and yet, no one makes the argument that submission isn't a thing. Whatever the polar opposite of submissive is, what do they want to call it? It's dominance.
@@ColdestRage303 yeah I forget who I was watching, someone was talking about truly dominant dogs and that they're chill most of the time until they don't want to do something, and then they're ready to stand their ground in a way that can ugly. For general purposes though submissive-dominant is a spectrum and most dogs are somewhere closer to the middle.
@@ColdestRage303 Well, it's all on a scale so they're on the dominant side instead of the submissive side. Yours sounds further up the scale. Regardless he was arguing against the people that say that dominance isn't even a thing to begin with, and that it's debunked that dogs like yours are wired the way they are etc etc.
@@ColdestRage303 "Like in a wolfpack the other dominant wolf will go to fight the alpha one day for leadership." That's been debunked. Well, no, not completely. This behavior was observed in replaced wolfs that were thrown together in enclosed parks. This led to the assumption that it must work the same with dogs. Then it was discovered that natural wolf packs don't display this social dynamic at all. That led to people claiming that no dominance is ever a thing. The truth is complicated. Dogs are not really trying to take over the house. To me it sounds like you based your training completely on dominance, rather than leadership, and that resulted in the dog rebelling against you. Perhaps you punished him too much, and he had enough and didn't take it anymore. (Like he perceived your command as incoming punishment). Not saying this is what happened, but that's how I can imagine a dog attacking its owner. I've never heard of a dog that's raised properly going against its owner. It's pretty much unheard of.
I swear Prince knows EXACTLY what he’s doing at all times and is probably the most calculated, intuitive animal I’ve ever seen..period. I mean literally. It’s wild watching his micro movements and how he almost psychically knows what to do, when, and what’s expected of him. It’s wildly impressive. I’ve never seen a dog like that before.
I'm glad you pointed out the nose touching, because I might have thought it was just a coincidence, but you showed it was definitely intentional communication. I also noticed when they ganged up on a dog they'd take different paths to try to corner them. It seemed like it could be very dangerous if there was nobody around.
Now my world is going back to where I started. I trained like you- then I went to get my training certification. Worked 3 years for a facility that barked at me that dominance isn't real- never be rough handed-never stand your ground. Treats and praise only. This- this is what makes sense to me and has always made sense.
i saw two kangal siblings kill 3 dogs out of nothing. i saw this dogs everyday playing. Suddenly something weird happened. They chased and killed 3 dogs so fast together it was insane. First time i thought some dogs cant be held in flats and cities.
@@BDTraining I love that cause its like you almost forget what you are doing here. Like all you want to do it illustrate animal behaviour and animal/human interaction. Then as you say you are done. That's the video. I was gonna say we are in school here only not all of us consider you the teacher. But you are the teacher. That why I subscribed. Best to you.
Love this. People have a misconception that dogs think the way we do. This isn’t mean at all. If you wanna train dogs you have to be top dog. You have to understand and teach them in ways they understand. Which is dominance. Dogs don’t get reason like we do. They understand cause an affect. Or action and reaction.
IMO dogs understand cause effect much better bc there is no hidden agenda as in humans. There’s no guessing about ulterior motives and they mostly live in the moment.
When the 2 siblings get back together & nose bump, you can almost hear them thinking "RIGHT, the Pack is together again, GAME ON!!" Such a powerful pair & mental bond, their owners really, REALLY need to learn your methods before someone gets hurt.
dang u definitely The Boss! The way you are able to see/interpret/respond so quickly is endlessly fascinating. There is so much good teaching in every single video. 🐾❤️
I love this type of training. I'm tired of the bad dog owners crying about any discipline. Especially the ones who let their dogs run around and bite people and think their dog is just friendly because it's obviously friendly to the owner.
Some people don’t understand the difference between discipline and hitting/abuse. That grab with Jax was a great example, discipline without hurting. It’s the dog version of a time out.
@@Robynhoodlum My dog learned the most when I would be clearly disappointed in him. When he was learning to camp with my family ( a lot of people and a lot of dogs ) he was mean to some dogs while playful with others. Any time he got aggressive to a dog, i would simply put him in the kennel "time out". Disconnecting them from the pack when they do wrong, goes a long way in my experience. My dog doesn't like being disconnected from the pack. But if he can't play by my rules, then he doesn't get to be apart of the pack. After a 15-30 min time out. He comes out and is playful with the dogs that he was aggressive with.
@@MrZZsharka "when he was learning to camp" is a lot more different than taking a dog for a simple walk. There's a lot more going on during a camping trip than there is on walks. Sorry I didn't explain that this was over two years ago, and on top of that i've paid for classes.
Hi, I'm Ljiljana from Serbia (my name is hard to pronounce in English :) ). I have a femail mixed breed dog, Bertha, who I adopted during the Corona virus pandemic. I reviewed a bunch of your videos and they helped me tremendously especially with the leash walking and while meeting other dogs but also in identifying the "problems" of my dog. You are wonderful and more importantly, your methods are efficient and easy to apply. I am very grateful!
Yep, I saw them turn from two separate dogs into one team of hunters. The sister instigated it and the brother followed. That check-in was a clear sign of “let’s hunt, fight, but together”.
Ive seen this before in person. I live next door to a family that has 2 free roam big dogs. They are brothers and they had a incident a few years ago where they attacked a smaller dog and started to eat him alive. The owner of the smaller dog tried to scare them off with a stick but they didn’t care. She got in her car and acted like she was going to run them over and that’s when they left. The smaller dog made it to the vet, but they ate his entire abdomen and he didn’t make it. They are still free roam btw. Oh, and no other murders happened since. They attacked my elderly dog before, but they were chased off.
@@Wobblyrage it really was. They weren’t always bad dogs of course, they were abused by the male owner. Luckily, he got throat cancer and failed to treat it. I kinda think that’s part of the reason they calmed down with the attacks. Oh, and they still are very sweet puppies, at least to women. They recently protected my other neighbors dog after she was hit by a car. Sat with her the whole time until people started helping her.
