Bookmark and Share

Aggressive Dog Behavior Specialist Greenville SC

Knowing the cause of your dog's behavior problem is key to correcting it. Here is a story on how to help and train an aggressive dog.

Dog Training In Your Home
(803) 561-9090
1201 Saint Andrews Rd
Columbia, SC
National Steeplechase Museum
(803) 432-6513
200 Knights Hill Rd
Camden, SC
Calvary Training Center
(843) 757-7469
11 Grassey Ln
Bluffton, SC
Wes Carter Training Stable
(803) 245-6189
4302 Howells Mill Rd
Bamberg, SC
Petsmart
(843) 626-2164
1301 Oak Forest Ln
Myrtle Beach, SC
Loyal Companions Dog Training And Boarding
(803) 800-7335
148 Jasmine Place Dr
Columbia, SC
Shalimar Horse Stables
(843) 379-1090
592 Broad River Blvd
Beaufort, SC
Wes Carter Training Stable
(803) 245-9820
4302 Howells Mill Rd
Bamberg, SC
Capps Performance Horses
(843) 658-7016
12445 Highway 151
Jefferson, SC
Westwind Ranch and Stables
(864) 261-9301
1012 Highway 187 S
Anderson, SC
Provided By:

How to Help an Aggressive Dog

Soon after Karen Miller adopted Murphy, a burly 7-month-old hound mix, from a shelter, she knew she had a problem. Murphy tried to bite her every time she bent over him, attempted to move him off the couch or got too close to him while walking down a narrow hallway.

"At first, I was afraid to go to sleep with Murphy around," Miller says. But enamored with his many agreeable characteristics, she embarked on a comprehensive canine rehabilitation program.

Without owners like Miller willing to uncover aggression's cause and curb the behavior, many dogs who bite do not get a second chance. They are euthanized. "Half of the dogs born in this country don't live to see their second birthday," says Nicholas Dodman, DVM, director of the Behavior Clinic at Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine, and author of "Dogs Behaving Badly" (Bantam). "Aggression is the No. 1 behavioral reason for that."

By immersing herself in dog-behavior literature, particularly Dodman's book, Miller learned Murphy's behavior was textbook dominance aggression. He reacted to any gesture or posture he interpreted as a threat to his self-appointed top-dog status. Even a pat on the head, which people universally intend as an expression of affection, set him off. Knowing punishment would only make matters worse, she implemented non-punitive solutions with great success.

First Miller gave Murphy gainful employment. Whenever he completed a "job" such as sitting or coming when called, he earned a rewar...

Author: Lloyd Resnick

Copyright 2009 BowTie Inc.

Click here to read the rest of this article from Dog Channel