Thread: Dog problem
View Single Post
  #13   Report Post  
Old 02-09-2005, 10:37 AM
Basil Chupin
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Trish Brown wrote:
Basil Chupin wrote:

What you need to do is to train the dog to behave by punishing bad
behaviour on its part. Do what dog trainers do with problem dogs (and
charge you lots of $$$).

Go to the hardware shop and get about a foot/300mm length of iron
chain - the links are ~1"/25mm long and are galvanized. Get a couple
of lenghts, it's cheap.

Now, every time the dog runs up and down the fence barking, chuck the
length of chain against the fence about where the dog is. The chain
hitting the fence makes a loud "ringing"/clanging noise (you'll know
what I mean the first time you do it) and this gets the attention of
the dog as well as frightens it. As you throw the chain yell out,
"Quiet!" or, as trainers usually say when training dogs, "NO!". You
will find that in no time at all the thing will stop barking.

If your neighbour complains then you have a choice of either having a
fight with him/her, explaining what you are trying to do, or telling
him/her that you have full right to chuck whatever you want at your
side of the fence (bearing in mind that you and your neighbour are
1/2-owners of the fence and it is only your side that you are
punishing with the chain).

BTW, if you travel with a dog in your car and it barks at every car
passing by or other dogs it sees out of the window, carry a basin (a
metal basin, washbasin) and drop the chain (with a bit of force) and
say, "NO!" everytime the dog carries on - and this will stop the dog
from misbehaving. This approach can also be used if your fence is one
of those at which you are not able to chuck a chain and if so place a
few metal buckets stragetically along the fence.

By using the chain approach either the dog will give up it's barking
very very quickly or the neighbour will get the message and keep the
bloody thing inside so as not to hear the chain hitting the fence.

(If you think that this is a bit of a leg pulling on my part, I
trained our dog, who was a stray, from barking this way and even now,
some 7 years after the training, a simple gentle jingle of the chain
(which now normally sits in one of my desk drawers as a momento) makes
him prick his ears up. The chain has a very distinctive "ring" when
handled and totally different to, say, bunch of keys which he
recognises as me about to go to the garage and follows me out.)

Cheers.



Basil, I stopped our dog from barking (and howling at the moon and
whining at the back door) by using your method with one small
modification. Instead of using a loud chain, I used a water cannon!
(Well, not really... 'water cannon' sounded good, but it was actually
one of those far-reaching water guns they sell to kids in toyshops). I
started with your basic squishy-bottle, but that soon ran out of range
as the blessed dog began racing up the back yard in her efforts to avoid
it. No, the water gun was the way to go. Within three days, I only had
to pick it up and she would stop barking. Within a week, calling out
'No' from the kitchen shut her up. Within a fortnight, she had
completely stopped barking!

Khangu, all you do is squirt the dog full in the face as it barks. Say


SORRY! this is a NO-NO. You do NOT squirt the dog with water or do
anything which actually touches the dog! Doing so is called ASSAULT and
you may end up spending heaps of $$$ on legals.

Do what you want to do with your own animal(s), but do NOT touch anyone
else's animal in any way.

'No' in a firm, commanding tone (do not shout: you'll find yourself
shouting more and more loudly and will ultimately lose your voice and
still have a barking dog...). The idea is to associate the word 'No'
with the squirt and the cessation of barking. Dogs are really bright and
Rottweilers are among the brightest, so this one ought to respond fairly
quickly.

(NB. The garden hose won't work because it takes too long to go out,
pick it up and turn the tap on. You need the instantaneous satisfaction
of a water gun that you can keep handy by the back door.)

It might be a kindness to discuss with your neighbours what you plan to
do. I wouldn't take kindly to anyone assaulting my Alice without my
say-so! If the neighbours express a desire for you *not* to discipline
their dog, then you have every right to get exactly the whistle you
describe. Or, perhaps a loud hooter which is even *more* annoying to the
neighbours than their dog's barking is to you. I don't think hurting the
dog is the best way to go. 'tsnot the dog's fault it annoys you - it's
just being a dog.

HTH,


Cheers.

--
All things are possible, except skiing through a revolving door.