The pack is on a 4-day, predators feeding schedule. Day one: eat all of the food that you want all day long plus regular meal at night. Day 2 regular meal at night. Day 3: is 1/2 of day 3's rations. Day 4 fast for 24 hours. They are not allowed to self-feed. The owner of the bitch, realized all of her puppies were infected with Parvo and were dying, He didn't want to treat them, instead what any, responible and "compassionate" human would do. He put them in a bag and dumped it on the side of a road. A couple of days later, he met up with his then, friend Tom. Tom asked how the new pups were doing. The guy told him the story. Tom said that he immediately left, to find the bag full of sick pups. Upon arriving, it was too late for 4 out of the 5 pups. He took the surviving puppy to an emergency vet. He named the puppy Odin, after the god of war. In the eyes and heart of Tom, Odin was still a vulnerable Parvo puppy. Fast forward 6-years, Odin grew into a spoiled, insecure, disrespectful, and aggressive 70-pound dog. I have structure, and high expectations. I do not get intimidated, by humans or dogs. I was the only human that he had encountered he could not intimidate. Today he was simply testing me, to see if I still deserved his respected and if he could move up in rank. There is only ONE Pack Mama and Odie is figuring this out.
@@thankmelater1254 @Zhahn-Pam 0 seconds ago This is an excellent question. My answer is yes and no. There are many variables. Is the dog/dogs and older person the same comparable age? What are the genetics of the dog/dogs? How long have the human and dog/dogs lived together. Did both human and dog/dogs respect one another. Did each species believe and trust in one another? How deep was the bond between them? Are we talking about a younger dog who is full of themself, or an older wizened dog? Older dogs just want security, and be comfy very much like their human counterparts. Spoiled, younger dogs power breeds can be a problem for older, fragile people.
24 hours without food would be good post-zap therapy. Maybe then no free food, ever. "A hungry dog is a good dog" (my Dad said).
The pack is on a 4-day, predators feeding schedule. Day one: eat all of the food that you want all day long plus regular meal at night. Day 2 regular meal at night. Day 3: is 1/2 of day 3's rations. Day 4 fast for 24 hours. They are not allowed to self-feed.
The owner of the bitch, realized all of her puppies were infected with Parvo and were dying, He didn't want to treat them, instead what any, responible and "compassionate" human would do. He put them in a bag and dumped it on the side of a road.
A couple of days later, he met up with his then, friend Tom. Tom asked how the new pups were doing. The guy told him the story. Tom said that he immediately left, to find the bag full of sick pups. Upon arriving, it was too late for 4 out of the 5 pups. He took the surviving puppy to an emergency vet. He named the puppy Odin, after the god of war.
In the eyes and heart of Tom, Odin was still a vulnerable Parvo puppy. Fast forward 6-years, Odin grew into a spoiled, insecure, disrespectful, and aggressive 70-pound dog. I have structure, and high expectations. I do not get intimidated, by humans or dogs. I was the only human that he had encountered he could not intimidate. Today he was simply testing me, to see if I still deserved his respected and if he could move up in rank. There is only ONE Pack Mama and Odie is figuring this out.
@@Zhahn-Pam Does "pack leader" work when people get too old or too sick, to be leader?
@@thankmelater1254
@Zhahn-Pam
0 seconds ago
This is an excellent question. My answer is yes and no. There are many variables. Is the dog/dogs and older person the same comparable age? What are the genetics of the dog/dogs? How long have the human and dog/dogs lived together. Did both human and dog/dogs respect one another. Did each species believe and trust in one another? How deep was the bond between them? Are we talking about a younger dog who is full of themself, or an older wizened dog? Older dogs just want security, and be comfy very much like their human counterparts. Spoiled, younger dogs power breeds can be a problem for older, fragile people.
@@Zhahn-Pam Wise response. Thanks!
@@thankmelater1254 you are welcome.