I know this sounds strange, but my uncle used to have a boxer that acted eerily like she was a human in her mannerisms without ever being trained. She knocked on the door before coming into the house, she would try and sit at the table (on a chair) with the family at meal times, and would idly turn her gaze to the television when everyone else did, among other undeniably human habits. She house trained herself, seeming to understand straight away that the house was not the place to do her business. I think her capacity to imitate was an impressive intelligence in itself :)
BrainCraft Congrats to Luna, and awesome video, as always. Just wondering, did you try testing her two or three times to see if her results improve even more (especially without the camera on her back)? Fellow dog lover :D
My border collie, Mocha, was so smart - and tricky. When I would come home from work, he and my sister's dogs from next door would come to greet me and get petted. Once, when I came back, they had heard something in the woods and had gone up there, barking. Mocha then came to the car for his greeting. After that, he figured out something, and when I would get home he would go barking into the woods with the other dogs following. Then he would circle back to the car, and have me all to himself. And you could see it on his face, how pleased he was with himself for leaving the other two barking in the woods at nothing.
Honestly, knowing my dog, she'd stare at me in confusion for these tests and then just wander off and go back to sleep. It's ok, we already know she's not exactly the brightest dog around. But we love her anyway, even if after 11 years of jumping on the same couch she still hasn't quite figured out how high it actually is.
Our family has always had dogs over the years. And they always seem to work out I am visually impaired, I don't know how but they do. A few years ago we had a border collie who we sadly had to have put down because she was 14 and her back legs kept going. I remember I went to the shop with my sister One day. I walked in front using my cane and she walked behind with Nelly on the lead. After we had gone to the shop, my sister said to fold my cane away and see if Nellie understood to walk slower with me and if she could understand how to help me. So I held Nellies lead and walked with her. She walked much slower with me, she walked me around obstacles like posts. She would sit at the curb so I knew when to cross over, and when a group of people were walking towards us she sat in front of me so that I didn't bump into them and waited until they had passed. I couldn't believe she knew how to help me, she was A pet dog and had never ever had any training like a guy dog
These kinds of multi-species tests often fail to control for the value systems of the subjects. For example, dogs will track eye movements and pointing fingers because they are pack animals, and they put more value on proving their loyalty than on proving their individuality or intelligence, so they perform well on certain tests because it's what they care about. An AKC breeder once told me about a grand champion labrador retriever, highest scorer of all time in breed performance tests, assumed to be some kind of genius dog; so it was autopsied when it died younger than expected. It turned out it had hydrocephalus, and all it had left was essentially a brain stem running on stimulus-response and basic loyalty instincts. It did every command perfectly, every time, without hesitation, because it basically had no thoughts of its own. Cats, on the other hand, are inherently more individualistic (and are evolutionarily successful at that), so when you point, they will look at you like, "Why are you showing me your finger for no reason, you stupid monkey? If there's something you want me to see, go get it yourself." Or you throw a ball and say "fetch!" and maybe they look at you with one eye, like "If you really wanted that ball, why did you throw it away, you idiot?" In this way, they have manipulated humans for thousands of years in return for feasting on the vermin humans attract, and making a few purring noises. Cats value the Great Dreaming and a life of luxury. In early attempts to chart the intelligence of dolphins, researchers found that at first they would have this great learning curve, then their performance would become erratic, almost random. Statistical analysis showed that the dolphins had quickly figured out they were being tested, got bored with the pedantic humans, and started throwing off the results on purpose just to mess with the scientists. So what do dolphins value? Having a sense of humor. Don't even get me started on ravens... they find humans a little bit cute, a lot ridiculous, and sometimes useful. They value novelty and taking advantage of other species. The idea of "general intelligence" is almost an oxymoron. Any given test is a value-based judgement attempting to compare traits among creatures against some artificially imposed standard transferred over from another value system. Even among humans, there are multiple versions of intelligence that allow them to succeed variably in different tasks or environments. GI is a colonial-era attempt to justify social stratifications and specializations, and to promote human arrogance in devastating the landscape. The proper question is not, "How intelligent is it?" The better question is, "How good is it at being itself, considering its inherent values, resources, and environment?" In the case of your dog, it just has to be good at being your dog, and it is apparently a sweet genius at being that :) Did you ever see "Do schools kill creativity? | Sir Ken Robinson" (TED 2006) It's a fun look at non-linear, non-comparable forms of talent and intelligence, and how the attempt to set a standard scale has damaged whole societies. Then compare that to "TEDxSanDiego - 2011 - Martha Beck - The Four Technologies of Magic" and think about how powerful, exotic skill-sets arise from particular circumstances and experiences, rather than from some linear/standard scale.
