Great video! I really like that you pointed out early on, "Doesn't matter if the lady shouldn't have gotten these dogs. She has them. Its my job to help her." People tend to be so judgmental of others on the internet. It's great to keep the discussion focused on being helpful.
You mentioned Newfies being stubborn-are there any videos you’re done on this? Loved this one - wish more dog trainers would concentrating on multiple dog households who have problems
For anyone reading this: I know that dog training can be difficult sometimes, but you're doing great. Keep up the good work, and your dog (and your own sanity) will thank you for it! ❤️💕
What if there are two dogs (13year old dachshund) 4 year old Corgi,both males,about once a week the young Corgi jumps on the old dachshund and really gets at him,the dachshund has problems with his back by his tail so he can’t even fight back,and there is NO WARNING
@@coreybirmingham5497 I would recommend putting a leash on the corgi when they're together (even inside), and not letting him do that. Teach him a solid Place cue, so they can learn to be calm around each other. It's fine to let them play and interact, but you need to control the intensity to ensure that the Corgi is not putting the other dog (and himself) in a bad situation.
I am laughing because Misha had to be like oh shit what did I do. People need to notice how your three dogs were WATCHING JOEL. That is control. That is proof Joel knows what he is talking about. Great video.
AMEN! Glad to see a trainer who can actually handle big, independent dogs. I live in a “positive training only” hell. Works for things you WANT them to do, but sometimes my dog needs to hear NO. Thanks!!
Joel, I’m so happy that you call people out before they start shaming people or leaving negative comments. I don’t read comments anymore because it’s not worth my time. Keep doing what you do you’re helping so many!!!
So many people think their dogs are fighting when they are only playing. Some people can't recognize when a dog is bullying a submissive dog. And some people cannot recognize when a situation is escalating and can't intervene in time. This is a great topic. Thanks for this video.
That is for sure a problem there is definitely a huge difference in play fighting and real fighting. Real fighting produces wounds! My husband used to think that I was being dramatic when I said the dogs were fighting because he thought I didn't know the difference between play and fight until he was actually home once when I fight broke out. But in general when dad's home they don't do it!
Yeah, I’m interested in knowing how to spot the difference. We have just introduced a third dog to the house and there is a lot of rough play/fights that I don’t like, but my partner says it’s just play.
My roommates dogs are sisters and they suddenly started viscously fighting when they’re near each other. I’m trying to find out how to re integrate them and fix this problem if possible
@@clarathompson3527when they are playing they tend to go for each other with a side mouth rather than full forward ..they back off, lower themselves them bounce up...thinkn ads playing rough with small kids, they bat at each other .... When its a fight they will snarl..with lip up at side showing long teeth and they don't back off for a moment.
My whole energy has gotten clearer learning about my dog. I’m having him wait at door each time he goes in and out, even when door is open. I dog sit a dog of same size (75lbs.). I am practicing these techniques with them both. Works great. When I correct them, I go get them and make them sit and stay for a bit. They are listening so much better now. Fascinating in practice. Thank you so much. I also like it Joel when you say, “you guys” when talking to your viewers.
Dobermans are by far the smartest breed I have ever owned! My Dobergirl learned most of the commands in one training session. She is 11 years old now but she remembers things from when she was a puppy. They are a phenomenal breed, and one that I cherish very much! Thank you Joel for all of the training videos you have produced. I have learned so much and you have made my training sessions more impactful!
Ruff housing allowed OCCASIONALLY with the males, supervised only although,the continued event with male 9 month mastiff wanting to push the female english bulldog by barking in her face, it is so wrong. I have not found a quick stop because it is during the excitement of play,getting up in morning or beginning a walk.The bulldog reaction is growl and snap and the big pup enjoys that and not getting hurt yet. HMMM PSYCHOLOGY ANYONE.
I agree Dobermans are super smar, used to own 3 of themt. We have 2 amazing German Pinchers that are just as smart. They look like Dobermans but are only 40 lbs, shorter & not as long.
Mr. Beckman is the only trainer I've ever followed where I have learned something new and helpful from every single video he puts out. Such great content, thank you so much!!!
Omg I really needed this video!! I have a 10month old Labrador who bullies my 9year old Lab. Both females but the senior is so submissive she never corrects the puppy for being too rough. Thank you for making this video!
Wow, we've trained our Belgian Malinois puppies today with this technique and I'm blown away!! I can't thank you enough!! ❤ Truly amazing, this is truly the best advice I've found on UA-cam/online so far. Thank you ❤
I feel so much better knowing I was doing this right prior to watching this video. My husband was like you are being mean. I’m like no I am being the boss I don’t have to say there names 5 times to get their attention I do exactly what he does when play gets to rough with my pittie I have 2 siblings and they play rough. I know by the sound and if it’s too much I just stop it and separate and they are fine. No blood no injuries. They listen to me immediately but it took time and practice especially as they are maturing. I’m glad I found these videos they are very helpful thanks!
