Dogs that bite don't automatically make good working dogs, they might just be dogs that bite (sorry but it bugs me when people automatically refer anyone with a dog who bites to the police, etc) but you could ask your local hunt for contact with a terrier man or see if any local farmers need a ratter etc. However if she doesn't make a working dog, what might happen to her then, where would she end up?
If there are children in the mix you will have to be very careful, I would muzzle her in the meantime and get a good trainer or behaviourist out to see what the triggers for her biting might be.
Don't leave her unattended. Simples.
She was unattended when she bit your horse, and off the lead when she bit when out for a walk. Id pop a little muzzle on her when out and about, and keep het away from the kids.[/Q
I may not have explained myself very well.......but when she bit my horse I had turned my back on her and was about to walk away, when she bit the lady in the field she was off the lead, but only a few yards from me, it was very fast and I hadn't even realised she had bitten until the lady called out !
Her biting incidences sound unpredictable. If so that is a problem.Do you reprimand her after these incidences? I don't necessarily mean a whack on the backside - I wouldn't blame you
or a stern telling off and isolating her? If she were mine, she wouldn't be allowed to interact with children, strangers or any visitor unless she was on the lead. Does she give any indication that she's getting arsey prior to biting?
Is she speyed?
Thing is she has only done it 3 times in nearly two years, so I doubt its boredom .Light Basket muzzle?
If she cant be trusted not to use her teeth inappropriately then stop her using them..
Most dogs do adjust to wearing a muzzle quite easily.
(restricted breed dogs over here are ment to wear a muzzle in public places so I have come across plenty -Do i agree with muzzling due to breed?.no,but thats a different story)
Introduce the muzzle by placing something lovely and tasty at the tip of it so she gets a reward for having it on.This tends to cut down a lot of the angst and worry about putting one on.
Initially most dogs do find the sensation of something on their nose odd and it can annoy them but its generally no more than using a halti or other headcollar after the initally dramatics most adjust just fine.
I would not advise rehoming her.She bites. Stoping her biting and hurting people is the priority.Unless you think she is seriously understimulated and biting out of boredom Im not sure how a working home would help?
This will perhaps sound a tad harsh, but the reason you are getting away with this is because she is a little dog. If she was a bigger dog, I think you'd have ended up in very serious trouble by now, and would possibly have had to have her pts.
I think you need to take this seriously, muzzle her in public and not have her off the lead in public - certainly not if there is anyone else around at all. If she is biting unpredictably and without provocation, I would not allow her contact with your grandchildren and would keep her crated or in a different room to them when they are there.
YOU HAVE GOT TO BE BLOODY JOKING IF YOU THINK I LET HER DO WHAT EVER SHE WANTSFeeling sorry for a rescue dog = letting it do whatever it wants = disaster. Having boundaries will not cause her little world to crumble around her.
As Spudlet says, if she was a Rott or a GSD or a Staff I am sure she would have been in the big kennel in the sky a long time ago.
You say 'she knows she is not allowed to growl' - has she been admonished in the past for it? - there are many interesting articles on why this is a bad idea. A growl is a warning. The warning has been removed. That may be why it seems like she is biting 'without warning' or in an 'unpredictable' way.
Dogs do not say 'hey, I'm a bit scared and unsure of myself/I don't like you, please get out of my space' - they growl. I am not a fluffy bunny and I will not let a dog throw their weight around and think 'if I growl I get to be left alone to do what I want to do' but if a dog feels threatened for whatever reason, rather a growl as a warning than a bite with none.
Er, OK, no need to shout
You said yourself 'I can't help feel a little sorry for her' which I took to mean, meant you give her a bit more leeway than you would with a dog you would not feel sorry for.
It's a common issue (as evidenced by an hilarious segment in Cesar Milan's stage show where he plays a paramedic trying to make someone better by feeling sorry for them, meanwhile they are breathing their last)
Here's a good article first posted by Goya, I think
http://www.pawprintsthemagazine.com/?p=14492
No she wasn't house trained when I rescued her, she had been born and brought up in a large stable yard. So she is kept in a very large fenced stable yard with her own bed and stable with heating, obviously this is at home, a few yards from the house.G - JRTs / Parsons are fiesty and generally dominant little dogs
Even where they are perfectly well behaved towards their owner (and this is not always so) they will often try to be second top dog to anyone else they encounter
My JRT was never allowed to bit or nip as a puppy and I have been very strict with him in terms of his behaviour.
I can bring him to shows and children can feed him icecream and he is as good as gold
However any where or near his own territory with any other people / animals and he will attempt to be dominant and has tried to nip if an opportunity arises
I do use a light muzzle just to make sure there are no unwarrented incidents.
He is a very happy little dog but by his nature both fiesty and bolshie
I ensure he does not have acccess outside his own area unless he is on a lead
Does your Parsons live in with you / have his own chair / sleep on the bed?
No she wasn't house trained when I rescued her, she had been born and brought up in a large stable yard. So she is kept in a very large fenced stable yard with her own bed and stable with heating, obviously this is at home, a few yards from the house.
Well thats good in terms of her position within the household. Many behaviourists suggest giving breeds such as Parsons / JRT a job to do so that they use up their excess energy. This can be exercise or being trained to help in some way (obstacle racing etc or rounding up poultry -as I have seen one trained to do)
The reasoning is that they become more balanced and less likely to have dominance issues...You obviously know your own setup bettter than anyone - Any ideas on this perhaps?
Well ......never really thought about a job for her (in her eyes) but in my eyes she guards the yard and enjoys barking at passers byand keeps any rodent problem at bay, I don't have any other livestock accept horses, I have tried to play ball with her but she is not a bit interested, even with a tit bit on the end of it. There is a lady along the lane who does dog agility I could ask her actually, thanks for that
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