She’s stunning, seems very young still. Glad the owner is socializing her at a young age, she’s skittish buy for a high content wolfdog she’s doing great in the dog park.
This is a great educational video. It shows how even well socialized dogs can still be selective about other dogs and dislike another dog even if the other dog is not being rude. Conversely, they will tolerate rude behavior from another dog and still play. You can tell he is well trained and well socialized by his controlled reactions to dogs he dislikes. Such a good boy Ronin!
@dianadelcastillo1896 The Wolf dog is still a puppy. As soon as it matures, it will happen. If you watch this guys videos, you'll know. His dog's been involved in several fights, and his dog started them. Also I guess you can condone him, ignoring the leash law.
@@BBBYpsidog “fights” aren’t always avoidable, nor are they always undesirable. What we see as fighting is sometimes stubbornness, dominance sorting, or even just a mild correction. Once went to a wolf dog preserve, where they specified in one pen that you had to wait for them to come to you if you wanted to pet them. The highest percentage they had (98%) dog came right up to me and plopped his butt on my feet. His buddy woke up and sauntered over to get some scritches too and my wolf simply low growled, which would sound aggressive to anyone because of the pitch, but which, based on his body posture, seemed to be more of a “get your own” to me. My husband and I both stayed as is, and in fact I didn’t even stop petting, but most of the others in the enclosure reacted nervously. We helped a friend who had a month where he was waiting to get into an apartment and couldn’t have his dog with him. He came into our pack of 4 and tried to hump my female. She was not receptive and would flip around and snarl and snap at him, setting off our Spaniel. It took about a week before he found his place and the rest of the month passed with zero incident. My female would even correct the puppy we rescued. Even though she was extremely maternal and tolerant, sometimes those puppy teeth in the armpit were just too much and she would open mouth pin him to the ground around his neck. If his growl changed when playing, both she and my husband’s female would corner him. Normal behavior for dogs is not what we see as normal.
One thing I like about this channel is the owner has no issue with showing when his dogs(mainly Ronin) is in the wrong and even lets other dogs properly correct him at the parks and that's cool because many other owners try to hide that with their dog to try and act like their picture perfect when showing that actually helps to teach the audience.
I have a big problem with it because he keeps doing the same thing & anyone with half a brain after so many fights at a dog park he should never take that dog to a dog park. Also letting it run free off leash in a public setting is so wrong & against the law. He acts like he is a expert but is in reality gonna someday be sued because of liability.
@@BBBYpsiyou’ve clearly never been to a dog park, dogs are allowed off leash which is why owners take them and likely don’t have a dog, based on your responses. Many dogs at the park are high energy and this is the only way for owners to expend that energy in some spaces, like cities. This means that there will be cases where things can easily get out of hand, especially if the humans don’t read dog body language well. There will be all levels of training and personality, yes, some dogs are just little 💩) and you can see that Ronin is well trained and actually well tempered, if you’d ever been around them. Just like with humans, it isn’t who snaps first that starts the “fight”. It is often started by one dog abusing the boundaries of another, basically the little kid holding his finger right next to them or talking smack. Some dogs have a shorter FAFO fuse. Also, corrections aren’t “fights”. Snapping, snarling and growling, as Ronin did here, especially if they resort to posture and growling first, are good indicators that an animal has a pretty even temperament and is just communicating a boundary. Dogs don’t, unlike humans, expect another dog to “read their mind”. We were visiting a friend’s house and our dog got cornered under the table because her dog was a little 💩. Our dog corrected her and she continued so our dog made a more severe correction which resulted in stitches because her dog was fighting for dominance. Our friend understood this, we paid for the stitches and everything was fine.
@@nightwolfxxdI just got mines 4 weeks ago and I thought him how to sit that was the easiest. I recommend that take it slowly. Then I’m teaching him the middle command. ( go between your legs)
You saying about how the video doesn't do her size justice, is exactly how I felt when I visited a zoo and saw African wild dogs. They don't look any bigger or stronger than a regular house dog. Boy was I wrong 😂
Being intact (or not) is not the cause of your dog's stubborness. It's the breed. They are VERY strong-willed. I've owned intact dogs of all breeds: my GSD and Rottie cross were both super easy to handle. My Heelers however are a whole different story. It's the Mal, not the balls. LOL.
in germany we have lots and lots of intact dogs. i have a cocker 4 times a week - in the beginning he was mounting all the time but as i gave him more work to do (lots of sniffing games, not only movement. sniffing uses the brain a lot) and quite a lot of interaction between me and him during the walk he was mounting much less without needing many more corrections. stray dogs are intact and don't mount all the time because they have a lot of other stuff to do. when we give the dogs jobs that drains the brain and muscles and fullfills the social needs (working as a pack besides contact) and also have quit time (laying for naps together with us and alone). not easy but then it is good not to castrate them because the hormones are also important for good bone density which becomes important when they get old. but i have to admit that in germany there are almost no stray dogs so it is much easier to have intact dogs (about 50% of the dogs i guess) than in countries with stray dogs.