It saddens me how octopuses have such a short lifespan, because they're one of the most intelligent species on the planet and I feel like they have so much potential that they can't take advantage of.
I had a Basset until recently (passed away) and if Border Collie's are the "smarter breeds" then the idiot that decided that needs to try again. I can remember a border collie chasing it's ball as it went just under the fence at my local dog park. The BC stood their barking at the ball, yet my dog, the basset, put her paw under the fence and grabbed the ball in seconds. _Of course she went and sat down and started to chew the ball to bits_ (which I always called back-engineering) but in this case she was way smarter then the Border Collie... it would have still been there barking at the ball on the other side of the fence, rather then barking at my dog for destroying its favorite toy. There were many instances where my Annabelle would have passed those tests along as failing the tests depending on the situation. The blood hound and the basset hounds noses (their sense of smell) are the best of all dogs, so if you put down two plates of food, one bigger then the other how do you know that the stronger smell isn't coming from the plate with the most food? On the flip side, you could skew that by putting a stronger smell on the smaller plate, proving the basset or blood hound is dumber because they went for the smaller (but smellier) portion. I think the tests need to take into consideration all the different breeds and what motivates them and then devise the tests with that in mind rather then just a standard test. Sense of smell, eyesight, even just how the dog is feeling could fail it because it doesn't respond the same way as some hyper dog that while can navigate an obstacle course will bark like mad at its own reflection in a mirror. Many a time my dog would stand in front of people at the dog park demanding the treats in their pocket, only to be told by the silly human that they didn't have any. I of course would inform them it is most likely a "crumb" which she could smell and once found by the silly humans she would take said crumb and leave the flabbergasted human standing there scratching their heads trying to comprehend how she could smell such a small amount. That was a regular occurrence.
You should! Something interesting I've observed from Luna's GoPro footage at the beach and dogs parks, etc. is you can ALWAYS see me in the very corner of the frame, or at least she will look back to locate me every few seconds. Even when I think she's off playing with another dog or something, she's always watching. Always.
Vanessa, you are such a show off! You and Luna make for such an incredibly cute pair. I am so jealous. I loved the video far much more than having to endure watching you do the 100 layer challenge.
We have a labradoodle as a dog at my station. Smart, energetic, easy to train and great with kids. We use him as a training tool in fire safety for kids. And if a kid happens to be allergic to dogs, they shouldn't have a problem with him.
For a minute I was considering trying this with my friend and his dog, but we kind-of already know his adorable little dog is dumber than dirt lol.. no offense, Obi. Haa
I have a Borzoi and she would do marvellously on that first test. Badly on the second, because she doesn't pay any attention when I point at things. I'm not entirely sure she knows what it means. On the third test it would depend entirely on how hungry she was, because she's not food motivated.
