КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @firenze5555
    @firenze5555 5 місяців тому +3

    Graeme is amazing as usual and he's so quick to praise the dog the second it's getting things right.

  • @diegop2311
    @diegop2311 2 місяці тому +3

    Omg I love that dog

  • @georgejohnson1498
    @georgejohnson1498 6 місяців тому +6

    My little Patteerdale loves all dogs, except for one Staffie, who attacked her, and a black Lab that also attacked her. Unfortunately my little dog now regards these as heartfelt enemies, and I am fairly sure that she would fight to the point of injury or death. Otherwise she just wants to play, even with dogs she has never met before, but really she prefers to meet humans and hang around with them. She definitely prefers to be with humans than other dogs, and if she does not take to someone, she simply ignores them.
    She is utterly loyal and as soon as it is time for home, she seem to know before I had even decided myself.
    So a mind reader as well.
    She came to me as a rescue at 15 months old, and she was three years old a couple of Sundays ago. Training her and socialising her has taken the patience of a saint! Worth it though for the sweet confident little dog she has become. Here she is being very gentle with a ball!
    ua-cam.com/video/t_eNvR61VoE/v-deo.html
    Best wishes from George

  • @HighConCannibal
    @HighConCannibal 2 місяці тому +7

    I dunno who i wanted to be quiet most. Her or the dog xD

  • @johneel7766
    @johneel7766 2 місяці тому +4

    I have 2 Patterdales. That dog needs to be trained

    • @janinehiggins1507
      @janinehiggins1507 Місяць тому +1

      The dogs trust that I take my pats are fantastic.
      I originally had 3or4 one to one sessions and then joined the class lessons.theres so much support and helpful advice in safe enviourment it's worth having a look to what's a ailable in your area .excellent value for 💰 .I needed the help as I'm disabled and it really helps.they are lovely dogs 🐕 good luck 🎉uk

    • @alexandrakurchikova899
      @alexandrakurchikova899 27 днів тому

      what an insight!

    • @Pea_Green
      @Pea_Green 21 день тому

      All owners need to be trained.

  • @arevee9429
    @arevee9429 6 місяців тому +4

    My female patterdale isn't nearly as reactive as this Sandy, but I certainly would not let her off-leash in a dog park. She wouldn't back down from any fight and at 18 pounds, that could put her at risk.

  • @poppletop8331
    @poppletop8331 4 місяці тому +4

    I have two Patterdales, one aged 12 the other nearly 7. Mine don't act aggressively towards any other dogs, they just want to sniff other dogs bottoms. 😂

    • @itsbadlols
      @itsbadlols 2 місяці тому +1

      You probably have show lines , non working or mixed breed

    • @poppletop8331
      @poppletop8331 2 місяці тому +2

      @@itsbadlols Our elder one was a working dog on the farm, he's been chilling for a few years now, he's more my husbands dog. Younger one just acts like a puppy all the time, my teens spoil him...he acts so privileged, he whines if we switch the fan off or if he can't see his treat box, (He's not greedy, he just likes to know it's there.)🤣

    • @itsbadlols
      @itsbadlols 2 місяці тому +1

      @@poppletop8331 at the same time, patterdales were breed to hunt together, so not acting aggressive towards each other is ideal, however, they should for sure have high prey drives and want to slay other creatures. Sorry if my og comment is irrelevant to your dogos

  • @janecse
    @janecse 8 місяців тому +22

    Why would you continually set your dog up to fail by walking in busy places? Poor dog.

    • @Hiraeth796
      @Hiraeth796 3 місяці тому +5

      Good traing includes exposure to triggers, and to support efforts of self control with praise/reward. It is the only way forward.

    • @sportysbusiness
      @sportysbusiness 2 місяці тому +1

      Desensitisation is the only way.

    • @Pea_Green
      @Pea_Green 21 день тому

      I totally agree with you BUT they are not helping the poor dog.

  • @renerawcliffe2827
    @renerawcliffe2827 29 днів тому

    I have a 3 year old Shitzu that I adopted from the neighbour of a friend. He had never been walked, just let out in the garden for exercise. When I adopted him everything was going great till we walked past a front garden gate and the dog that lived in the house shot out of the house barking and snarling. It frightened the life out of him. Now any dog he meets in the street or park he kicks off. Any ideas?

  • @Malegys
    @Malegys 6 місяців тому +1

    Did the dog get worse when Sandy started on the Pies?

  • @michelewood925
    @michelewood925 8 місяців тому +40

    First off don’t use a retractable lead. 🙄

    • @douglasvest9420
      @douglasvest9420 8 місяців тому +5

      Great advice!