It is actually good to wait up to at least a year, I believe and then bone density is not an issue, while spaying/neutering can reduce the risk of complications and cancers.
@@TheBaumcm cancers in females for example do not go down but move. if the female is castrated the mammal cancer is of lower risk - but this one can be seen and treated well. it then moves to higher risk of cancer in inner organs - which will in most cases be seen too late. and bone density is an issue in the whole life because bones rebuilt all the time. but ih human females for example osteoporosis is an issue after menopause. and as menopause in women (biological women) lowers their sexual hormones significantly same happens in dogs after castration. there is much more in modern research. but this is not the place for teaching. only for those who are interested to have an impulse to do their own research.
The most amazing dog I ever met was from Alaska. Half wolf half Collie. They were not going for "the look" but for intelligence and smart and behavior and they succeeded. Most people were not even sure it was part wolf, was totally comfortable around people. Her owner could tell her to "go get" one of the kids or the husband, never failed to come back with that family member. She would also leave the toddler and kindergartner with just the "dog" on the playground confident they were safe. We were in Germany and at the time (on an Army post) there were enough hostile gunshots I would not with my own kids strong dog or not.
Collies crossbreeds (had a collie, retriever, shepherd, super mutt) tend to have the people pleasing, voice command, part of the collie. They are also exceptionally smart. We could tell her, when we were in an open field and the lab got too far and pretended to be unable to hear us, to go round her up and bring her, and she’d go run circles around her and check her back to us, even though she’d never been trained. Also, with wolf dogs,as I understand it, you never know quite what the personality impact will be.
She looks exactly like my dog. My girl is the puppy of a ~90% wolf and a 100% husky. Looks just like her and acts the same. Tail tuck and evasive maneuvers too 😂
I’m really surprised after watching some of your videos that a dog fight hasn’t broken out yet (not in a bad way) it’s just where I live if you take your dog to the dog park for an hour your guaranteed to see at least three or four close calls or full blown fights
Train your dogs Recall techniques, this really helps them from A getting lost, B causing problems and C just generally well behaved mannors what a great video
I really like your videos. Do you think you could regularly upload videos please? I would love to see how Ronin is doing now and the rest of the pack. I really like your information on canine communication. It's a great informative learning to all dog owners. Thanks!
My Belgium Mal/German Shepherd mix was well trained who we were gifted her when she was too gentle for her police training program. But she was not socialized. Your ideas have been invaluable in reading her signals. She is very sensitive so just overly stern verbal correction of NO or AHH AHH AHH makes her soo sad and avoiding eye contact and physical closeness after more than a year. So, we incorporated dog signals into our behavior to lighten the mood and get her to understand play behavior. It has worked wonderfully.she has gone from protectively growling and guarding her immediate family to being able to be approached and petted by strangers while in sit and enjoying repeat attention from people she recognizes from dog trail. She is starting to find dog friends when off leash in open dog park area who like to chase also. In our own yard, while off leash she will take her own sit and then she will watch but not chase all the rabbits, birds, squirrels because we are next to her. Then she sniffs their trails like crazy once we free her self imposed sit. We are s lucky to have her.
Your Malinois looks exactly like my Anatolian/Malinois cross. My pup has true double dew claws of the Anatolian and the curled tail. Same coloring, same legginess…mine has white front boots.
1:42 I would note that she didn’t like the dog, the one that did not like Ronin running up on her when she was about to drink, one of the most vulnerable positions for any animal. That might be why Ronin was annoyed, almost like a “don’t involve me in your shenanigans, and she goes low when he stands up straight to show her issue wasn’t with him.
Just be careful of what you're getting into. They can be very difficult - can be! If you've never had a large dog before go with something more manageable for you to learn and practice training every day. Good luck, they are beautiful!
An interesting thing I noticed is that some dogs treat wolf dogs just like any other dog, while other dogs almost seem to treat them like different animals, either with wariness or even fear, and in a few cases, some dogs show actual predator prey responses when interacting with fully grown wolf dogs. I wonder if it's Instinctual, since wolves do kill and suppress feral dogs in the wild to reduce competition and eliminate potential threats to their pups.
Wow, I'm surprised they would allow a wolfdog at a dog park. I know for a fact it's illegal in some places to take your wolfdog places off of your property, but I'm surprised it's allowed some places. Your dog is so well trained! I know a malinois must he a handful.
