Dang, I have a great dog. A Black Mouth Curr that was abandoned at the apartment complex. He was here for about a month and the tenants here tried to get him as well as taking care of him but he wouldn't go home with anyone. I was sick and quarantined for 2 weeks. The first day I went outside he came right to me me and straight up to my apartment. Never used pee pads. About 5 months later a dog catcher checked for a chip cause we were at a high school. He took Cooper from me, I was devastated!! Low n behold, he was back within 6 hours ❤🙏
I have a 70kg Rottweiler and he knows very well who is in charge! The moment I looked into his puppy eyes, I had no chance whatsoever! He only qualifies for 2 of the mentioned behaviors though...
Uggghh I must’ve created a monster… My rescue dog was very anxious and scared and skinny when we first got him… and now after months of love and comfort, & showing him that he doesn’t have to scour the house, ground, and outside, for food cuz we will always feed him, etc… he probably does about eight out of these 10 things….yikes! What i thought was him just learning to trust & love us, & to finally feel safe & at home, I think may be turning into him thinking he’s the boss now…especially of me! We went from one extreme all the way to the other in about eight months. I know he still has anxiety, especially of other dogs and of being outside, but now I have to fix this. And I have no idea where to start!
I had a jack russell who SA'd a potential babysitter for an interview for babysitting on Christmas eve for 45 minutes. Humping this poor woman. 🙄 I thought I would die from embarrassment. Turns out Christmas morning he was a complete angel. Her words in a note I still have to this day 20 years later.
I’ve seen that in my dogs and like in your video on how to correct them I do that all the time. I let them know that I am the one that’s in charge and will not put up with their bad behaviors. I’m the boss not them. Especially when you have a German Shepherd, who is three times stronger than you you have to lay down the law. Without corrections is how bad behavior escalates. Just like in human beings it’s exactly the same and the rules should apply to them as well. And they don’t.
Nothing to do with dominance whatsoever. It's mostly fear induced aggression. Sometimes it's a different cause, but never dominance. A really confident dog does not have to show aggression. They solve problems without aggression because they don't need it
@@cecileraveling4836 All around the world are dogs behaving absolutely nasty, and erraticly (usually small dogs) which their owners try to calm down with words as: "it is O.K., puppy, don't worry. And surprisingly this treatment of "puppy fear induced aggression" does not work. Because: 1. Almost always they are not puppies but adults or dog teenagers. But their "parents" considered them "babies" and their excessive barking, growling and nipping means for them desperate crying. World must be very scary place for helpless puppy. 2. "It is O.K. puppy" when dog behavior is not O.K. it is the worst for training. It is verbal reward and appreciation of bad behavior and dog would do this again and again. Beautiful circle of neverending rewarding spoiled dogs and owners' imbecility. All what these dog did not got is installed leadership of their owner, basic training of obedience, and just a bit socialisation. Well-trained cane corse is respectful to owner's guest, but can react when sees something strange. But in such moment one word or gesture of its lord is enough to stop. Do you understand? You are responsible for dog's behavior. As a lord commander you are the one who decide when it is time for your dog to show teeth. A dog is confident and calm under kind, firm leadership of owner, because its knows it is not in charge.
@@cecileraveling4836 actually, your opinion does not make sense. Dominance is just a dog's feature. Some dogs are less dominant, other ones are more dominant. Simple tests on puppies behavior can detect this. Puppies that behave bolder and confident will be more dominant as adult, which is not bad. It just means that their training must be very consistent and focus on obedience. Dominant dog if its will is done is calm and confident. But, dog should not be a leader. This is a catastrofe. The ultimate goal of training is to have dog which is calm and confident under human leadership. th-cam.com/video/YD2EOFEflWY/w-d-xo.html
Doggy boss is not a ilness of dog rather than its owner. Typically it is mom/daddy of "furry baby". Thats the problem. Owners are idiots who just wanted to have something cute in house. To all these stupid pieces of advice - You do not neat treats. You are supposed to be the lord commander. Kind but firm commander. You should decide where, when, how, what will be going on in the life of your furry mate. Let doggy always know it. A dog appreciate leader but despise pathetic mate. Do not be distracted by puppy eyes. As doggy knows that pathetic tricks don't work it will stop. As your doggy knows you are of softer brain to be break by puppy eyes, it will be always taking benefits.
There are gentle owners too who set boundaries and have well trained dogs. It doesn’t always need to be authoritative when you set boundaries. Dogs’ boundaries should also be respected too, when they don’t want to be pet, don’t want people playing with them while they are eating their food, don’t want to interact with other dogs or people. When you build trust in your dog, that’s where the loyalty lies. That being said, dogs can have a number of reasons they don’t always “behave”. They could have anxiety issues, or be senior dogs with their senses fading.