I absolutely loved this footage, prince completely trusts joel also for him to be safe. And in this environment this other dog has every opportunity to thrive and be safe. And that is wonderful
Just the reasserting of the dominancy of the dominant male without yelling screaming hitting any effortless motion of energy being spent other than the repetition of the consistent conveying
Fantastic content and commentary throughout. I love hearing Joel's masterclasses in dog body language - they're a privilege to watch. Just today I saw a local purely positive training group posting a tick-list meme from COAPE talking about (amongst other things) saying yes to "trainers who train with rewards, treats and play" and no to trainers who "use leash corrections" and "talk about dominance." There is no way this group will EVER have encountered dogs like this brother and sister! And I hope for everyone's sakes they never do, frankly! This brother and sister would end up killing another dog - and possibly badly injure a human while they were about it - if the only training approaches were "rewards, treats and play"! Yes, maybe when they were LITTLE ... but for heaven's sake, not now! Another of my favourite multi-approach trainers often talks about meeting the dog's behaviour with commensurate reaction ... not too over the top and not too soft, but equal. Which is just like Joel, who we've all seen will have a hugely different approach than what he's using in this video to young or nervous dog. In other words, you have to meet fire with fire to fix a huge problem ... not with a tiny squirt gun of water!
amen!! perfect point about reacting with equal energy. a correction should always reflect the offensive action. dont want to be too soft so it doesnt land, but not also over the top when its not needed. theres definitely a balance to be found.
The nose touch is very interesting. You don't see many dogs do that in that way. I'm friends with the owners of my first dog's sister and brother. They're close friends, basically these two grew up together. They also do that nose touch, and they've hunted a lot of rabbits together up until the point that they started killing deer. They were definitely two souls with one mind until the owners were "over it."
@@Aswodel In a lot of places like Germany, nothing. You can even get some of the meat. In the Netherlands it's forbidden, and you have to pay huge fines. I personally feel it's only wrong if you don't have full control over them. I'd love to go to Germany and let my dog bring me dinner :D But only that what I allow.
@@Aswodel Here where I am from people have special professions and are allowed to shoot a dog that chases a deer or anything else. So you gotta teach them from the very start that they can’t chase. A little different case are hunter dogs. If you have a permit your dog can hunt with you.
@@Aswodel If the owner didn't command them to. If they decide to hunt deer on their own, what's stopping them from hunting other similar or smaller sized creatures, say an unattended little human?
Could have watched more of that. I get so resentful of dogs that ignore people. It's very satisfying seeing these dogs being put back in their place. Boy they look pleased with themselves though don't they!
A huge problem is that people don't recognize dog body language. Once you understand it the lens at which you view dogs completely changes. All the subtle motions, head moves, eye contact, posturing etc etc. It becomes crystal clear. The nose touch was like when wrestlers in a tag team match high five. It's was basically a "ok let's do this".
Absolutely. They are about to start hunting. I would not let those two dogs live in the same household together. They are a very effective team with the female being the instigator and the male being her back up. Very bad situation.
This brother is on the ball . This is exactly how you train your alpha dog .. salute . My puppy *140lbs 4 year American bulldog x presa* trained to be off leash and well submissive to me while my dog understands what my expectations are with him . 💯
I’m so glad I watched this video a while ago which helped me save my dog today. I saw exactly the same situation where a pair of dog touched nose before they were running towards mine. I was on high alert when I saw the nose touch and those dogs didn’t come to greet, they went straight to my dog’s neck and I yelled to intervene as soon as they were trying to bite. Luckily my yelling scared them off, and that owner has the audacity telling me they were only trying to say hello. No, I have a lab and I know how dogs say hello to each other, showing teeth and attacking the neck is not saying hello!
As a owner of large breeds that are well trained and socialised. I absolutely applaud this man. this the way to do things. In a world full of self proclaimed dog trainers that are clueless prats it is refreshing to see this gentleman. Keep it up Beckman's! More folk need to learn and watch your videos now I recommend random folk with little shit bag dogs your channel. Society today is far to weak and they forget dogs are pack animals and descended from wolves 👌all need a alpha and you radiate it dogs respect you as do I. Best regards. Keep it up disprove all these self proclaimed tiktok and TH-cam toolends making dogs worse and not educating the owners also
As someone who's owned dominant dogs for most of my life, I gotta say, you do a really excellent job. And the videos and explanations are also really well done. For the first time, I have a relatively submissive dog now. And only 35lbs at that. And since I can now finally let my guard down a little bit, it's really cool to watch these vids and reflect on ways I've had to handle a dog in the past. Realizing some of my own errors, and putting them into better practice with a dog who's more under control, potential aggression wise.
Glad I found your videos. My American Bulldogs are 2 and litter mates. They fought a dog to protect me and since then twice they have fought each other. I’m “over it” as you say. Glad for this help.
The truth is a lot of these bully or wolfdog breeds are with owners that can't handle them. YES, there are certain breeds that are BRED for dominance. People hate when I say this and claim "Ohhh it's not the breed though". YES IT IS. That's why there are different classes of breeds like working class and different breeds in general. There ARE dogs that are more predisposed to aggression and dominance. Doesn't make them bad dogs. It's just what they were bred for. My shiba is BRED to be a hunting dog. In regards to DNA, the shiba inu is the closest related to the wolf and I did extensive research before getting her. I have owned dogs before and IT IS VERY MUCH the breed. What worked for my boxer/pit and pomeranian, and pomchi and rottie, did NOT work with the Shiba. Shibas are known to be VERY stubborn and wild-like dogs. I had to be way firmer with her. I had to socialize her a lot more. Over the pandemic she is not wary of people and other dogs again so I had to RE-socialize her. I dropped the ball a while back which caused her to send my pomchi to the emergency room. Thank goodness he is totally ok now but I had to get my ass in gear and continue training. That was 100% my fault, yes, but the incident happened because I got lazy and treated her like the other breeds of dogs. With dog breeds like Shibas, Malamutes, Chows, Pits/bullies, or high content wolf dogs, it takes WAY more effort and the thing they all have in common is a very dominant personality or high drive which can translate to stubbornness. We should not just get dogs bc they look cute or powerful or for whatever ego trip we have. We should get them for our lifestyle and most importantly, if we know we can handle them. I worked at a shelter and not surprisingly, 98% of the dogs left there are pitbull breeds. The stories ranged from "couldn't handle them" "kept attacking other people's pets" "seized" "too aggressive" "behavior issues" etc. It broke my heart bc many don't know how to handle them and all thought their dogs were just sweet with them and so nothing would ever happen. One lady came in crying and claiming she had other dogs and her pit was the only one who was "like this". I asked her what her other breeds were and she said lab, shih tzu, beagle and something else. No one wanted to judge her for leaving her dog with us and she claimed she had the dog since he was young but I don't know what she was expecting. (Also, many people who breed bullies and pits, breed for those traits or ignore them bc the dog looks badass and so they have temperament issues they pass down) I think these dominant high drive breeds are a work of art, but seriously people should be required to take some training classes - just like with firearms or vehicles - before being allowed to own one. Bc the thing is, your firearm or vehicle wont just jump your fence on its own and go attack someone's pet or child, but a high drive dog breed will. ANYWAYS, rant aside lol you're a good trainer and you're giving us the reality that many trainers don't.