Hi 5 months per year I am usually fishing after work, are wolf hybrids generally independent to the point that they are ok with seeing owners only a few hours per day?
Move your focus to Downs and Down+Stay. It’s easier to get distance away from and move around with the dog Down. Sitting it’s easier for some dogs to be tempted to break because two legs are already up. As soon as your dog masters the concept of Stay in Down revisit Sits +Stay and you should have better results. Don’t forget Stand-Stay too!
Mate your commands of that dog have got to have more seriousness inflected into it, especially when he ignores you on the first command. It's got to be a firm NO followed with a stern HERE.
Wolf dogs are so different, they have both wolf behaviour and dog behaviour. Must be so confusing for a little girl like herself. Ronin was such a butthead in this one. I feel like he was on alert because of her wolf DNA.
Sounds like she needs a lesson on impulse control. You can research on that or get her a trainer. I won't give advise coz my dog also has issues with impulse control and I haven't managed to get her to a place where I can trust her. Can't have the blind leading the blind lol 😅
We’d need to know more about her breed because that would determine, to an extent, her triggers, motivations, and “preferred jobs”. For example, our doxie mix has always loved burrowing and we often wondering how he can breathe under layers of covers and is quite stubborn and difficult to train. Our collie, shepherd mix, liked to run perimeter checks at night, never slept in the bed with us, was prey driven and kept everything out of her yard but couldn’t care less out and about, wanted nothing more than to be pet for hours, and would “check in” mostly by staring at me with her head on the bed until I woke up😂. Our lab was a couch potato who was extremely food motivated. Our little guy likes to be active in short bursts, chasing the hose, fetch or swimming, with lots of sleeping but could not be off leash. The lab liked to walk or swim, slowly 😂 and her nose would detour her if off leash, but she was incredibly smart and we had to start spelling her favorite words until she learned to spell and we had to speak in code😂. The collie mix, hated getting wet, would run circles in the yard by herself just to burn off energy, rest for 15 then be ready to go again, and was easily voice command able, no leash required. The reason is doxies are bred to be ratters and go into burrows, independently. They are often stubborn. Labs are swimmers to pull nets, and retrievers to flush and retrieve waterfowl, so they have a soft mouth and have to be obedient. Collies are bred to work with humans and be high energy but also commendable from a distance. Shepherds and collies are both perimeter protectors. So, knowing the breed(s) will help. You also need to learn her body posture. There will be cues for alertness (ears up, chest up), that you can correct before she takes off, with a sharp tug on the leash then immediate release. You can also tap them near their neck, open hand like a mouth, because that is what a dog would do. It might also depend on age. Good luck!
Play dates with known dogs who get along are much safer for your dog than going to a dog park, where the dogs, owners, levels of training, aggressiveness, parasites [fleas, mainly], etc., are unknown and unknowable. Most pros and vets strongly recommend against them now. I know they used to be considered a "fun" thing for your dog to do, they were in fashion, but, we know better now. A bunch of strange dogs of differing temperaments should never be thrown together, and the owner of the wolf dog could not even catch her dog, how sad is that? And that poor wolf dog was simply trying to get some water. I have two Malenois and I would never risk their health by going to a dog park. If you don't have the space for a large dog, get a small one, instead of going to a dog park. Arrange play dates with friendly dogs you know.
Several problems in this video. First your dog Ronin is off leash running free in public place which I am assuming is against the law. Second you are allowing your dog into a dog park where the other dog has had problems with before. (from your video's I have seen many dog fights have happened with your dog) third your putting your hand in front of a wolf dog who you are a stranger to. Which is a good way to get bitten. Old wives tale stick your hand in front of cannin to let them sniff it. It is actually more likely to get bitten that way. They can smell you from a really good distance. 4th is clueless uneducated person bringing any wolf dog to dog park. When it matures it will without a doubt get into fights there.
Months ago you had a vid and everyone defended you, it’s a malinois, it’s young and here we are, time has passed, and still Ronan ignoring you and has poor recall. So how is everyone going to excuse that? I’m sure they will. PS - the mounting the doodle is about dominance. The happy go lucky doodle flips him off and tells him off and is having none of it. It’s not sexual. Ronan is still trying to conquer that dog.
Deliberately misspelling 'trying to' as 'trynna' is a smart aleck remark from an ignorant dog owner. Real pro dog handlers always tell us to stay OUT or dog parks all the time.
They’re fearful that’s why, having a dog this timid could lead to issues
6 วันที่ผ่านมา
A high content wolf should not be at the dog park. High prey drive and hard to train which makes it hard for the owners to control in that environment. I have worked with several and they are skiddish of humans because they are mostly wild wolves and shouldn't trust humans.
