blackcob
🖖
After a brilliant few weeks we had a bit of a setback yesterday. Out in the park, on a long line, she spotted an off-lead spaniel that was quite intense (chasing a ball, barking, spinning round, generally being a crazy spangle
). I called her to me no problem, sit, treat, begin to walk off in the other direction.
Crazy spangle spots us and begins to approach in a very excitable way - running forward, barking, spinning, staring at her, etc - Dax begins to fixate on it and won't snap out of it to follow me. I call her once more and walk off with the intention of giving her a tug when I reach the end of the line and then rewarding her when she comes back to me.
Spaniel woman spots us, marches over and is all "oh, I saw you struggling back there
confused
, I've trained dogs for years, would you like to know where you're going wrong?". She takes my politely pained look as signal to start outpouring. I'm sure she was trying to be helpful, and most of the stuff she was saying were things we were doing anyway, but she was so incredibly condescending about it and all "my dog was doing X at four months, but that's because I'm an excellent trainer", that sort of thing. Fed up, I pointed out that at four months my dog was locked in a mid-terrace back garden and never socialised because her previous owner was a numpty, thanked her for her time and finally managed to reel in my (by now) extremely overstimulated dog. 
Guh. I'm just so disappointed because I can call her off most things now, quiet dogs are no problem but intensity and excitement just make her go deaf. She is particularly bad with collies - it's that collie gaze and lowered stance, I think, it just sends her into that fixated zone. That woman made me feel about an inch tall, despite all of the many advances we've made so far, and saying 'well, a husky isn't the same as a spaniel' just sounds a bit lame to someone who's never owned an unbiddable dog like a husky (she had to ask me what breed she was, so is clearly not aware that huskies operate on a different level to normal dogs
).
She's not food-orientated, chicken and sausages elicit a better response than most treats but only for a couple of repetitions and then she loses interest. Neither is she fussed about balls and toys, even her favourite big cuddly woodlouse (and boy did we get some funny looks that day, running around waving a cuddly woodlouse...). In the house and outside with no intense dogs she's 100%, I can get focus and eye contact instantly, sit, down, stay, come, no problem, it just falls apart when there's too many distractions.
Any ideas? I know this will all improve with time and we've done really well so far, but she's an incredibly intelligent dog and I just can't help but feel I'm missing something somewhere that will help resolve this last problem.
Crazy spangle spots us and begins to approach in a very excitable way - running forward, barking, spinning, staring at her, etc - Dax begins to fixate on it and won't snap out of it to follow me. I call her once more and walk off with the intention of giving her a tug when I reach the end of the line and then rewarding her when she comes back to me.
Spaniel woman spots us, marches over and is all "oh, I saw you struggling back there
Guh. I'm just so disappointed because I can call her off most things now, quiet dogs are no problem but intensity and excitement just make her go deaf. She is particularly bad with collies - it's that collie gaze and lowered stance, I think, it just sends her into that fixated zone. That woman made me feel about an inch tall, despite all of the many advances we've made so far, and saying 'well, a husky isn't the same as a spaniel' just sounds a bit lame to someone who's never owned an unbiddable dog like a husky (she had to ask me what breed she was, so is clearly not aware that huskies operate on a different level to normal dogs
She's not food-orientated, chicken and sausages elicit a better response than most treats but only for a couple of repetitions and then she loses interest. Neither is she fussed about balls and toys, even her favourite big cuddly woodlouse (and boy did we get some funny looks that day, running around waving a cuddly woodlouse...). In the house and outside with no intense dogs she's 100%, I can get focus and eye contact instantly, sit, down, stay, come, no problem, it just falls apart when there's too many distractions.
Any ideas? I know this will all improve with time and we've done really well so far, but she's an incredibly intelligent dog and I just can't help but feel I'm missing something somewhere that will help resolve this last problem.