I did this with my cat. At the pointing test he went right to the one with a treat hidden under it like hunting a rat. At the size discrimination test he outsmarted me went to the fridge from which i had taken the food before then proceeding to scratch the floor next to the bigger plate of food as if to burry his poo. I'm not sure what to make of that he's rather odd. The detour test I'm not even counting, he didnt even care, just jump right over when I called him. I have trained him since he was a kitten to respond on call. :)
and here i thought luna was a unique name for my black and white akita mix, who is an extremely smart 6 yo rescue that just doesn't get the finger point thing. luckily she does respond to verbal directions (left, right, your other right....) love your videos! 🐾
I literally have started taking steps to have a dog in my life again. I want a malinios. They are generally super smart so will need to be able to dedicate a lot of time and energy to the pup so that it's happy
I remember when I was looking for a new dog and all the puppies tried to get out of their cages by licking through the glass nonstop. Then I found 1 that tried to lick the glass, but it didn't work. So he tried chewing on the bars, but it didn't work. So he tried chewing on the lock, but it didn't work. So he tried looking at me with sad, puppy-dog eyes, that's when I knew he was a genius. Then a few years later it turned out he was my seizure dog. :)
The first twst is smth ive done a lot with my german shep. He figures it out within a few seconds, it was hilaruous the first time. He looked 3 seconds then jumped
I love dogs. The fact that my dog low crawls (commando crawl is the command) forces me to accept that dogs ARE better than cats. And to see a corgi bow is one of the cutest things in life. 👍🐕 🐈🙅♂️
This makes me want a dog again even more, just to try it out. We had a white WestHighland Terrier and I always wonder if he was smart or not. He did so many dumb things (like running into glass doors or picking fights he was bound to lose), but maybe he was just a douche lol
The food quantity test seems flawed. The dog could be going for the lesser bowl in hopes it is consumed before the other is picked up. It would be the right choice for a crafty strategist to make. I also think quick decision making is not always a key trait in intelligence. In nature quick movement can often cost you your lunch or in a dogs case a human could view it as rude or threatening and remove your lunch. This is why intelligence is often hard to quantify, but in theses cases I suppose you must look at it through strategy and dogs do tend to show this.
I have to do theses test with my Schnauzer! Very good episode!! P.s.: You looked super pretty in this episode... was it the lights, the shirt or your make up? Or maybe juste talking about Luna!
My dog loved frisbee but she prefered not to be the frisbee catcher and was terrible at throwing it. It went maybe five feet and always to her left and not towards me.
A fine episode Vanessa. I'm sorry I haven't commented on your last few but I have been ill recently. Looks like your dog is fairly smart. There is an excellent documentary about dog on PBS Nova. Did you know that monkeys can't do the cup test? Also, when dogs look at you they will first look you in the center of the eyes then move to the right side of your eyes. It is believed they do this because the right side of our eyes convey emotion, and dog want to get a sense of our promotional states. Also, many evolutionary biologists believe that dogs helped establish civilization by moving us from hunter-gatherers to agrarian societies. And before you go "Sniff, sniff, you didn't remember my dog's name," did you say Luna?
Idk if my dachshund puppy is smart or not but he figured out how to jump up the couch and how he did it was he took his dog bed and stood in the highest point of the dog bed and jumped from there onto the couch and this happened yesterday
I think dogs are a lot more intelligent than we think. They've got us trained to feed and snuggle them and pick up their turds just for being adorable.
Yeah, if my dog has a problem she can't solve/ can't be bothered to solve she'll just bark until someone comes along and sorts it out for her. Does that make her really clever?
when my dog was 1year old iI went into the forest and let him intangle by him self and let him untangle himself . That made him very smart and he maskes his own desision . The IQ tests is a child play for him it is hard for me to trick him
I guess it's my own fault, but I was thinking along the lines of how "sentient" is your dog. They're smart animals there's no doubt, but sentience is what I want to know. How much do dogs understand of their own feelings compared to those of their environment effecting them. Happy owner happy dog, etc etc.
I gave my dog an intelligence test. I'm pretty sure he failed. He couldn't even hold the pencil, let alone write any correct answers.
Master Therion my dog did really well with the questions, unfortunately, he wrote the cat's name on the answer sheet. Big fail.
Master Therion seriously
CrankyPants actually I tried that same thing and my dog wind up teaching how to do quantum physics
Yes dogs are dumb
If dogs had opposable thumbs, I'm pretty sure they'd be ruling the world right now.
in your doggy's mind: Why is she talking alone so much ? she must be crazy... but I love her anyway
But look how patiently it sits. My would never last so long!
I have a hypothesis, this entire video was a clever ploy to show off your doggo.
Ros didnt she state that directly?
