TBB
Well-Known Member
Does anyone know what happened later in the show with Holly?
It was over for the dog.
When a dog does something wrong, do you tell it off/scold it there and then so it knows that its behaviour wasnt acceptable with what it had just done. Or do you wait 5 minutes and then tell it off?
A dog would not remember why it was being told off a period after the incident. By then it has forgotten.
CM was not acting aggressivly towards this dog, he was merely asserting his authority. CM/humans are the 'provider' of food.
I actually think Holly would have reacted the same way if a family member had dared to move her food . . . and I don't know about you, but we sometimes have non-family members in the house - strangers to the dogs - some of them not at all dog-savvy.
I'm afraid I'm sticking with my original point which is that Holly's reaction was disproportionate and that she, sadly, isn't terribly suitable as a family pet. Not her fault. Possibly not even her owners' fault. Certainly not CM's fault either.
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wonder what this dog would be like if a toddler walked past with something tasty in its hand?
I actually think Holly would have reacted the same way if a family member had dared to move her food . . . and I don't know about you, but we sometimes have non-family members in the house - strangers to the dogs - some of them not at all dog-savvy.
I'm afraid I'm sticking with my original point which is that Holly's reaction was disproportionate and that she, sadly, isn't terribly suitable as a family pet. Not her fault. Possibly not even her owners' fault. Certainly not CM's fault either.
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I admit to my dog stealing a burger from my friends hand - not aggressively, it was just at the right height!![]()
Holly snapped CM backed of and then she attacked i see a dangerous dog that i would not hesitate in having PTS, for everyone comparing the dogs feelings to that of a human you are missing a fundemental point Holly is a DOG so she does not think and feel the same as you-too many dogs are not PTS after dangerous actions on their part, people need to realise the dog does not know it is not coming home.
My comparison to human situations is merely to try to explain some of the possible reasoning nehind the dog's behaviour. Yes, we are not dogs and they are not humans, but we are all animals and share many of the same instinctive behaviours.
It is a survival technique to remain wary of someone who has just acted aggressively towards you - CM has not backed off, he is still right in the vicinity, waving his arms around (which the dog will be wary of, considering CM has been waving his arms all in her face, hitting her in the face etc. minutes before) and then reaches out to her yet again. He may have snatched his hand back but he did not back off from a cornered dog (camera crew one side, owner the other, dog could not retreat any further)
Also, what you see is a dog bite. What you don't see is a prolonged attack, a dog lashing out at anyone or anything - the bite is very specific, it was a bite and hold to the hand that has just been poking and hitting at her. A controlled bite and hold to a hand that had been given absolutely bucketloads of warning signals. I'm not justifying a bite, but this dog was forced into this situation yet still showed a lot of restraint even then. Cats certainly get away with a lot more biting and scratching for minor reasons like not wanting a belly tickle, we cannot expect dogs to be robots that would never bite no matter how hard we pushed them.
I certainly agree with you that dogs do not understand the concept of euthanasia and that it may be kinder in many situations. I certainly would rather take my dog for that one-way trip than hand them over to CM, any day, but these are not the only options. The dog's behaviour is very specific - resource guarding, so not without a trigger. The dog was very restrained up to a certain point, another plus for it - that says to me that the dog could be managed quite efficiently, especially as it gave very clear signals of its discomfort with its body language, and displayed many signs of wanting to avoid confrontation if it had another choice. We cannot judge the sitaution from a short clip but from what I saw here and in another video of Holly, I think a dog like this could easily be managed in the short term (feeding in a crate or behind a babygate, never leaving chews down, either keeping the baby separate or rehoming to a child-free house, etc., and then rehabiliated with much less physical methods than CM favours, in my opinion.
it will teach the dog that its gentler warning signs get ignored
Which gentler warning signs would they be, the growling, snarling or snapping?
Which gentler warning signs would they be, the growling, snarling or snapping?
Which gentler warning signs would they be, the growling, snarling or snapping?
Just one more thought. As a rider, I have had it drummed into me that when things go wrong, I blame myself before the horse. I look at myself, to see what I could have done differently, or should have done better, first and foremost. So should the same principle not apply to dog handling? When things go wrong, should we not be asking ourselves what we did wrong - did we misread the signs, were we unclear in what we wanted, did we give the wrong message out?
yes, but if it is dangerous it still has the same outcome.