleaners, food blenders and even the music we play in our home or car can cause it discomfort. Don’t confine a dog in a room or car with the music blasting. You may not want to maintain good hearing into your later years, but the dog will need his to maneuver and survive when his eyesight becomes even less refined.   
            Jane Goodall’s extensive work with chimpanzees, Desmond Morris’ scholarly books on animal behavior and the oceanographic studies by Jacques Cousteau have provided us with a better understanding and appreciation for the animals that inhabit the forest, jungles and seas. But dogs have not been given the same positive press
because many of the canine books available to the general public appear to regurgitate the same information but negate several important facts.
            Did you know that men and women acquire, maintain, interact and then train their dogs in dramatically different ways? (So much for the group training method) Men also tend to experience fewer behavioral problems with dogs than do women. Perhaps the reason for this is – men act more like dogs, but women tend to act more like human beings.
            Are you also aware of the fact that the mother dog, the most influential factor in a puppy’s early development, has been completely ignored by most canine authors, behaviorists and trainers? When was the last time a trainer asked you to act more like a mother dog and less like an alpha?  Momma dog does it all, with efficiency — no leashes, clickers or treats — and with expedience because her puppies will attain adulthood within a few months and must learn quickly to be prepared to survive in the real world. Interesting isn’t it? Momma dogs know she can’t train her puppies in a pet food warehouse, I wonder why humans who invite a dog into their house would think otherwise?