I know this sounds strange, but my uncle used to have a boxer that acted eerily like she was a human in her mannerisms without ever being trained. She knocked on the door before coming into the house, she would try and sit at the table (on a chair) with the family at meal times, and would idly turn her gaze to the television when everyone else did, among other undeniably human habits. She house trained herself, seeming to understand straight away that the house was not the place to do her business. I think her capacity to imitate was an impressive intelligence in itself :)
Luna scored "average" for all three tests. Imma so proud. This video was really fun to make - thank *you* for watching! 💁🏻🙌
Thank you and *Luna* for being so smart and well as incredibly cute.💗
BrainCraft Congrats to Luna, and awesome video, as always. Just wondering, did you try testing her two or three times to see if her results improve even more (especially without the camera on her back)?
Fellow dog lover :D
BrainCraft it's so cute when Luna just puts its head against you (not sure if it's a boy or girl haha)
I feel like you chose this topic just so you can get Luna on camera with a reason xD
Luna is an adorable pup, I want to pet her.
My border collie, Mocha, was so smart - and tricky. When I would come home from work, he and my sister's dogs from next door would come to greet me and get petted. Once, when I came back, they had heard something in the woods and had gone up there, barking. Mocha then came to the car for his greeting. After that, he figured out something, and when I would get home he would go barking into the woods with the other dogs following. Then he would circle back to the car, and have me all to himself. And you could see it on his face, how pleased he was with himself for leaving the other two barking in the woods at nothing.
I tried to do these tests on our dog, but he wouldn't put his smartphone down. Apparently he was ordering a pizza. Dumb dog.
I love that pupper just chills during the explanations
so smart that I haven't seen him in 2 years, mum said he's a hardcore hide and seeker3
Your mom ate him
@@samiam1059 lol
5 years now lol
Honestly, knowing my dog, she'd stare at me in confusion for these tests and then just wander off and go back to sleep. It's ok, we already know she's not exactly the brightest dog around. But we love her anyway, even if after 11 years of jumping on the same couch she still hasn't quite figured out how high it actually is.
Our family has always had dogs over the years. And they always seem to work out I am visually impaired, I don't know how but they do. A few years ago we had a border collie who we sadly had to have put down because she was 14 and her back legs kept going. I remember I went to the shop with my sister One day. I walked in front using my cane and she walked behind with Nelly on the lead. After we had gone to the shop, my sister said to fold my cane away and see if Nellie understood to walk slower with me and if she could understand how to help me. So I held Nellies lead and walked with her. She walked much slower with me, she walked me around obstacles like posts. She would sit at the curb so I knew when to cross over, and when a group of people were walking towards us she sat in front of me so that I didn't bump into them and waited until they had passed. I couldn't believe she knew how to help me, she was A pet dog and had never ever had any training like a guy dog
These kinds of multi-species tests often fail to control for the value systems of the subjects. For example, dogs will track eye movements and pointing fingers because they are pack animals, and they put more value on proving their loyalty than on proving their individuality or intelligence, so they perform well on certain tests because it's what they care about.
An AKC breeder once told me about a grand champion labrador retriever, highest scorer of all time in breed performance tests, assumed to be some kind of genius dog; so it was autopsied when it died younger than expected. It turned out it had hydrocephalus, and all it had left was essentially a brain stem running on stimulus-response and basic loyalty instincts. It did every command perfectly, every time, without hesitation, because it basically had no thoughts of its own.
Cats, on the other hand, are inherently more individualistic (and are evolutionarily successful at that), so when you point, they will look at you like, "Why are you showing me your finger for no reason, you stupid monkey? If there's something you want me to see, go get it yourself." Or you throw a ball and say "fetch!" and maybe they look at you with one eye, like "If you really wanted that ball, why did you throw it away, you idiot?" In this way, they have manipulated humans for thousands of years in return for feasting on the vermin humans attract, and making a few purring noises. Cats value the Great Dreaming and a life of luxury.
In early attempts to chart the intelligence of dolphins, researchers found that at first they would have this great learning curve, then their performance would become erratic, almost random. Statistical analysis showed that the dolphins had quickly figured out they were being tested, got bored with the pedantic humans, and started throwing off the results on purpose just to mess with the scientists. So what do dolphins value? Having a sense of humor.