From Meriam-Webster's website (one of the leading publishers of English dictionaries): "tryna (also spelled trynna as listed on Yale University's website on English vernacular) pronunciation spelling try·na ˈtrī-nə -used for "trying to" in informal speech and in representations of such speech Hey, sports fans: If you're tryna watch the Royal Wedding and also follow sports like your life depends on it, fuboTV is a streaming bundle gaining major traction from sports fans in recent months. -Leah Stodart Garnish with grapefruit or jalapeño if you're tryna get fancy. -Nicole Malick "They're tryna bamboozle you." -Barack Obama First Known Use 1919, in the meaning defined above The first known use of tryna was in 1919"
Explain how he is putting dogs in danger. I just see someone trying to help people who clearly cannot read dogs’ body language very well for themselves and sometimes people have to see it to know it needs correction BEFORE it escalates. Didn’t see anything here that was an issue.
@@TheBaumcm continually placing dogs together who he knows will have issues just to show off his "knowledge base"? That's sick. A real expert can educate without using the dogs as bait. He's barely above Mike Vick.
Why do you not neuter your dog???? And go to dog parks too??? All it takes are two irresponsible dog owners at a dog park to have two dogs mate on accident…. could you pull him off? Are you prepared to have that scenario happen eventually?
Ive gort a black belgin shepard i wish i jad space like that to run my dog .where can i find info on readind the dogs body language the way tyou explaned in your pauses.
First, if you don’t have the space, you might not have wanted such a high energy breed. That aside, there are a number of trainers who have channels here, who explain in depth what to look for and how to make a correction. Basically, throw what you know about body language regarding humans out of the window. Ears, tail and actual posture (chest up or not, cowering or not), as well as muscle tension (like a human grinding their teeth), can all be indicators. Not all wagging is positive, sometimes it is anxiety (I believe there was a study done that show they wag more to the left or the right and one side is joy/excitement, while the other is anxiety/vigilance).
@TheBaumcm Thank you, and my apologies for not proofreading my last post. I'm in Southern California, so our dog parks are nothing like the one on these vids, and most parks with space don't allow dogs off leashes . Can't even run them on the beach! which is understandable due to people who are outright inconsiderate of others . Thanks again. I will be subscribing to the channel did a great job. ✌️.
She’s stunning, seems very young still. Glad the owner is socializing her at a young age, she’s skittish buy for a high content wolfdog she’s doing great in the dog park.
This is a great educational video. It shows how even well socialized dogs can still be selective about other dogs and dislike another dog even if the other dog is not being rude. Conversely, they will tolerate rude behavior from another dog and still play.
You can tell he is well trained and well socialized by his controlled reactions to dogs he dislikes. Such a good boy Ronin!
Education on several things not to do. This guy is clueless & thinks he is a dog behaviorist
@@BBBYpsi And yet there was no escalation. Go figure... 🙄
@dianadelcastillo1896 The Wolf dog is still a puppy. As soon as it matures, it will happen. If you watch this guys videos, you'll know. His dog's been involved in several fights, and his dog started them. Also I guess you can condone him, ignoring the leash law.
@@BBBYpsidog “fights” aren’t always avoidable, nor are they always undesirable. What we see as fighting is sometimes stubbornness, dominance sorting, or even just a mild correction. Once went to a wolf dog preserve, where they specified in one pen that you had to wait for them to come to you if you wanted to pet them. The highest percentage they had (98%) dog came right up to me and plopped his butt on my feet. His buddy woke up and sauntered over to get some scritches too and my wolf simply low growled, which would sound aggressive to anyone because of the pitch, but which, based on his body posture, seemed to be more of a “get your own” to me. My husband and I both stayed as is, and in fact I didn’t even stop petting, but most of the others in the enclosure reacted nervously. We helped a friend who had a month where he was waiting to get into an apartment and couldn’t have his dog with him. He came into our pack of 4 and tried to hump my female. She was not receptive and would flip around and snarl and snap at him, setting off our Spaniel. It took about a week before he found his place and the rest of the month passed with zero incident. My female would even correct the puppy we rescued. Even though she was extremely maternal and tolerant, sometimes those puppy teeth in the armpit were just too much and she would open mouth pin him to the ground around his neck. If his growl changed when playing, both she and my husband’s female would corner him. Normal behavior for dogs is not what we see as normal.
@@dianadelcastillo1896They have a point. There’s multiple videos of this guy’s dogs starting negative interactions.