@@tiffanypersaud3518 authoritative? What the meaning of word autoritative? When owner is the person who should decide anything about dog? He/She is supossed to be a leader (as human over domesticated animal) and must be competent in this role. Leadership is love. But leadership of human over animal cannot be a democracy. I am not telling about tough, overly strict leadership. It very easy. Just to show your puppy from young age that you are the guy that always decides things. When you gained puppy's respekt and you can work on the training. Being the one who decides is the cornerstone, which a lot of people do not understand. For them are the puppy's eyes that decide. Feeding at table when puppy asks, ignoring unacceptable behavior, half an hour "discussion" with dog about obedience. This is pathetic. And yes, call your doggie a puppy, baby, child whole life is not only creepy. It is sick. Your fury mate is growing up and maturing. Respekt its personal development.
There are many things wrong with your comment, but I don’t have time right now to spell them out. Keep your eyes open because I will comment further later.
@@luciamacakova7516 authoritative is a form of leadership and should be used alternatively with other forms of leadership and not always as the go-to. You’d be surprised what building a bond and establishing trust with your dog can do. Even when my dogs are anxious, outdoors or indoors, they listen to me when I tell them WAIT. I’m not perfect but I know the importance of building a bond. That bond is far better than having a robotic relationship with your pet. They will trust you and want to please you without you having to even say anything much of the time. Many dogs often respond to owners with kinder and firmer voices who tend to be gentler rather than those only relying on volume or strictness. Often, with pairs, it’s woman who tend to be faster at training dogs because dogs tend to respond to milder voices more quickly.
Dang, I have a great dog. A Black Mouth Curr that was abandoned at the apartment complex. He was here for about a month and the tenants here tried to get him as well as taking care of him but he wouldn't go home with anyone. I was sick and quarantined for 2 weeks. The first day I went outside he came right to me me and straight up to my apartment. Never used pee pads. About 5 months later a dog catcher checked for a chip cause we were at a high school. He took Cooper from me, I was devastated!! Low n behold, he was back within 6 hours ❤🙏
My dog does everyone of these. But she’s a princess and she knows it.💅🏻
I knew it! It is a YES on all 10 for my little dachshund!
Nothing to be bragging about.
Yep, this is my Basset Hound. She's a diva.
11. Your dog gives you a formal notice of eviction.
LOL!
😂😂👍👏👏
😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂
12. Your dog is a Dachshund.
Yes my Fred is a Dachshund. Its like having a buldog crossed with a Lion in a tiny body. But, i love the guy.
My mini dachshund is totally the boss. Haha
I have a 70kg Rottweiler and he knows very well who is in charge! The moment I looked into his puppy eyes, I had no chance whatsoever! He only qualifies for 2 of the mentioned behaviors though...
11. Your dog starts paying rent
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 imagine
Must pay attention to my dog
My pits never have shown food aggression 😊 and they love snuggling
That's great to hear! Sounds like you’ve got some really loving pups. 😊🐾
Interesting video, well done!
Uggghh I must’ve created a monster… My rescue dog was very anxious and scared and skinny when we first got him… and now after months of love and comfort, & showing him that he doesn’t have to scour the house, ground, and outside, for food cuz we will always feed him, etc… he probably does about eight out of these 10 things….yikes! What i thought was him just learning to trust & love us, & to finally feel safe & at home, I think may be turning into him thinking he’s the boss now…especially of me! We went from one extreme all the way to the other in about eight months. I know he still has anxiety, especially of other dogs and of being outside, but now I have to fix this. And I have no idea where to start!
😌thanks dude for the infoo
I had a jack russell who SA'd a potential babysitter for an interview for babysitting on Christmas eve for 45 minutes. Humping this poor woman. 🙄 I thought I would die from embarrassment. Turns out Christmas morning he was a complete angel. Her words in a note I still have to this day 20 years later.
My puppy goes crazy licking my face when I 1st wake up in the morning, does that count as excessive licking, or is she just happy to see me?
Maybe she's just happy to see you! If the licking is too much for you, you can start teaching her other ways to show her excitement.
Herding is another one
A well fitted harness is a good way to build a sled dog with dominant ego.
My dog pulls me on the skateboard.
No it's not. Dominance has absolutely nothing to with this. Only excitement or overstimulation
It is the other way around with a Pom.
I’ve seen that in my dogs and like in your video on how to correct them I do that all the time. I let them know that I am the one that’s in charge and will not put up with their bad behaviors. I’m the boss not them. Especially when you have a German Shepherd, who is three times stronger than you you have to lay down the law. Without corrections is how bad behavior escalates. Just like in human beings it’s exactly the same and the rules should apply to them as well. And they don’t.
Agressive dog does not guard you. It show dominance to anyone including you.