Don't even get me started on ravens... they find humans a little bit cute, a lot ridiculous, and sometimes useful. They value novelty and taking advantage of other species.
The idea of "general intelligence" is almost an oxymoron. Any given test is a value-based judgement attempting to compare traits among creatures against some artificially imposed standard transferred over from another value system. Even among humans, there are multiple versions of intelligence that allow them to succeed variably in different tasks or environments. GI is a colonial-era attempt to justify social stratifications and specializations, and to promote human arrogance in devastating the landscape.
The proper question is not, "How intelligent is it?" The better question is, "How good is it at being itself, considering its inherent values, resources, and environment?" In the case of your dog, it just has to be good at being your dog, and it is apparently a sweet genius at being that :)
Did you ever see "Do schools kill creativity? | Sir Ken Robinson" (TED 2006) It's a fun look at non-linear, non-comparable forms of talent and intelligence, and how the attempt to set a standard scale has damaged whole societies.
Then compare that to "TEDxSanDiego - 2011 - Martha Beck - The Four Technologies of Magic" and think about how powerful, exotic skill-sets arise from particular circumstances and experiences, rather than from some linear/standard scale.
Science and dogs? What more could you possibly want?! Great vid!
My dog is a border collie Pitbull female 2 years old in December, she’s also a service dog in training :)
She looks so cute with the glasses on 😍😍
I KNOW.
i thought you ment the girl
Your dog looks so content on your lap. I love it.
It saddens me how octopuses have such a short lifespan, because they're one of the most intelligent species on the planet and I feel like they have so much potential that they can't take advantage of.
Its cuz they dont have thumbs
@@JMRabil675 they do have arms
Dogs walking detours... meanwhile parrots are doing 10 stage puzzles involving levers and strings
Luna was so good in this video. She looks like she's sleeping sitting up during most of it.
I had a Basset until recently (passed away) and if Border Collie's are the "smarter breeds" then the idiot that decided that needs to try again. I can remember a border collie chasing it's ball as it went just under the fence at my local dog park. The BC stood their barking at the ball, yet my dog, the basset, put her paw under the fence and grabbed the ball in seconds.
_Of course she went and sat down and started to chew the ball to bits_ (which I always called back-engineering) but in this case she was way smarter then the Border Collie... it would have still been there barking at the ball on the other side of the fence, rather then barking at my dog for destroying its favorite toy. There were many instances where my Annabelle would have passed those tests along as failing the tests depending on the situation.
The blood hound and the basset hounds noses (their sense of smell) are the best of all dogs, so if you put down two plates of food, one bigger then the other how do you know that the stronger smell isn't coming from the plate with the most food? On the flip side, you could skew that by putting a stronger smell on the smaller plate, proving the basset or blood hound is dumber because they went for the smaller (but smellier) portion. I think the tests need to take into consideration all the different breeds and what motivates them and then devise the tests with that in mind rather then just a standard test. Sense of smell, eyesight, even just how the dog is feeling could fail it because it doesn't respond the same way as some hyper dog that while can navigate an obstacle course will bark like mad at its own reflection in a mirror.
Many a time my dog would stand in front of people at the dog park demanding the treats in their pocket, only to be told by the silly human that they didn't have any. I of course would inform them it is most likely a "crumb" which she could smell and once found by the silly humans she would take said crumb and leave the flabbergasted human standing there scratching their heads trying to comprehend how she could smell such a small amount. That was a regular occurrence.
awww the last part was lovely.
I have a standard schnauzer and he’s very intelligent. I talk to him all the time lol he’s my best friend. he acts like a human, I swear !
okay but now i just want to put a gopro on my dog and explore what she gets up to.
also luna, so delightfully adorable.
You should! Something interesting I've observed from Luna's GoPro footage at the beach and dogs parks, etc. is you can ALWAYS see me in the very corner of the frame, or at least she will look back to locate me every few seconds. Even when I think she's off playing with another dog or something, she's always watching. Always.
oh that is really fascinating. now i've gotta try it!
BrainCraft thats both cute and creepy
Vanessa, you are such a show off! You and Luna make for such an incredibly cute pair. I am so jealous.