One thing I like about this channel is the owner has no issue with showing when his dogs(mainly Ronin) is in the wrong and even lets other dogs properly correct him at the parks and that's cool because many other owners try to hide that with their dog to try and act like their picture perfect when showing that actually helps to teach the audience.
I have a big problem with it because he keeps doing the same thing & anyone with half a brain after so many fights at a dog park he should never take that dog to a dog park. Also letting it run free off leash in a public setting is so wrong & against the law. He acts like he is a expert but is in reality gonna someday be sued because of liability.
@@BBBYpsiyou’ve clearly never been to a dog park, dogs are allowed off leash which is why owners take them and likely don’t have a dog, based on your responses. Many dogs at the park are high energy and this is the only way for owners to expend that energy in some spaces, like cities. This means that there will be cases where things can easily get out of hand, especially if the humans don’t read dog body language well. There will be all levels of training and personality, yes, some dogs are just little 💩) and you can see that Ronin is well trained and actually well tempered, if you’d ever been around them. Just like with humans, it isn’t who snaps first that starts the “fight”. It is often started by one dog abusing the boundaries of another, basically the little kid holding his finger right next to them or talking smack. Some dogs have a shorter FAFO fuse. Also, corrections aren’t “fights”. Snapping, snarling and growling, as Ronin did here, especially if they resort to posture and growling first, are good indicators that an animal has a pretty even temperament and is just communicating a boundary. Dogs don’t, unlike humans, expect another dog to “read their mind”. We were visiting a friend’s house and our dog got cornered under the table because her dog was a little 💩. Our dog corrected her and she continued so our dog made a more severe correction which resulted in stitches because her dog was fighting for dominance. Our friend understood this, we paid for the stitches and everything was fine.
@@TheBaumcmThe dog was not in a dog park while bike riding. The dog was running free in a public setting.
I just got a dog, I gotta learn how to train her like you
@Canela any tips?
She’ll train you instead
@@user-bf5qh3ih4u yoooo
@@nightwolfxxdI just got mines 4 weeks ago and I thought him how to sit that was the easiest. I recommend that take it slowly. Then I’m teaching him the middle command. ( go between your legs)
@@Misskk850 Ok thank you
You saying about how the video doesn't do her size justice, is exactly how I felt when I visited a zoo and saw African wild dogs. They don't look any bigger or stronger than a regular house dog. Boy was I wrong 😂
Being intact (or not) is not the cause of your dog's stubborness. It's the breed. They are VERY strong-willed. I've owned intact dogs of all breeds: my GSD and Rottie cross were both super easy to handle. My Heelers however are a whole different story. It's the Mal, not the balls. LOL.
Stop.
love your vids man, keep up the good work!
Thanks 🙏
That wolf pup was beautiful. And Ronin is the goodest boy. And a good dancer too. 🤣
in germany we have lots and lots of intact dogs. i have a cocker 4 times a week - in the beginning he was mounting all the time but as i gave him more work to do (lots of sniffing games, not only movement. sniffing uses the brain a lot) and quite a lot of interaction between me and him during the walk he was mounting much less without needing many more corrections. stray dogs are intact and don't mount all the time because they have a lot of other stuff to do. when we give the dogs jobs that drains the brain and muscles and fullfills the social needs (working as a pack besides contact) and also have quit time (laying for naps together with us and alone). not easy but then it is good not to castrate them because the hormones are also important for good bone density which becomes important when they get old. but i have to admit that in germany there are almost no stray dogs so it is much easier to have intact dogs (about 50% of the dogs i guess) than in countries with stray dogs.
It is actually good to wait up to at least a year, I believe and then bone density is not an issue, while spaying/neutering can reduce the risk of complications and cancers.
@@TheBaumcm cancers in females for example do not go down but move. if the female is castrated the mammal cancer is of lower risk - but this one can be seen and treated well. it then moves to higher risk of cancer in inner organs - which will in most cases be seen too late. and bone density is an issue in the whole life because bones rebuilt all the time. but ih human females for example osteoporosis is an issue after menopause. and as menopause in women (biological women) lowers their sexual hormones significantly same happens in dogs after castration. there is much more in modern research. but this is not the place for teaching. only for those who are interested to have an impulse to do their own research.
We never really see Ronin’s face from previous videos. What a good looking dog.
I'm sad Ronin didn't wanna be friends with that beautiful wolfdog. Maybe he'll change his mind in the future. 🥹 He's a good boy, afterall.
It’s because the Wolfdog was scared, she was very nervous! Wolf-dogs are skittish breeds
Hi man! I’m so excited to see your new vids! Never give up.