Nothing to do with dominance whatsoever. It's mostly fear induced aggression. Sometimes it's a different cause, but never dominance. A really confident dog does not have to show aggression. They solve problems without aggression because they don't need it
@@cecileraveling4836 All around the world are dogs behaving absolutely nasty, and erraticly (usually small dogs) which their owners try to calm down with words as: "it is O.K., puppy, don't worry. And surprisingly this treatment of "puppy fear induced aggression" does not work. Because:
1. Almost always they are not puppies but adults or dog teenagers. But their "parents" considered them "babies" and their excessive barking, growling and nipping means for them desperate crying. World must be very scary place for helpless puppy.
2. "It is O.K. puppy" when dog behavior is not O.K. it is the worst for training. It is verbal reward and appreciation of bad behavior and dog would do this again and again.
Beautiful circle of neverending rewarding spoiled dogs and owners' imbecility. All what these dog did not got is installed leadership of their owner, basic training of obedience, and just a bit socialisation. Well-trained cane corse is respectful to owner's guest, but can react when sees something strange. But in such moment one word or gesture of its lord is enough to stop. Do you understand? You are responsible for dog's behavior. As a lord commander you are the one who decide when it is time for your dog to show teeth. A dog is confident and calm under kind, firm leadership of owner, because its knows it is not in charge.
@@cecileraveling4836 actually, your opinion does not make sense. Dominance is just a dog's feature. Some dogs are less dominant, other ones are more dominant. Simple tests on puppies behavior can detect this. Puppies that behave bolder and confident will be more dominant as adult, which is not bad. It just means that their training must be very consistent and focus on obedience. Dominant dog if its will is done is calm and confident. But, dog should not be a leader. This is a catastrofe. The ultimate goal of training is to have dog which is calm and confident under human leadership.
th-cam.com/video/YD2EOFEflWY/w-d-xo.html
so what’s wrong with a little bossy personality?
if dog and people are happy who cares
Is this a Scottish person doing an American accent?
Doggy boss is not a ilness of dog rather than its owner. Typically it is mom/daddy of "furry baby". Thats the problem. Owners are idiots who just wanted to have something cute in house. To all these stupid pieces of advice - You do not neat treats. You are supposed to be the lord commander. Kind but firm commander. You should decide where, when, how, what will be going on in the life of your furry mate. Let doggy always know it. A dog appreciate leader but despise pathetic mate. Do not be distracted by puppy eyes. As doggy knows that pathetic tricks don't work it will stop. As your doggy knows you are of softer brain to be break by puppy eyes, it will be always taking benefits.
There are gentle owners too who set boundaries and have well trained dogs. It doesn’t always need to be authoritative when you set boundaries.
Dogs’ boundaries should also be respected too, when they don’t want to be pet, don’t want people playing with them while they are eating their food, don’t want to interact with other dogs or people.
When you build trust in your dog, that’s where the loyalty lies.
That being said, dogs can have a number of reasons they don’t always “behave”. They could have anxiety issues, or be senior dogs with their senses fading.
@@tiffanypersaud3518 authoritative? What the meaning of word autoritative? When owner is the person who should decide anything about dog? He/She is supossed to be a leader (as human over domesticated animal) and must be competent in this role. Leadership is love. But leadership of human over animal cannot be a democracy. I am not telling about tough, overly strict leadership. It very easy. Just to show your puppy from young age that you are the guy that always decides things. When you gained puppy's respekt and you can work on the training. Being the one who decides is the cornerstone, which a lot of people do not understand. For them are the puppy's eyes that decide. Feeding at table when puppy asks, ignoring unacceptable behavior, half an hour "discussion" with dog about obedience. This is pathetic. And yes, call your doggie a puppy, baby, child whole life is not only creepy. It is sick. Your fury mate is growing up and maturing. Respekt its personal development.
There are many things wrong with your comment, but I don’t have time right now to spell them out. Keep your eyes open because I will comment further later.
@@luciamacakova7516 authoritative is a form of leadership and should be used alternatively with other forms of leadership and not always as the go-to.
You’d be surprised what building a bond and establishing trust with your dog can do. Even when my dogs are anxious, outdoors or indoors, they listen to me when I tell them WAIT. I’m not perfect but I know the importance of building a bond. That bond is far better than having a robotic relationship with your pet. They will trust you and want to please you without you having to even say anything much of the time.
Many dogs often respond to owners with kinder and firmer voices who tend to be gentler rather than those only relying on volume or strictness. Often, with pairs, it’s woman who tend to be faster at training dogs because dogs tend to respond to milder voices more quickly.
Signs your "dos" is the boss? More and more videos lack professionalism.
Ok Catherine
Thanks for catching that typo!
You could have said this without insinuating in professionalism.
Where are your videos?