Excellent work I had an American Bulldog then rescued one off the street who was half feral. Both were 2 big guys. I was never able to completely control the adoptive one. Finally had to extract his canines or give him away because kept misdirection his aggression to my older boy. He lived with us 6 years but had to be put down due to cancer. RIP in peace León.
So good, Joel! I had 2 American Bulldogs... a mother & son... they were a disaster. When you talked about the eyes, I know exactly what you're saying!! Wish I would've had you back then. We loved them dearly, but we couldn't take them anywhere.
Just found your channel. This is really something special to watch. I grew up with dogs and my dad and I would train them. As a teen I worked with and trained horses. Sometimes it's critical to be assertive and do things that might look rough, and it's unfortunate how that can be seen as taboo. But when you're dealing with animals that have the ability or intent to be aggressive or dangerous, it's not something you can just be nice and soft about. It's important to be the one in charge. Anyway, this is amazing to watch and I've already learned a lot from just a couple videos.
Another t-shirt saying: There is only one boss -- and it's me! Haha. I want one that reads: Every walk is a training session. This was a great video -- informative.
Your absolutely right! They always need to be checked and told. Have a six year old one dominant dog and can just not stand around in dog park and not pay attention. Thank you great demonstration
Best trainer I've ever seen. I know soany people who try and treat there dogs and train there dogs like they're people and never get anywhere with them
I just found your videos and I love them. Since I was a baby me and my immediate family had American pitbulls n bullies, mastiffs, staffies, bully mixes and at one time a whole ass Tosa. We fostered and rescued bullies (and some angry little guys) so I'm more comfortable with big dogs than most people. I love trainers like you that explain your methods AND dog behavior so people know what to look for. You don't scapegoat any breeds, instead you go by individual dog behaviors. It makes it clear that you MUST train ur dog like a dog (with other dogs if necessary) especially 80lb+ ones. You dont need to hit them or scare them, just be firm. The same things work on chihuahuas too! I've seen so many people give their dogs too much leeway or instigate bad behavior because "haha angry face is cute" or whatever. They don't realize you have to be consistent and correct these things or they get out of hand. We used a similar dominant correction method when our big dogs were babies. Sometimes we also flipped them over and pinned them when they couldn't be scruffed( similar to how another dog would pin them/ or theyd roll over and show bellies) As they got older they chilled out and we would continue any needed corrections via normal collar or a chain choke (for the huge dogs because I'm short). Definitely subscribing.
Prince is such a good dog. No matter how many times I see you figure out and change these other dogs, your Prince will always stun me. What a great dog!!
That frenzy u saw and mentioned, is when they get so amped up and instincts take over, that is when bad things happen....I love that finally, a trainer says like it is...u need control and you won't get it with treats and good words all the time....
This was fantastic. You are ABSOLUTELY CORRECT, not like you need to be told, but this was a great way to show different looks, the tag team aspect was right on this was awesome!!!!
I watched the first 10 seconds of your video and I already approve. This is how I am with my dog. He’s my baby but I am very stern and take no crap from him.
wanna know what i love the most about this show/channel, you actually show all your cases and not just "dangerous" breeds or restricted ones, its any dog, like some dogs that pop up reload my memory cause i forgot the breeds even existed, its good to see because most trainers have the same typical dogs in, making it look so much worse for them
Outstanding video as many of us have siblings dogs. Yes siblings become a team and they feed off each other. Thanks for helping us know how to recognize this behavior and defuse
Brilliant, Joel - yes, 2 dogs, strongly bonded, living together... I have that, too, and they do act as one single organism; very different dynamic than when it's just 1. That started when I brought the younger dog home as a puppy - the older German Shepherd had never been close to another dog in our home, but with that new puppy, things clicked; and they had this connection, almost instantly. And even though the older one is not dog-aggressive - she tries to be when the younger one is play-bowing to the neighbor's dog at the gate, for instance: That happened yesterday, the older dog saw the other 2 dogs having a friendly meet and sniff at the gate, and she rushed down, all hackled up, growling and barking. Of course, we strongly corrected this, but jeeez, Joel, just imagine these were 2 massive American Bulldogs like the ones you are dealing with. Things could get pretty nasty pretty quick. You're a hero man, much admiration and respect.
Wow 😮. Amazing. These animals are no joke. It's frightening that so many dog owners don't get help they just get these dog breeds they aren't prepared for or know how to properly train. Thank you for your program.
Yeah I have 2 corsos and good dogs not super great trained. But very well behaved. My cousin brought his shepherd and was surprised they didn't jump and all that stuff. Told him I treat them like my kids. Strict with love. And recommended your channel 👍🏾
Yesss! Same with my kids! We as parents have to let them know there are consequences in life. Action=consequence, good or bad. It’s their choice. I taught them that early.
I have been waiting and looking for this video to teach me how to work my two female sisters. They are amazing ladies, but together they are mean. Thank you so much
Awesome video! Stopping two powerful and dominant dogs when they team up on other dogs that s amazing! The only person who could fix my male dog from being aggressive towards other males is you Joel! I regret I don t live in the US! Great job on this video!
Sir, you are so on point about the stubborn attitude of american bull dogs. Our girl is stubborn, headstrong, and picky about male dogs and men of an older age. It is an workout to make sure she is focused on us. Of all my dogs she has been the hardest to socialize out side of our home. I know the reason she is hard around some men. She was traumatized by my husband's sudden death and for a few yrs she associated men of a certain age with a negative attitude. (she also picks up negative attitudes very quickly of people) We have over came most of it but it is still hard to introduce her to new dogs. Loved seeing how you worked with those two naughty siblings.
I've just found this channel a few days ago, and I love it. All you hear about is, as you said, the give them treats, kind of training. This is how you speak canine language. Thanks for showing us how it's done. There will likely be a hell of a lot of better dog owners as a result. Myself included.
Thank you so much for these detailed explanation. These two bullies are like our two frenchies! They are acting exactly the same way if they meet with an other dog since they were 4 month old. They are a team and the dominant girl always try to protect her sister. Finally I could show this video to my husband and he understood why this is serious and why I have to correct them every single time if we meet with other dogs. Until this video I never found any help on the internet and we didn't get any advise from our trainer. I hope one day I'm able to let them to play with other dogs at the same time.
You "cut the push" in excellent fashion! You stopped the mount at the most perfect time as well. 💪🏿💪🏿That nose touch was what I call a "counsel move". They went pack mode in a flash
Excellent video! One of the reasons I am so fond of this channel is because Joel documents stuff like this. Not only does he show behaviors like this and the body language that goes along with it but he shows us how to work through it and progress and help our dogs.🙏
I fully support literally everything you do that works for you because I'm all for what works! As a dog trainer for reactive, aggressive and anxious dogs, I don't always agree with your methods entirely, just for myself personally, not in general. But man if I don't learn something every time I watch one of your videos!! Keep doing what you do, Joel, and keep filming. Thank you for this one, it makes a lot of sense.