Appreciate it bro! 🙏
The most amazing dog I ever met was from Alaska. Half wolf half Collie. They were not going for "the look" but for intelligence and smart and behavior and they succeeded. Most people were not even sure it was part wolf, was totally comfortable around people. Her owner could tell her to "go get" one of the kids or the husband, never failed to come back with that family member. She would also leave the toddler and kindergartner with just the "dog" on the playground confident they were safe. We were in Germany and at the time (on an Army post) there were enough hostile gunshots I would not with my own kids strong dog or not.
Collies crossbreeds (had a collie, retriever, shepherd, super mutt) tend to have the people pleasing, voice command, part of the collie. They are also exceptionally smart. We could tell her, when we were in an open field and the lab got too far and pretended to be unable to hear us, to go round her up and bring her, and she’d go run circles around her and check her back to us, even though she’d never been trained. Also, with wolf dogs,as I understand it, you never know quite what the personality impact will be.
I love your vids I teach my dogs like you do
She looks exactly like my dog. My girl is the puppy of a ~90% wolf and a 100% husky. Looks just like her and acts the same. Tail tuck and evasive maneuvers too 😂
I’m really surprised after watching some of your videos that a dog fight hasn’t broken out yet (not in a bad way) it’s just where I live if you take your dog to the dog park for an hour your guaranteed to see at least three or four close calls or full blown fights
This is the most educational step-by-step analysis of dog behaviour. Thank you for your great job.
Ronin ain’t no simp😂
LMAOO
Awesome
Roman is a really beautiful, but Wolf Dog is something else, gorgeous!
I actually have nightmares about encountering a Wolf-Malinois mix... Malin-Wolf... Yeah, that's the stuff of nightmares right there.
I always love watching your videos they teach me a lot about K9 behavior. Would you ever get a wolf dog if you had the chance?
Theo von in the end 😂 we love
What a beautiful dog you have, and I really like the way you explain in the captions what's going on. He's a great boy!
She's adorable and was trynna make friend's loll😊
(Edit) she was very gentle and friendly
That was nice interaction!
You posted that on my birthday😂😁
Wow, she was gorgeous! Thanks for sharing
Malinois and Wolf dog puppies would be AWESOME 😂😂❤
Train your dogs Recall techniques, this really helps them from A getting lost, B causing problems and C just generally well behaved mannors what a great video
Love the channel man. Thanks
I really like your videos. Do you think you could regularly upload videos please? I would love to see how Ronin is doing now and the rest of the pack. I really like your information on canine communication. It's a great informative learning to all dog owners. Thanks!
3:30 Ronin and the other dog were slow dancing😆
Awesome videos
I saw a Wolf and lots of Dogs💁🐾
My Belgium Mal/German Shepherd mix was well trained who we were gifted her when she was too gentle for her police training program. But she was not socialized. Your ideas have been invaluable in reading her signals. She is very sensitive so just overly stern verbal correction of NO or AHH AHH AHH makes her soo sad and avoiding eye contact and physical closeness after more than a year. So, we incorporated dog signals into our behavior to lighten the mood and get her to understand play behavior. It has worked wonderfully.she has gone from protectively growling and guarding her immediate family to being able to be approached and petted by strangers while in sit and enjoying repeat attention from people she recognizes from dog trail. She is starting to find dog friends when off leash in open dog park area who like to chase also. In our own yard, while off leash she will take her own sit and then she will watch but not chase all the rabbits, birds, squirrels because we are next to her. Then she sniffs their trails like crazy once we free her self imposed sit. We are s lucky to have her.
Videos, not ideas to read dog signals.
Your Malinois looks exactly like my Anatolian/Malinois cross. My pup has true double dew claws of the Anatolian and the curled tail. Same coloring, same legginess…mine has white front boots.
Very cool!
Great video! I want to see more of the owner
Sorry, he's still in training! Lol
Hiii ur dogs are so cutee
1:42 I would note that she didn’t like the dog, the one that did not like Ronin running up on her when she was about to drink, one of the most vulnerable positions for any animal. That might be why Ronin was annoyed, almost like a “don’t involve me in your shenanigans, and she goes low when he stands up straight to show her issue wasn’t with him.
i want to rescue a wolf dog so bad. she's so beautiful omg
Just be careful of what you're getting into. They can be very difficult - can be! If you've never had a large dog before go with something more manageable for you to learn and practice training every day. Good luck, they are beautiful!
An interesting thing I noticed is that some dogs treat wolf dogs just like any other dog, while other dogs almost seem to treat them like different animals, either with wariness or even fear, and in a few cases, some dogs show actual predator prey responses when interacting with fully grown wolf dogs. I wonder if it's Instinctual, since wolves do kill and suppress feral dogs in the wild to reduce competition and eliminate potential threats to their pups.