    • @kerricegeorge668
      @kerricegeorge668 3 місяці тому +3

      I had one and a patty who acted same that’s where the lock click mechanism works and it’s a pull up move to back off . Not pull back . They 🔒 on 🎯 & kill kill 😂 it’s typically the behaviour of breed stresses of owners feed into dog 🐶 so more relaxed no excitement or he 🐶 does same . Mine was a rescue and scared of everything - love ❤️ breed Neva owned a dog and found easy to train -just lost 14yrs cancer rip POPPY

    • @MM-ud6mo
      @MM-ud6mo 10 днів тому

      I have a patterdale called Hannah she's 7 year old. My dad trained and bred dobermans and like 99.99% of working dogs, they need a firm hand. They need to understand you have 2 options only! Behave, listen and you will be paid and treated like royalty. React in a way WE DONT LIKE, then you will be corrected and taught you do not run the show. If you do it again then again, you will be corrected until the penny drops ( which it will). Mine growled once at me and that was enough to go beyond correction.. It was a loud clap of the hands with a "hey" taken by the collar to a neutral spot, sat and told to stay. She moved, I took her back until it clicked. Once she understood this, I called her over and positively reinforced the good calm behaviour. Never growled again! Firm hand, strong leadership and boundaries needed.

  • @apriljohnson421
    @apriljohnson421 8 місяців тому +10

    The wife's reaction is fueling their dog, and the dog does not see either of its owners as the dominant figure. I did not hear either of them tell their dog to stop it, not one time. There's no chastising/no discipline. Them continuing to take the dog around other dogs knowing it behaves this way, is insane. They also are not using a body harness leash, so they're choking the dog.

    • @emsxbabe1982
      @emsxbabe1982 8 місяців тому +4

      They're not being firm enough for sure but as a fellow Patterdale owner, they will challenge you even when you're disciplining them. They can be very difficult to train. Positive reinforcement is almost always the way to go with these dogs, being harsh with them can often backfire.

    • @Andre-kc9di
      @Andre-kc9di 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@emsxbabe1982 It's a working dog that's probably never been worked you going to have behavioural problems unless you take it hunting

    • @emsxbabe1982
      @emsxbabe1982 8 місяців тому +4

      @@Andre-kc9di Nonsense, Patterdales just need plenty of stimulation to replicate hunting. And she gets boat loads of that! Graham himself has a Patterdale, doesn't need to take it hunting though. The majority of Patterdales are kept as domestic pets these days, the reason owners have issues is because most want or expect a dog to just quieten down as they age and settle, like a fat old Labrador. I will never want or expect my Pat to do that. She gets miles of walks and very regular runs, I live rural so got woods, canals, rivers all around me. And then inside the house she's got squeaky toys for days, a ball pit, a sandpit, obstacle courses with tunnels... I have no kids and no partner. This dog is my whole life and I work from home too. She wants for absolutely nothing, all needs well and truly catered for! And if she does happen to find a mouse or a rat outside, or even inside, then I trust she will deal with it accordingly so I guess that's an added bonus.

    • @janecse
      @janecse 8 місяців тому

      Dominance really is an outdated FAKE theory. Worth looking into the science of dominance theory because dominance is not a thing with dogs, only their owners!

    • @Hajde_budalla
      @Hajde_budalla 6 місяців тому

      @@emsxbabe1982Positive reinforcement is the ONLY way.
      And with jacks & patters you will probably train them best on a clicker, where they get rewarded for their discipline.
      Its hard, but you have to be consistent and predictable when you train a dog. People with ADD should pick another kind of dog other than these ratters. They need a LOT of exercise, hardly slow down as they age, and are smart as a whip; they’ll be at least 2 steps ahead of what youre thinking, at any time. They actually will train >you< to do what they want, if you dont train them first. You dont even notice it, at first.
      And they’ll just do it naturally on their own. For eg, My jack comes to me when something is done cooking. Never trained him for that. He just knows through sense of smell before I do that the food is done cooking.

  • @michaelsadler9683
    @michaelsadler9683 8 місяців тому +3

    Yes it's def a patterdale. Like someone else said they are not a recognised breed. That's why you don't see them at crufts.

  • @PureMadMetal
    @PureMadMetal Місяць тому

    Hi I feel your pain, my Patterdale terrier is exactly the same in terms of his behaviour towards dogs and humans. If he senses weakness he will dominate, remember these dogs were bred to hunt and kill foxes and badgers, you need to engage your Patterdale in exercise and activities that allow him to chase, run and play.
    The dog vs dog, has been a long standing problem but recently has only just wanted to play with my neighbours jack Russell's, progress!.
    Loving, loyal, protective he's all these things but if you're not doing anything to engage his primal instincts this will make any Patterdale very frustrated and will see other dogs as prey.
    Another key aspect of having a Patterdale is being firm with them, and advice from previous keepers was you'll need to be more firm that with most other dogs, routine, praise and reward are key to getting these 'not for the fainthearted ' terriers to behave. A wee bit a patience, love and persistence will reap rewards.
    Good luck.

  • @AlanGreenspan-l6k
    @AlanGreenspan-l6k 6 місяців тому +3

    Patterdales are demented creatures 🤣

  • @KentRoads
    @KentRoads Місяць тому

    why tf my Patterdale 33lbs lol

  • @HS-wp5vb
    @HS-wp5vb 8 місяців тому +19

    Just watching this lady constantly bossing around her partner already made me aggressive. No surprise the dog gets aggressiv. So would I.

