Neighborly relations
Jul. 28th, 2012 10:13 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Bliss is of the opinion that neighbors should be met with great joy and wagging, followed by an armful of joyous, wiggling collie, a personal human necessity that he is happy to meet. I am of the opinion that if people want 70+ lbs of collie in their arms (and this only because he's a thin beast), they will ask, and the canine in question is to sit politely until they have indicated this desire.
We keep having this discussion, and it's hard to train him out of it when he is almost never poorly behaved in any other context (other than that 'not liking food' thing). The problem is, the neighbors keep encouraging him. I need to teach them to wait patiently while I correct him, before running up to him excitedly and accepting the proffered armfuls of collie. That's much harder to accomplish than training the dog.
We keep having this discussion, and it's hard to train him out of it when he is almost never poorly behaved in any other context (other than that 'not liking food' thing). The problem is, the neighbors keep encouraging him. I need to teach them to wait patiently while I correct him, before running up to him excitedly and accepting the proffered armfuls of collie. That's much harder to accomplish than training the dog.
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Date: 2012-07-30 08:11 pm (UTC)If the other person gives me time and space to set them up, they are all actually quite well-behaved, even (especially?) as a large group. In the presence of a person who was nervous about dogs (but who wanted to work on it with mine), I would put them all on down stays and have a quiet conversation with the person until I noticed that the pack's general energy had subsided. Then I would call one of the shelties, who are a lot smaller---usually I use Rogue for this, but when dealing with a very nervous person, I would probably ask Coba, because he is also so reserved. Coba will rarely approach someone he doesn't know well, but he will sit quietly when a stranger (such as a judge, heh) approaches gently and touches him, without reacting other than perhaps with a quiet wag. If James got that far and then decided that he wanted more dog contact, I would have him choose which dog, and then keep him or her calmed down and on close command, for a fully supervised and controlled encounter.
...This is how I like to introduce them, anyway---if the stranger ramps up the excitement and walks up into the middle of my pack, there is not a lot I can do to keep them calm, especially Mr. Social Butterfly Bliss. Even then, though, I'm still workin' on it.
Any time you're in the area, let me know. I'd love to visit. :)