I loved the video far much more than having to endure watching you do the 100 layer challenge.
We have a labradoodle as a dog at my station. Smart, energetic, easy to train and great with kids. We use him as a training tool in fire safety for kids. And if a kid happens to be allergic to dogs, they shouldn't have a problem with him.
I love dogs
Same.
Great video! I love how you cover so many subjects no other channel does, or barely touches on. Your dog is so cute, too :)
For a minute I was considering trying this with my friend and his dog, but we kind-of already know his adorable little dog is dumber than dirt lol.. no offense, Obi. Haa
I have a Borzoi and she would do marvellously on that first test. Badly on the second, because she doesn't pay any attention when I point at things. I'm not entirely sure she knows what it means. On the third test it would depend entirely on how hungry she was, because she's not food motivated.
Luna is too cute!
I did this with my cat. At the pointing test he went right to the one with a treat hidden under it like hunting a rat. At the size discrimination test he outsmarted me went to the fridge from which i had taken the food before then proceeding to scratch the floor next to the bigger plate of food as if to burry his poo. I'm not sure what to make of that he's rather odd. The detour test I'm not even counting, he didnt even care, just jump right over when I called him. I have trained him since he was a kitten to respond on call. :)
and here i thought luna was a unique name for my black and white akita mix, who is an extremely smart 6 yo rescue that just doesn't get the finger point thing. luckily she does respond to verbal directions (left, right, your other right....)
love your videos! 🐾
I literally have started taking steps to have a dog in my life again. I want a malinios. They are generally super smart so will need to be able to dedicate a lot of time and energy to the pup so that it's happy
Your dog Luna's a gem Nessy. Love the Flop at the end. Really interesting topic. Thanks for producing it!
I remember when I was looking for a new dog and all the puppies tried to get out of their cages by licking through the glass nonstop. Then I found 1 that tried to lick the glass, but it didn't work. So he tried chewing on the bars, but it didn't work. So he tried chewing on the lock, but it didn't work. So he tried looking at me with sad, puppy-dog eyes, that's when I knew he was a genius. Then a few years later it turned out he was my seizure dog. :)
The first twst is smth ive done a lot with my german shep. He figures it out within a few seconds, it was hilaruous the first time. He looked 3 seconds then jumped
Can you do a video on dogs and anxiety? And particularly on what that would tell us about anxiety.
That's a hella cute doggo
Your dog looks soo fluffy and sweet
I would like to see the obstacle test with vacuum cleaners. Most dogs will fail.
I love how dogs willingly try to find the weirdest most uncomfortably positions to put themselves in. XD
Thanks super helpful!
I love dogs. The fact that my dog low crawls (commando crawl is the command) forces me to accept that dogs ARE better than cats. And to see a corgi bow is one of the cutest things in life. 👍🐕 🐈🙅♂️
This makes me want a dog again even more, just to try it out.
We had a white WestHighland Terrier and I always wonder if he was smart or not.
He did so many dumb things (like running into glass doors or picking fights he was bound to lose), but maybe he was just a douche lol
tfw your dog picks the cup with the snack instead of listening to you
BARK BARK BARK BARK (Just like bipeds Chortle, Snort!)
The food quantity test seems flawed. The dog could be going for the lesser bowl in hopes it is consumed before the other is picked up. It would be the right choice for a crafty strategist to make. I also think quick decision making is not always a key trait in intelligence. In nature quick movement can often cost you your lunch or in a dogs case a human could view it as rude or threatening and remove your lunch. This is why intelligence is often hard to quantify, but in theses cases I suppose you must look at it through strategy and dogs do tend to show this.
My pup asks for food while I'm eating. Is that considered a "smart" trait? 😂
i was smiling through this entire video
I have to do theses test with my Schnauzer! Very good episode!!
P.s.: You looked super pretty in this episode... was it the lights, the shirt or your make up? Or maybe juste talking about Luna!
Love your dog, it's really cute haha.
My dog loved frisbee but she prefered not to be the frisbee catcher and was terrible at throwing it. It went maybe five feet and always to her left and not towards me.