    • @rustyhowe3907
      @rustyhowe3907 6 місяців тому +1

      LOL and his sneer was saying it all, blasting her behaviour on telly to show the problem he lives with day in day out.

    • @LoneSheWolf09
      @LoneSheWolf09 Місяць тому +1

      @@rustyhowe3907he should leave if he’s not happy. Can tell he’s not happy with her. If I was him I’d be running like forest gump!😆

    • @rustyhowe3907
      @rustyhowe3907 Місяць тому +1

      @@LoneSheWolf09 Yep I fully agree! I hope he has and is in a better situation now.

    • @LoneSheWolf09
      @LoneSheWolf09 Місяць тому +1

      @@rustyhowe3907 same. She can keep the dog😆

    • @rustyhowe3907
      @rustyhowe3907 Місяць тому

      @@LoneSheWolf09 This is what I'd be saying as well.

  • @timbowalk
    @timbowalk 6 місяців тому

    I need that dog breed it back to a pitbull 😂😂

  • @grietjenieuwkoop8234
    @grietjenieuwkoop8234 5 місяців тому +1

    I dont see the boyfriend correcting the dog

    • @Pea_Green
      @Pea_Green 21 день тому

      . . because he is clueless.

  • @liamobrian9642
    @liamobrian9642 Місяць тому

    mine killed a badger she territorial

  • @liamobrian9642
    @liamobrian9642 Місяць тому

    i have pat she 10 and she has killer in her but you just have to harness and avoid other dogs it not dogs fault is in her nature

  • @Andre-kc9di
    @Andre-kc9di 8 місяців тому +4

    Its a ratting dog it wants to kill , these probably treat it like a child lol

  • @SemperFi_0311
    @SemperFi_0311 4 місяці тому +3

    Mayb investment in a chest harness

  • @Movimientoargentinablanca
    @Movimientoargentinablanca 5 місяців тому +4

    *Choke collars should no longer be used on dogs as they hurt the thyroid glands.*

  • @pip110.5
    @pip110.5 4 місяці тому +5

    In the right hands, he would make an amazing ratter. Wrong dog for these guys, should have gone for a Labrador. Just saying.

    • @thecasualatvguy617
      @thecasualatvguy617 22 дні тому +1

      I have a patterdale mix with a bigger terrier. She loves other dogs and wants to play. She wasn't socialized with people and is protective until she gets to know them. I'm working on that now with her that people mostly are good

  • @mannie7028
    @mannie7028 7 місяців тому +3

    Stupid owners create bad behaviour

  • @powderedtoastfacekillah734
    @powderedtoastfacekillah734 2 місяці тому

    Which one of them will take the dog when they inevitably break up?

  • @waynesilva9157
    @waynesilva9157 3 місяці тому +1

    Nothing a training collar won't cure .

    • @paulgough6120
      @paulgough6120 2 місяці тому +4

      Cruelty collar

    • @waynesilva9157
      @waynesilva9157 2 місяці тому +2

      @@paulgough6120cruelty is not controlling your animal , like when a pitbull mauls a child or letting your dog get hit by a car .

    • @librorum4
      @librorum4 2 місяці тому

      dog that small is controllable - risk is that some dogs are too sensitive for training collars. ​@@waynesilva9157

  • @themermaidstale5008
    @themermaidstale5008 2 місяці тому

    Not having watched the video, I’m guessing the dog has never been socialized to other dogs, perhaps has never really smelled other dogs and has no idea how to greet and play with them.

  • @soserious9041
    @soserious9041 3 місяці тому

    First off get a new wife she's the problem

  • @taratwothumbs1079
    @taratwothumbs1079 8 місяців тому

    That dog is NOT a Patterdale terrier! Patterdale’s do not have white on their fur also, I’ve never seen one with chin whiskers like that!

    • @Andre-kc9di
      @Andre-kc9di 8 місяців тому +3

      What terrier is it then? I think it looks like a patterdale

    • @emsxbabe1982
      @emsxbabe1982 8 місяців тому +18

      It's a Patterdale. 🤣 They're not a recognised pedigree breed so there's loads of variations in appearance. Smooth, broken and rough coats. Black, tan, brindle, chocolate, bronze. Some have more of the Lakeland terrier heritage in them (taller, more slender) and others have more of the Staffordshire bull terrier heritage in them. They tend to be more sticky, shorter and broader faces. I've had Patterdales all my life and they've all been so different from each other.

    • @shweetniawalk4124
      @shweetniawalk4124 8 місяців тому +15

      It's definitely a Patterdale you don't know what you're on about.

    • @josephinestecak4945
      @josephinestecak4945 8 місяців тому

      Yes they can have white on them and some are wire haired. We have a Patterdale bitch that we have turned around, took 10 months!

    • @hilaryholgate6758
      @hilaryholgate6758 8 місяців тому +6

      Yes it is. They have all kinds of coats.

  • @Randy-lf2dp
    @Randy-lf2dp 8 місяців тому +1

    Same as my chesapeake bay retreiver does not like other dogs