Dominance is something a lot of people don't fully understand. Most people especially women are not in tune with their primal nature. Men don't even notice that humans even have a Dominance system. The biggest strongest men are often the leader in a group of male freinds. It is the same with dogs.
What a good looking doberman. I used to help abused dogs to learn how to socialise with the help of my doberman. We even helped rescued wiled cats. :) how lovely
I adopted a 3yo Olde English Bulldog in March and have focused on bonding between us. Occasionally, another person mixed in but just us until recently. My friends have a pair of Jack Russell siblings and I am so proud of how she handled herself. I just leaned down and played with them, holding her back between my legs and slowly let her start interacting. Kept referring to all of them as good girls and good boy.
SHOUT OUT TO JOEL! You are most definitely one of the best trainers out there - especially for the working/herding type breeds. What stands out most compared to many other trainers is your remarkable attention to body language, training approach that caters to a dog's natural social behavior rather than ours, and training steps that are clear, concise, and produce surprising fast results. I am very happy you are an online resource in the sea of 'safe space' purely positive reinforcement trainers all over the internet that would never be able to improve the dogs you improve.
Joel you really are an artist in the way you deal with dogs. I'm sure you occasionally get it wrong. But I bet it's pretty damn rare. The way you communicate power with dogs is amazing. And of course in that power you provide safety and security and that then calms everything down.
I’ve got a 4yr old submissive male American Bully/APBT mix and a 1yr old female corgi who is extremely dominant. She regularly instigates rough play and this is giving me a lot of great tips
Your vids have made a huge impact on my training. I have a 9 mth pretty dominant male border collie (intact). Whilst positive reinforcement helped for basic command/obedience training, the more assertive approach to build respect and leadership has made him a much calmer dog, and now he's doing great even as a teen pup. Keep it up mate.
Hi I a English Bullterrier male that was a very calm and loving dog.One day I opened my gate and out of the blue my dog ran out and attacked my neighbor.He grabbed him by the arm and injured him.Luckily I ran after him immediately when he started running.I manage to get him off quickly. After that he became very aggressive towards people.One day I was putting him away because he was barking and acting very aggressive towards my Uncle that visited me.I tried putting him away then he jumped and bit me. After watching your dominance video I realized that I am not the boss and that he is. I used 3 of your videos to change the pack oder.After a month he now knows I am the boss.I have a consistant recall even if he wants to act aggressive.I can stop him from becoming aggressive.I am still working with him but he is a completely different dog. I just want to say thank you very much.
Wow very cool to see someone was able to turn their dog around. I love to know more about what you specifically did and how to avoid this. I have a 12 week old American bulldog and start worrying like I'm not gonna be cut out for this.
I love this channel so much! You are able to articulate what I know to be true, even in the realm of humans! As a human I'm able to learn so much from you and solidify what I already know about healthy human interaction when dealing with not so desirable people. You be nice, you be respectful, but you never let someone walk all over you or intimidate you.
Bro I don't even own a dog and never have, but I have been watching these videos nonstop for a few days and this is the most unreal training I've ever seen. You're SO next level. It's like they activated their wonder twins powers with that energy check. lol
AHHH yup the nose touch. a little "you wanna get em?" "yup, lets get em." you can even see the brother immediately watching and reacting to the sister's lead right after. as others are saying, these duo would be dangerous unsupervised.
Wow I'm so grateful I cam we across this video of the brother/sister and they way they bully another dog when their together. I thought I was always too firm with my dogs but I see your like me! Owner has to show who is the dominant one or lose control. Great video thanks
Great video Joel best part is your acute observation and timing with the correction...that is the key. The dog's tail is wagging so he is calm and connected with you regardless, before, you did not exist. Very noticeable how effective your method of training is....it has authority and respect....no wishy washy boundaries
I've definitely seen two dogs who are great alone. get together and attack people or other dogs. They just get so hyped and nuts Definitely great work with these two.
and yet, no one makes the argument that submission isn't a thing. Whatever the polar opposite of submissive is, what do they want to call it? It's dominance.
That’s a great point
I was literally just thinking that yesterday.
@@ColdestRage303 yeah I forget who I was watching, someone was talking about truly dominant dogs and that they're chill most of the time until they don't want to do something, and then they're ready to stand their ground in a way that can ugly. For general purposes though submissive-dominant is a spectrum and most dogs are somewhere closer to the middle.
@@ColdestRage303 Well, it's all on a scale so they're on the dominant side instead of the submissive side. Yours sounds further up the scale.
Regardless he was arguing against the people that say that dominance isn't even a thing to begin with, and that it's debunked that dogs like yours are wired the way they are etc etc.
@@ColdestRage303 "Like in a wolfpack the other dominant wolf will go to fight the alpha one day for leadership." That's been debunked. Well, no, not completely. This behavior was observed in replaced wolfs that were thrown together in enclosed parks. This led to the assumption that it must work the same with dogs. Then it was discovered that natural wolf packs don't display this social dynamic at all. That led to people claiming that no dominance is ever a thing.
The truth is complicated. Dogs are not really trying to take over the house. To me it sounds like you based your training completely on dominance, rather than leadership, and that resulted in the dog rebelling against you. Perhaps you punished him too much, and he had enough and didn't take it anymore. (Like he perceived your command as incoming punishment). Not saying this is what happened, but that's how I can imagine a dog attacking its owner.
I've never heard of a dog that's raised properly going against its owner. It's pretty much unheard of.
I swear Prince knows EXACTLY what he’s doing at all times and is probably the most calculated, intuitive animal I’ve ever seen..period. I mean literally. It’s wild watching his micro movements and how he almost psychically knows what to do, when, and what’s expected of him. It’s wildly impressive. I’ve never seen a dog like that before.
Its Lassiesk 😂
You're very observant! Prince is an incredible animal!
I'm glad you pointed out the nose touching, because I might have thought it was just a coincidence, but you showed it was definitely intentional communication. I also noticed when they ganged up on a dog they'd take different paths to try to corner them. It seemed like it could be very dangerous if there was nobody around.
Agree with that nose touch! Amazing when Joel pointed that out the two took off
I'm glad you pointed out that Jax and Gemma took different paths to get to the dog. I went back and watched those parts.
It’s actually kinda cool that kind of communication between the two dogs. “You ready?” “Yea I’m ready” “Then lets go”
That nose touch was absolutely a "you take the back, I'll take the front and lets own this bitch" type of deal.