Wow, I'm surprised they would allow a wolfdog at a dog park. I know for a fact it's illegal in some places to take your wolfdog places off of your property, but I'm surprised it's allowed some places. Your dog is so well trained! I know a malinois must he a handful.
Hi 5 months per year I am usually fishing after work, are wolf hybrids generally independent to the point that they are ok with seeing owners only a few hours per day?
You have a very intelligent BM there!!guess he knows/ smells any dog that could pose him a problem ?
Great video tho 😊
wish my dog would be like ronin and not be tempted to chase squirrels lol
Ronin is so big 😮
This was very interesting. We just adopted a year and half old husky. Trying to train sit seems next to impossible! 😊❤️🙏🏼🐕
Keep it away from dog parks. Worst place you can take any dog is a dog park
Move your focus to Downs and Down+Stay. It’s easier to get distance away from and move around with the dog Down. Sitting it’s easier for some dogs to be tempted to break because two legs are already up. As soon as your dog masters the concept of Stay in Down revisit Sits +Stay and you should have better results. Don’t forget Stand-Stay too!
@@LeashMechanic Thanks for the advice makes total sense!
Bro' can you tell me which cam are you using on Ronin and in your hand plssss...
I have a german shep who’s an ex police dog, he once met a wolf dog and a fight almost started😭
cool post
I don't know where your located at but I have a beautiful female Malinois that I'd love to breed with Ronin. Is he fixed or intact ?
Mate your commands of that dog have got to have more seriousness inflected into it, especially when he ignores you on the first command. It's got to be a firm NO followed with a stern HERE.
1:14 is that balto? /j lol
👍
Wolf dogs are so different, they have both wolf behaviour and dog behaviour. Must be so confusing for a little girl like herself. Ronin was such a butthead in this one. I feel like he was on alert because of her wolf DNA.
Can someone help me i have a intact dog but whenever she sees someone walking or just anyone overall shell just run at them how do i train her to not
Sounds like she needs a lesson on impulse control. You can research on that or get her a trainer. I won't give advise coz my dog also has issues with impulse control and I haven't managed to get her to a place where I can trust her. Can't have the blind leading the blind lol 😅
@@dianadelcastillo1896 idk bro my dogs kinda like slow cuz shes inbred.
We’d need to know more about her breed because that would determine, to an extent, her triggers, motivations, and “preferred jobs”. For example, our doxie mix has always loved burrowing and we often wondering how he can breathe under layers of covers and is quite stubborn and difficult to train. Our collie, shepherd mix, liked to run perimeter checks at night, never slept in the bed with us, was prey driven and kept everything out of her yard but couldn’t care less out and about, wanted nothing more than to be pet for hours, and would “check in” mostly by staring at me with her head on the bed until I woke up😂. Our lab was a couch potato who was extremely food motivated. Our little guy likes to be active in short bursts, chasing the hose, fetch or swimming, with lots of sleeping but could not be off leash. The lab liked to walk or swim, slowly 😂 and her nose would detour her if off leash, but she was incredibly smart and we had to start spelling her favorite words until she learned to spell and we had to speak in code😂. The collie mix, hated getting wet, would run circles in the yard by herself just to burn off energy, rest for 15 then be ready to go again, and was easily voice command able, no leash required.
The reason is doxies are bred to be ratters and go into burrows, independently. They are often stubborn. Labs are swimmers to pull nets, and retrievers to flush and retrieve waterfowl, so they have a soft mouth and have to be obedient. Collies are bred to work with humans and be high energy but also commendable from a distance. Shepherds and collies are both perimeter protectors. So, knowing the breed(s) will help.
You also need to learn her body posture. There will be cues for alertness (ears up, chest up), that you can correct before she takes off, with a sharp tug on the leash then immediate release. You can also tap them near their neck, open hand like a mouth, because that is what a dog would do. It might also depend on age. Good luck!
Play dates with known dogs who get along are much safer for your dog than going to a dog park, where the dogs, owners, levels of training, aggressiveness, parasites [fleas, mainly], etc., are unknown and unknowable. Most pros and vets strongly recommend against them now. I know they used to be considered a "fun" thing for your dog to do, they were in fashion, but, we know better now. A bunch of strange dogs of differing temperaments should never be thrown together, and the owner of the wolf dog could not even catch her dog, how sad is that? And that poor wolf dog was simply trying to get some water. I have two Malenois and I would never risk their health by going to a dog park. If you don't have the space for a large dog, get a small one, instead of going to a dog park. Arrange play dates with friendly dogs you know.
Its such huge off leash dog park where tou ride bike?