My dog is so smart, she writes these comments instead of me
My human is so dumb, he does't realise I've hacked his youtube account.
тупые русские шутеечки
That is a well trained dog. That's rare to see.
Your dog is very cute ! Please, do all your next vidéo with him :)
My dog still has trouble with the mirror 😂
omg she used doggos! i love that word
More videos of Luna please!! Haha this was a cool video :D
*BILL NYE THE SCIENCE GUY!!!*
A fine episode Vanessa. I'm sorry I haven't commented on your last few but I have been ill recently. Looks like your dog is fairly smart. There is an excellent documentary about dog on PBS Nova. Did you know that monkeys can't do the cup test? Also, when dogs look at you they will first look you in the center of the eyes then move to the right side of your eyes. It is believed they do this because the right side of our eyes convey emotion, and dog want to get a sense of our promotional states. Also, many evolutionary biologists believe that dogs helped establish civilization by moving us from hunter-gatherers to agrarian societies. And before you go "Sniff, sniff, you didn't remember my dog's name," did you say Luna?
My fav episode so far!!!!!!
OMG, what a cute doggie! This is good info to help me choose my future pet pooch breed. Thanks : )
Lune is so Cute and plus her name is in Spanish ❤️❤️❤️🐶🐶🐶
Love your dog 🐕
Mine is named Luna TOO
Great Video as always! :)
Idk if my dachshund puppy is smart or not but he figured out how to jump up the couch and how he did it was he took his dog bed and stood in the highest point of the dog bed and jumped from there onto the couch and this happened yesterday
Great video! I'll have to try some of these on my dog.
Thanks! Please let me know how it goes.
I think dogs are a lot more intelligent than we think. They've got us trained to feed and snuggle them and pick up their turds just for being adorable.
A channel recommendation from Vanessa Hill, whelp time to binge watch REACTIONS.
P.S. Luna with glasses is love.
That's quite the dog-cam you have
Yeah, if my dog has a problem she can't solve/ can't be bothered to solve she'll just bark until someone comes along and sorts it out for her. Does that make her really clever?
THEY'RE GOOD DOGS
I cant wait to try these test on my dog. I've always wondered about my dogs intelligence. By the way the thumbnail is adorable.
Luna would make a viable Pokemon
I didn't know Dillion Harper was teaching stuff..
That is one cute dog....
you didn't link reactions in the doobly do, looks like an interesting channel
Whoops, thanks for the reminder! It's in there now :)
My dad had a mastiff that was hard to train. Sweet dog though!
I also have a massive stiffy
What breed is that lovely doggo ?
Can you post a link to the Reactions channel please?
Im here for the doggos!
So does Curiosity Stream have documentaries or "dog"umentaries. :D
what dog takes up to 38 seconds to choose which plate of food to go to? a paraplegic? haha
when my dog was 1year old iI went into the forest and let him intangle by him self and let him untangle himself .
That made him very smart and he maskes his own desision . The IQ tests is a child play for him it is hard for me to trick him
It's bullshit I have a border collie and a mastiff there both equally smart honestly the Mastiff catches on super fast just like the collie
But that still doesn't explain why they are so friggin cuddly!!!!
What breed is your dog? she's amazing!! and so adorable!
My dog drives herself to the dog park
That accent! 😍 also, very informative and entertaining.
My dog is autistic and meows and purrs all the time
what kind of dog breed is that at 0:31 ? a beagle?
How about doing pigs and cows?
here from Reactions :D
My german shepherd is great in obedience and learning commands.
But NOTHING, NO METHOD HAD WORKED FOR LEASH TRAINING. NOTHING 😭😭😭😭
My puppy is a lab and husky mix. I would do this but my puppy is only 6 weeks old lol
Luna!!!! She's a good girl
I guess it's my own fault, but I was thinking along the lines of how "sentient" is your dog. They're smart animals there's no doubt, but sentience is what I want to know. How much do dogs understand of their own feelings compared to those of their environment effecting them. Happy owner happy dog, etc etc.
I'm going to try this with my Bichon. Frisé.
Is the narrator the PBS space time guys sister!?
3:40
you have a beautiful smile leting Natural Instincts be natural