@@alfatbear I literally said the same thing a then read this. That's exactly what happened. 🤣
Now my world is going back to where I started. I trained like you- then I went to get my training certification. Worked 3 years for a facility that barked at me that dominance isn't real- never be rough handed-never stand your ground. Treats and praise only. This- this is what makes sense to me and has always made sense.
that check in they do is so wild, you can definitely see their energy rise+change!
Yeah siblings and I believe pack dogs do that too. They had a whole conversation in those nose touches lol!
Yep pack behavior
They switched to predator mode.
Yes you can really see the energy. Wow. Great training job ^^
i saw two kangal siblings kill 3 dogs out of nothing. i saw this dogs everyday playing. Suddenly something weird happened. They chased and killed 3 dogs so fast together it was insane. First time i thought some dogs cant be held in flats and cities.
Omg they're like a hunting pair!! Scary to suddenly see them treat the other dog like prey. Good job, Joel!
These are the best videos. That negative energy the first dog had was crazy. I believe your method is the only way to work with dogs this dominant.
Negative energy at the end "subscriber to channel"
@@savvysavvy4527 you didn’t like the way I said “subscribe to the channel”?
@@BDTraining 😂😭😂
I actually think that the sister is the catalyst for her brother. Or am I wrong here?
@@BDTraining I love that cause its like you almost forget what you are doing here. Like all you want to do it illustrate animal behaviour and animal/human interaction. Then as you say you are done. That's the video. I was gonna say we are in school here only not all of us consider you the teacher. But you are the teacher. That why I subscribed. Best to you.
Love this. People have a misconception that dogs think the way we do. This isn’t mean at all. If you wanna train dogs you have to be top dog. You have to understand and teach them in ways they understand. Which is dominance. Dogs don’t get reason like we do. They understand cause an affect. Or action and reaction.
And you need to build trust, love, overcome fear, guidance or your dominance things it’s just to show your dick.
just as humans do
IMO dogs understand cause effect much better bc there is no hidden agenda as in humans.
There’s no guessing about ulterior motives and they mostly live in the moment.
When the 2 siblings get back together & nose bump, you can almost hear them thinking "RIGHT, the Pack is together again, GAME ON!!" Such a powerful pair & mental bond, their owners really, REALLY need to learn your methods before someone gets hurt.
dang u definitely The Boss! The way you are able to see/interpret/respond so quickly is endlessly fascinating. There is so much good teaching in every single video. 🐾❤️
I love this type of training. I'm tired of the bad dog owners crying about any discipline. Especially the ones who let their dogs run around and bite people and think their dog is just friendly because it's obviously friendly to the owner.
Some people don’t understand the difference between discipline and hitting/abuse. That grab with Jax was a great example, discipline without hurting. It’s the dog version of a time out.
@@Robynhoodlum My dog learned the most when I would be clearly disappointed in him. When he was learning to camp with my family ( a lot of people and a lot of dogs ) he was mean to some dogs while playful with others. Any time he got aggressive to a dog, i would simply put him in the kennel "time out". Disconnecting them from the pack when they do wrong, goes a long way in my experience. My dog doesn't like being disconnected from the pack. But if he can't play by my rules, then he doesn't get to be apart of the pack. After a 15-30 min time out. He comes out and is playful with the dogs that he was aggressive with.
@@yooginava1828 hard to do that with a kennel on a walk though right ?
@@MrZZsharka "when he was learning to camp" is a lot more different than taking a dog for a simple walk. There's a lot more going on during a camping trip than there is on walks. Sorry I didn't explain that this was over two years ago, and on top of that i've paid for classes.
And when he bites and is put down for it. " oh, but he didn't bite. it was all of a sudden. "
I can not get bored watching these videos. It's like every single one is different and interesting in it's own way. Huge respect for the work you do.
Hi, I'm Ljiljana from Serbia (my name is hard to pronounce in English :) ). I have a femail mixed breed dog, Bertha, who I adopted during the Corona virus pandemic. I reviewed a bunch of your videos and they helped me tremendously especially with the leash walking and while meeting other dogs but also in identifying the "problems" of my dog. You are wonderful and more importantly, your methods are efficient and easy to apply. I am very grateful!
All the way from Serbia! Hi 👋
I’m glad that you have been helped tremendously!
Whenever they hear 'HEY' in the house, they know I am watching your video's :) Thank you for your great lessons!
Yep, I saw them turn from two separate dogs into one team of hunters. The sister instigated it and the brother followed. That check-in was a clear sign of “let’s hunt, fight, but together”.
Yes, classic pack hunting/fighting behavior! At least we know the siblings are close ha ha..
Ive seen this before in person. I live next door to a family that has 2 free roam big dogs. They are brothers and they had a incident a few years ago where they attacked a smaller dog and started to eat him alive. The owner of the smaller dog tried to scare them off with a stick but they didn’t care. She got in her car and acted like she was going to run them over and that’s when they left.
The smaller dog made it to the vet, but they ate his entire abdomen and he didn’t make it.
They are still free roam btw. Oh, and no other murders happened since. They attacked my elderly dog before, but they were chased off.
@@greeneggsspam3969 that’s just horrible! Omg…
@@Wobblyrage it really was. They weren’t always bad dogs of course, they were abused by the male owner. Luckily, he got throat cancer and failed to treat it. I kinda think that’s part of the reason they calmed down with the attacks.
Oh, and they still are very sweet puppies, at least to women. They recently protected my other neighbors dog after she was hit by a car. Sat with her the whole time until people started helping her.
It was like a
Fist Bump of two buddies
Whenever Joel says, in the session, “I am *OVER* (whatever)” you know it’s about to get real! 😁👍
I absolutely loved this footage, prince completely trusts joel also for him to be safe. And in this environment this other dog has every opportunity to thrive and be safe. And that is wonderful
Just the reasserting of the dominancy of the dominant male without yelling screaming hitting any effortless motion of energy being spent other than the repetition of the consistent conveying
Fantastic content and commentary throughout. I love hearing Joel's masterclasses in dog body language - they're a privilege to watch.
Just today I saw a local purely positive training group posting a tick-list meme from COAPE talking about (amongst other things) saying yes to "trainers who train with rewards, treats and play" and no to trainers who "use leash corrections" and "talk about dominance." There is no way this group will EVER have encountered dogs like this brother and sister! And I hope for everyone's sakes they never do, frankly! This brother and sister would end up killing another dog - and possibly badly injure a human while they were about it - if the only training approaches were "rewards, treats and play"! Yes, maybe when they were LITTLE ... but for heaven's sake, not now!
Another of my favourite multi-approach trainers often talks about meeting the dog's behaviour with commensurate reaction ... not too over the top and not too soft, but equal. Which is just like Joel, who we've all seen will have a hugely different approach than what he's using in this video to young or nervous dog. In other words, you have to meet fire with fire to fix a huge problem ... not with a tiny squirt gun of water!
amen!! perfect point about reacting with equal energy. a correction should always reflect the offensive action. dont want to be too soft so it doesnt land, but not also over the top when its not needed. theres definitely a balance to be found.