There’s a 110 acre off leash dog park near where I’m at!
Several problems in this video. First your dog Ronin is off leash running free in public place which I am assuming is against the law. Second you are allowing your dog into a dog park where the other dog has had problems with before. (from your video's I have seen many dog fights have happened with your dog) third your putting your hand in front of a wolf dog who you are a stranger to. Which is a good way to get bitten. Old wives tale stick your hand in front of cannin to let them sniff it. It is actually more likely to get bitten that way. They can smell you from a really good distance. 4th is clueless uneducated person bringing any wolf dog to dog park. When it matures it will without a doubt get into fights there.
The only problem here is you thinking your opinion is wanted or needed...not to mention you clearly have zero education when it comes to wolfdogs
Poor thing wants to hunt and do adult things, and then there are the dogs.
Months ago you had a vid and everyone defended you, it’s a malinois, it’s young and here we are, time has passed, and still Ronan ignoring you and has poor recall. So how is everyone going to excuse that? I’m sure they will.
PS - the mounting the doodle is about dominance. The happy go lucky doodle flips him off and tells him off and is having none of it. It’s not sexual. Ronan is still trying to conquer that dog.
Deliberately misspelling 'trying to' as 'trynna' is a smart aleck remark from an ignorant dog owner. Real pro dog handlers always tell us to stay OUT or dog parks all the time.
Wolf dogs look beautiful but they should not be pets, and breeding them not encouraged.
They’re fearful that’s why, having a dog this timid could lead to issues
A high content wolf should not be at the dog park. High prey drive and hard to train which makes it hard for the owners to control in that environment. I have worked with several and they are skiddish of humans because they are mostly wild wolves and shouldn't trust humans.
I checked 4 different dictionaries and didn't see "trynna" in any of them...perhaps you could explain the meaning and also explain the illiteracy????
trynna is short for trying to (do something) :)
@sachielzack6309 No, it is not a word,it is rubbish vocabulary.
@@jerrypiaskowski5746 it's called slang
Is that all you gathered from the entire vid? Seek therapy. 🤣
From Meriam-Webster's website (one of the leading publishers of English dictionaries):
"tryna (also spelled trynna as listed on Yale University's website on English vernacular)
pronunciation spelling
try·na ˈtrī-nə
-used for "trying to" in informal speech and in representations of such speech
Hey, sports fans: If you're tryna watch the Royal Wedding and also follow sports like your life depends on it, fuboTV is a streaming bundle gaining major traction from sports fans in recent months.
-Leah Stodart
Garnish with grapefruit or jalapeño if you're tryna get fancy.
-Nicole Malick
"They're tryna bamboozle you."
-Barack Obama
First Known Use
1919, in the meaning defined above
The first known use of tryna was in 1919"
I love how you continously put dogs in danger, just for youtube content. 🙄
all those dogs are more well behaved than most around where i live 🙄🙄🙄
@@MissyMuthaTruckiN I'm not saying there's a shortage of idiots, I'm just saying he's one of them.
Explain how he is putting dogs in danger. I just see someone trying to help people who clearly cannot read dogs’ body language very well for themselves and sometimes people have to see it to know it needs correction BEFORE it escalates. Didn’t see anything here that was an issue.
@@TheBaumcm continually placing dogs together who he knows will have issues just to show off his "knowledge base"? That's sick. A real expert can educate without using the dogs as bait. He's barely above Mike Vick.
Why do you not neuter your dog???? And go to dog parks too??? All it takes are two irresponsible dog owners at a dog park to have two dogs mate on accident…. could you pull him off? Are you prepared to have that scenario happen eventually?
Ive gort a black belgin shepard i wish i jad space like that to run my dog .where can i find info on readind the dogs body language the way tyou explaned in your pauses.
First, if you don’t have the space, you might not have wanted such a high energy breed. That aside, there are a number of trainers who have channels here, who explain in depth what to look for and how to make a correction. Basically, throw what you know about body language regarding humans out of the window. Ears, tail and actual posture (chest up or not, cowering or not), as well as muscle tension (like a human grinding their teeth), can all be indicators. Not all wagging is positive, sometimes it is anxiety (I believe there was a study done that show they wag more to the left or the right and one side is joy/excitement, while the other is anxiety/vigilance).
@TheBaumcm Thank you, and my apologies for not proofreading my last post. I'm in Southern California, so our dog parks are nothing like the one on these vids, and most parks with space don't allow dogs off leashes . Can't even run them on the beach! which is understandable due to people who are outright inconsiderate of others . Thanks again. I will be subscribing to the channel did a great job. ✌️.
Squirrels are our HARDEST distraction to break from (ACD)