@@katec708 I guess if you go overboard, the dog's just gonna think you're a jerk instead of learning the rules
@@Poldovico yeah exactly! you never wanna be mean, but make sure they get the message yknow.
The nose touch is very interesting. You don't see many dogs do that in that way. I'm friends with the owners of my first dog's sister and brother. They're close friends, basically these two grew up together. They also do that nose touch, and they've hunted a lot of rabbits together up until the point that they started killing deer. They were definitely two souls with one mind until the owners were "over it."
what's wrong with a dog chasing and killing deer?
@@Aswodel In a lot of places like Germany, nothing. You can even get some of the meat. In the Netherlands it's forbidden, and you have to pay huge fines.
I personally feel it's only wrong if you don't have full control over them. I'd love to go to Germany and let my dog bring me dinner :D But only that what I allow.
@@Aswodel there are laws in the US as well, varies state to state, but dogs can be euthanized for that.
@@Aswodel Here where I am from people have special professions and are allowed to shoot a dog that chases a deer or anything else. So you gotta teach them from the very start that they can’t chase. A little different case are hunter dogs. If you have a permit your dog can hunt with you.
@@Aswodel If the owner didn't command them to. If they decide to hunt deer on their own, what's stopping them from hunting other similar or smaller sized creatures, say an unattended little human?
Your reading of situations and your subsequent reactions are lightning quick, and then you just nonchalantly explain everything to us. Just wow!
Touch noses- wonder twin powers activate ! Joel- naw I have the power…I’m He Man. Awesome video
Could have watched more of that. I get so resentful of dogs that ignore people. It's very satisfying seeing these dogs being put back in their place. Boy they look pleased with themselves though don't they!
Every time I watch you, I’m completely amazed by your knowledge of dog behavior. And your results are so good.
Your work with dominant breeds is nice to see and hear. People really do need to understand what it means to own a bully breed
A huge problem is that people don't recognize dog body language. Once you understand it the lens at which you view dogs completely changes. All the subtle motions, head moves, eye contact, posturing etc etc. It becomes crystal clear. The nose touch was like when wrestlers in a tag team match high five. It's was basically a "ok let's do this".
Absolutely. They are about to start hunting. I would not let those two dogs live in the same household together. They are a very effective team with the female being the instigator and the male being her back up. Very bad situation.
What I learnt about dogs is that
They lick their lips when they are getting ready to attack
This brother is on the ball . This is exactly how you train your alpha dog .. salute . My puppy *140lbs 4 year American bulldog x presa* trained to be off leash and well submissive to me while my dog understands what my expectations are with him . 💯
and one more thing- the power of your look at him- amazing, yes- you run the this show and he understands that 👍
I’m so glad I watched this video a while ago which helped me save my dog today. I saw exactly the same situation where a pair of dog touched nose before they were running towards mine. I was on high alert when I saw the nose touch and those dogs didn’t come to greet, they went straight to my dog’s neck and I yelled to intervene as soon as they were trying to bite. Luckily my yelling scared them off, and that owner has the audacity telling me they were only trying to say hello. No, I have a lab and I know how dogs say hello to each other, showing teeth and attacking the neck is not saying hello!
Privileged to watch a top-class dog trainer. Thanks very much.
I swear you’re saving one dog at a time, aggressor dogs end up fighting and getting put down, you are truly saving them!
His famous line, I'm over it I'm so over it every episode it's so funny.
As a owner of large breeds that are well trained and socialised. I absolutely applaud this man. this the way to do things. In a world full of self proclaimed dog trainers that are clueless prats it is refreshing to see this gentleman. Keep it up Beckman's! More folk need to learn and watch your videos now I recommend random folk with little shit bag dogs your channel. Society today is far to weak and they forget dogs are pack animals and descended from wolves 👌all need a alpha and you radiate it dogs respect you as do I. Best regards. Keep it up disprove all these self proclaimed tiktok and TH-cam toolends making dogs worse and not educating the owners also
As someone who's owned dominant dogs for most of my life, I gotta say, you do a really excellent job. And the videos and explanations are also really well done.
For the first time, I have a relatively submissive dog now. And only 35lbs at that. And since I can now finally let my guard down a little bit, it's really cool to watch these vids and reflect on ways I've had to handle a dog in the past. Realizing some of my own errors, and putting them into better practice with a dog who's more under control, potential aggression wise.
Glad I found your videos. My American Bulldogs are 2 and litter mates. They fought a dog to protect me and since then twice they have fought each other. I’m “over it” as you say. Glad for this help.
You have a gift from God. You're amazing with dogs. Thank you for all you do for dogs and their owners.
The truth is a lot of these bully or wolfdog breeds are with owners that can't handle them. YES, there are certain breeds that are BRED for dominance. People hate when I say this and claim "Ohhh it's not the breed though". YES IT IS. That's why there are different classes of breeds like working class and different breeds in general. There ARE dogs that are more predisposed to aggression and dominance. Doesn't make them bad dogs. It's just what they were bred for.
My shiba is BRED to be a hunting dog. In regards to DNA, the shiba inu is the closest related to the wolf and I did extensive research before getting her. I have owned dogs before and IT IS VERY MUCH the breed. What worked for my boxer/pit and pomeranian, and pomchi and rottie, did NOT work with the Shiba.
Shibas are known to be VERY stubborn and wild-like dogs. I had to be way firmer with her. I had to socialize her a lot more. Over the pandemic she is not wary of people and other dogs again so I had to RE-socialize her.
I dropped the ball a while back which caused her to send my pomchi to the emergency room. Thank goodness he is totally ok now but I had to get my ass in gear and continue training. That was 100% my fault, yes, but the incident happened because I got lazy and treated her like the other breeds of dogs.
With dog breeds like Shibas, Malamutes, Chows, Pits/bullies, or high content wolf dogs, it takes WAY more effort and the thing they all have in common is a very dominant personality or high drive which can translate to stubbornness.
We should not just get dogs bc they look cute or powerful or for whatever ego trip we have. We should get them for our lifestyle and most importantly, if we know we can handle them.
I worked at a shelter and not surprisingly, 98% of the dogs left there are pitbull breeds. The stories ranged from "couldn't handle them" "kept attacking other people's pets" "seized" "too aggressive" "behavior issues" etc. It broke my heart bc many don't know how to handle them and all thought their dogs were just sweet with them and so nothing would ever happen. One lady came in crying and claiming she had other dogs and her pit was the only one who was "like this". I asked her what her other breeds were and she said lab, shih tzu, beagle and something else. No one wanted to judge her for leaving her dog with us and she claimed she had the dog since he was young but I don't know what she was expecting. (Also, many people who breed bullies and pits, breed for those traits or ignore them bc the dog looks badass and so they have temperament issues they pass down)
I think these dominant high drive breeds are a work of art, but seriously people should be required to take some training classes - just like with firearms or vehicles - before being allowed to own one. Bc the thing is, your firearm or vehicle wont just jump your fence on its own and go attack someone's pet or child, but a high drive dog breed will.
ANYWAYS, rant aside lol you're a good trainer and you're giving us the reality that many trainers don't.
I'm ,so glad I seen your video my Pit mix is about 3 she is starting to test me. I had to let her know u don't run this house Lady.
Excellent work I had an American Bulldog then rescued one off the street who was half feral. Both were 2 big guys. I was never able to completely control the adoptive one. Finally had to extract his canines or give him away because kept misdirection his aggression to my older boy. He lived with us 6 years but had to be put down due to cancer. RIP in peace León.
Love this dude he's one of the best I've seen his experience is unmatched
Coming from a family that trains police dogs
So good, Joel! I had 2 American Bulldogs... a mother & son... they were a disaster. When you talked about the eyes, I know exactly what you're saying!! Wish I would've had you back then. We loved them dearly, but we couldn't take them anywhere.
Just found your channel. This is really something special to watch. I grew up with dogs and my dad and I would train them. As a teen I worked with and trained horses. Sometimes it's critical to be assertive and do things that might look rough, and it's unfortunate how that can be seen as taboo. But when you're dealing with animals that have the ability or intent to be aggressive or dangerous, it's not something you can just be nice and soft about. It's important to be the one in charge. Anyway, this is amazing to watch and I've already learned a lot from just a couple videos.
Same as with people otherwise they become criminals
JAX & GEMMA are gorgeous!
They’re like a WWF TagTeam!
Another t-shirt saying: There is only one boss -- and it's me! Haha. I want one that reads: Every walk is a training session. This was a great video -- informative.
They definitely hatched a plan there!
Your absolutely right! They always need to be checked and told.
Have a six year old one dominant dog and can just not stand around in dog park and not pay attention.
Thank you great demonstration
Best trainer I've ever seen. I know soany people who try and treat there dogs and train there dogs like they're people and never get anywhere with them
I just found your videos and I love them. Since I was a baby me and my immediate family had American pitbulls n bullies, mastiffs, staffies, bully mixes and at one time a whole ass Tosa. We fostered and rescued bullies (and some angry little guys) so I'm more comfortable with big dogs than most people. I love trainers like you that explain your methods AND dog behavior so people know what to look for. You don't scapegoat any breeds, instead you go by individual dog behaviors. It makes it clear that you MUST train ur dog like a dog (with other dogs if necessary) especially 80lb+ ones. You dont need to hit them or scare them, just be firm. The same things work on chihuahuas too!
I've seen so many people give their dogs too much leeway or instigate bad behavior because "haha angry face is cute" or whatever. They don't realize you have to be consistent and correct these things or they get out of hand.
We used a similar dominant correction method when our big dogs were babies. Sometimes we also flipped them over and pinned them when they couldn't be scruffed( similar to how another dog would pin them/ or theyd roll over and show bellies) As they got older they chilled out and we would continue any needed corrections via normal collar or a chain choke (for the huge dogs because I'm short). Definitely subscribing.
Prince is such a good dog. No matter how many times I see you figure out and change these other dogs, your Prince will always stun me. What a great dog!!
That frenzy u saw and mentioned, is when they get so amped up and instincts take over, that is when bad things happen....I love that finally, a trainer says like it is...u need control and you won't get it with treats and good words all the time....
This was fantastic. You are ABSOLUTELY CORRECT, not like you need to be told, but this was a great way to show different looks, the tag team aspect was right on this was awesome!!!!
I watched the first 10 seconds of your video and I already approve. This is how I am with my dog. He’s my baby but I am very stern and take no crap from him.
Amazing attitude adjustment.Best demonstration of boss attitude making a difference. Love it
I like this guy because we share similar traits. Boss status.
wanna know what i love the most about this show/channel, you actually show all your cases and not just "dangerous" breeds or restricted ones, its any dog, like some dogs that pop up reload my memory cause i forgot the breeds even existed, its good to see because most trainers have the same typical dogs in, making it look so much worse for them
Outstanding video as many of us have siblings dogs. Yes siblings become a team and they feed off each other. Thanks for helping us know how to recognize this behavior and defuse
Brilliant, Joel - yes, 2 dogs, strongly bonded, living together... I have that, too, and they do act as one single organism; very different dynamic than when it's just 1. That started when I brought the younger dog home as a puppy - the older German Shepherd had never been close to another dog in our home, but with that new puppy, things clicked; and they had this connection, almost instantly. And even though the older one is not dog-aggressive - she tries to be when the younger one is play-bowing to the neighbor's dog at the gate, for instance: That happened yesterday, the older dog saw the other 2 dogs having a friendly meet and sniff at the gate, and she rushed down, all hackled up, growling and barking. Of course, we strongly corrected this, but jeeez, Joel, just imagine these were 2 massive American Bulldogs like the ones you are dealing with. Things could get pretty nasty pretty quick. You're a hero man, much admiration and respect.
Wow 😮. Amazing. These animals are no joke. It's frightening that so many dog owners don't get help they just get these dog breeds they aren't prepared for or know how to properly train. Thank you for your program.
Yeah I have 2 corsos and good dogs not super great trained. But very well behaved. My cousin brought his shepherd and was surprised they didn't jump and all that stuff. Told him I treat them like my kids. Strict with love. And recommended your channel 👍🏾
Yesss! Same with my kids! We as parents have to let them know there are consequences in life. Action=consequence, good or bad. It’s their choice. I taught them that early.
Can I just say You are AWESOME!
My dog died in December. And I am learning all I can before I decide to have another one.
Thank You
I have been waiting and looking for this video to teach me how to work my two female sisters. They are amazing ladies, but together they are mean. Thank you so much
oh wow these dogs are gorgeous
Awesome video! Stopping two powerful and dominant dogs when they team up on other dogs that s amazing! The only person who could fix my male dog from being aggressive towards other males is you Joel! I regret I don t live in the US! Great job on this video!
Sir, you are so on point about the stubborn attitude of american bull dogs.
Our girl is stubborn, headstrong, and picky about male dogs and men of an older age.
It is an workout to make sure she is focused on us. Of all my dogs she has been the hardest to socialize out side of our home.
I know the reason she is hard around some men. She was traumatized by my husband's sudden death and for a few yrs she associated men of a certain age with a negative attitude. (she also picks up negative attitudes very quickly of people) We have over came most of it but it is still hard to introduce her to new dogs.
Loved seeing how you worked with those two naughty siblings.
IM OVER IT LOL. I love it thank you for all the information you need to make shirts with the slogan if you haven't!
I've just found this channel a few days ago, and I love it. All you hear about is, as you said, the give them treats, kind of training. This is how you speak canine language. Thanks for showing us how it's done. There will likely be a hell of a lot of better dog owners as a result. Myself included.
Thank you so much for these detailed explanation. These two bullies are like our two frenchies! They are acting exactly the same way if they meet with an other dog since they were 4 month old. They are a team and the dominant girl always try to protect her sister. Finally I could show this video to my husband and he understood why this is serious and why I have to correct them every single time if we meet with other dogs. Until this video I never found any help on the internet and we didn't get any advise from our trainer. I hope one day I'm able to let them to play with other dogs at the same time.
You "cut the push" in excellent fashion! You stopped the mount at the most perfect time as well. 💪🏿💪🏿That nose touch was what I call a "counsel move". They went pack mode in a flash
Excellent video! One of the reasons I am so fond of this channel is because Joel documents stuff like this. Not only does he show behaviors like this and the body language that goes along with it but he shows us how to work through it and progress and help our dogs.🙏
I fully support literally everything you do that works for you because I'm all for what works! As a dog trainer for reactive, aggressive and anxious dogs, I don't always agree with your methods entirely, just for myself personally, not in general. But man if I don't learn something every time I watch one of your videos!! Keep doing what you do, Joel, and keep filming. Thank you for this one, it makes a lot of sense.
Dominance is something a lot of people don't fully understand. Most people especially women are not in tune with their primal nature. Men don't even notice that humans even have a Dominance system. The biggest strongest men are often the leader in a group of male freinds. It is the same with dogs.
I have 5 pitbulls and 1 American Bulldog..and you are correct about dominance and sibling teamwork to intimidate other dogs
What a good looking doberman. I used to help abused dogs to learn how to socialise with the help of my doberman. We even helped rescued wiled cats. :) how lovely
You are right. As soon as they checked in and touched noses, it was on.
You are great at reading their body language.
I adopted a 3yo Olde English Bulldog in March and have focused on bonding between us. Occasionally, another person mixed in but just us until recently. My friends have a pair of Jack Russell siblings and I am so proud of how she handled herself. I just leaned down and played with them, holding her back between my legs and slowly let her start interacting. Kept referring to all of them as good girls and good boy.
SHOUT OUT TO JOEL! You are most definitely one of the best trainers out there - especially for the working/herding type breeds. What stands out most compared to many other trainers is your remarkable attention to body language, training approach that caters to a dog's natural social behavior rather than ours, and training steps that are clear, concise, and produce surprising fast results. I am very happy you are an online resource in the sea of 'safe space' purely positive reinforcement trainers all over the internet that would never be able to improve the dogs you improve.
Joel you really are an artist in the way you deal with dogs. I'm sure you occasionally get it wrong. But I bet it's pretty damn rare.
The way you communicate power with dogs is amazing. And of course in that power you provide safety and security and that then calms everything down.
I’ve got a 4yr old submissive male American Bully/APBT mix and a 1yr old female corgi who is extremely dominant. She regularly instigates rough play and this is giving me a lot of great tips
Very interesting. Thanks for showing these interactions and interdog communications.
Your vids have made a huge impact on my training. I have a 9 mth pretty dominant male border collie (intact). Whilst positive reinforcement helped for basic command/obedience training, the more assertive approach to build respect and leadership has made him a much calmer dog, and now he's doing great even as a teen pup. Keep it up mate.
They wanna tag team! Great job! You are the BOSS! Loved the video
The goal us the right time for a correction. And you did on time. And you succeed. So simple it looks. It depends on energy, too. Well done
I love this video and the analysis of dog behaviours. Great video. Thanks again so very much.
Remarkable job, sir. Well done.
Hi I a English Bullterrier male that was a very calm and loving dog.One day I opened my gate and out of the blue my dog ran out and attacked my neighbor.He grabbed him by the arm and injured him.Luckily I ran after him immediately when he started running.I manage to get him off quickly.
After that he became very aggressive towards people.One day I was putting him away because he was barking and acting very aggressive towards my Uncle that visited me.I tried putting him away then he jumped and bit me.
After watching your dominance video I realized that I am not the boss and that he is.
I used 3 of your videos to change the pack oder.After a month he now knows I am the boss.I have a consistant recall even if he wants to act aggressive.I can stop him from becoming aggressive.I am still working with him but he is a completely different dog.
I just want to say thank you very much.
Wow very cool to see someone was able to turn their dog around. I love to know more about what you specifically did and how to avoid this. I have a 12 week old American bulldog and start worrying like I'm not gonna be cut out for this.
I love this channel so much! You are able to articulate what I know to be true, even in the realm of humans! As a human I'm able to learn so much from you and solidify what I already know about healthy human interaction when dealing with not so desirable people. You be nice, you be respectful, but you never let someone walk all over you or intimidate you.
Bro I don't even own a dog and never have, but I have been watching these videos nonstop for a few days and this is the most unreal training I've ever seen. You're SO next level.
It's like they activated their wonder twins powers with that energy check. lol
Wow! Glad I stumbled upon this video. We have a nine week old American Bulldog puppy and we can tell that she’s going to very stubborn.
Brilliant work by Joel, as usual.
I don't even have dogs but one of your videos was recommended to me for some reason and now I'm binging your channel
Best trainer and assistant ever
I’ve never seen Prince look so happy! AB’s wonder twin powers activated!!🤣🤣🤣☠️
AHHH yup the nose touch. a little "you wanna get em?" "yup, lets get em." you can even see the brother immediately watching and reacting to the sister's lead right after. as others are saying, these duo would be dangerous unsupervised.
Feel that energy you can tell he's done with those two dogs 🐕
Thank you for all your helpful videos!
They feel powerful together and that makes them guard against any possible alliance one of them might form with any other dog.
Wow I'm so grateful I cam we across this video of the brother/sister and they way they bully another dog when their together. I thought I was always too firm with my dogs but I see your like me! Owner has to show who is the dominant one or lose control. Great video thanks
Those two enjoyed your presence in the box. Clearly. Big ups for pointing out the nose check.
Great video Joel best part is your acute observation and timing with the correction...that is the key. The dog's tail is wagging so he is calm and connected with you regardless, before, you did not exist. Very noticeable how effective your method of training is....it has authority and respect....no wishy washy boundaries
Perfect video. Excellent work as usual Joel and cree
I've definitely seen two dogs who are great alone. get together and attack people or other dogs. They just get so hyped and nuts Definitely great work with these two.