Every dog owner needs to watch this. Enough with the positive reinforcement, overly lenient methods. As the owner you are the leader and it's your responsibility to establish order. Show love by teaching them and keeping them safe. The dogs wont hate you for it, they'll respect you and they will stop bad behaviour. Not so much because they are afraid of the punishment, but because they are afraid to disappoint you. At the end of the day they want to please you. You are their whole world and you love them
This guy knows what he’s talking about - SUBSCRIBED. I’m sick of seeing other so called celebrity dog trainers trying to correct serious behavioural issues in dangerous dogs by giving them a treat.
A few seconds in and tears are rolled down my face. I felt like you are talking about me. I rescued 5 dogs nobody wanted (dumped in front of my house/ found almost dead, handicapped etc). For the first two years it all was ok. My Bailey (1st recue) was annoyed by Molly (5th rescue/ roughly a year old back then) who was that overactive puppy, lunging, nibbling, running into other dogs ( exactly like the white one you showed in your video " Fix rough play before it becomes aggression"). A friend of mine ( not anymore) adopted Molly after 2 month and then dumped her back at my place 2 month later. For a while Bailey just ignored Molly who could not find anybody to play with. 1 year later a Staffordshire from next door got into our garden and all 6 dogs were fighting. It was a bloody mess with lots of bad injuries). Since then I am traumatized. Another year later that overreactive behaviour of Molly turned into aggression and she got into a bloody fight with Bailey. I had to get him stitched back together. Back then Bailey (about 6years old at that time) was not doing well and Molly saw her chance to dominate him. Before that she just backed off when he was growling. I got bitten multiple times over the years separating them. They keep attacking each other, they need separate areas. Since 3 years I have my home divided in two areas. Molly (6) and Bailey (9) cannot be together and I have trouble giving them all the same attention as I cannot cut myself in two. I have a big garden and I know they need to get outside more beside that but unfortunately they also don't like other dogs. There are so many free roaming dogs of careless owners in our neighbourhood that I rarely walk them. Too much terror. The ones staying at home never stop barking (another issue). One of my other dogs ( handicapped bossy Panda) is also animating Molly in her aggression towards other dogs. She just sees another dog and turns from the sweet people loving girl into a T-Rex. I can hardly leave the house, work or see my family in another country. It takes a toll on my health, my social life and I barely have income. I am looking for online work as I am tight to the house. I had quite some breakdowns, all alone overwhelmed with this situation. I once thought no matter how difficult the situation is, I can handle it but I have to admit I desperately need help. I dream of a life in peace with my happy 4 dogs ( one died 2 years ago at the age of 18). They need dog friends and have adventures. We want to be able to sit all in one car and travel. I also want them to be good with a dog sitter, so I can see my human family more often (seen them 3 times in 8 years). We used to do hikes and beach walks before the fights started. My dogs are my everything and I would never give them up. NEVER! I do everything for them, we are family. I recently fell over your videos and watch nonstop. I intuitively did a lot of these things already which gives me confidence but it is a lot to fix here, not just the aggression. If you are still reading, thank you for that. I did not want to flood you but had to get rid of it! I am alone with it as I usually just get bad comments from people advising me to give up on my dogs which is not an option! I gave them a promises and I love them unconditionally! Bailey is 9 now and Molly about 6. I have not given up hope! Thank you for not judging!
My heart breaks for you. You made your promises so that you can do this. Start Joel’s doorway method with one dog at a time, then move to the Loose Leash Walking method with the first dog you started with. Stick with each step of each video per dog until they have it down pat. Then go to the second dog and so on. It will take time, patience, and consistency, but mainly it will be your attitude. Say what you mean and mean what you say. You can do it. You have to find your bug attitude voice, or else it won't work. They want to know their boundaries. Don't we all want to know what is acceptable and what is not? We are all much happier knowing what the rules and boundaries are so we don't get into trouble. Agree? Tomorrow and the next day will go by whether you do nothing or put the work in. You will feel better as you will be doing something to change the situation. If what you are doing isn't working, change what you are doing. Get into the mindset. Make yourself. Good Luck. 🌟
Carry pepper spray for self defense and do you use a soft muzzle at home? It helps a lot with calming their mouthyness and aggression. Basket muzzles work too and even more effective
My situation is kind of like yours. Two dogs I love so much but they can't stand each other. Had Rue since he was a few weeks old, he is 5 now. Then got Luna in May '23. They got in with each other really well for 5-6 months, very happy. Then one day it all flipped and we've been trying to get them to calm since. They will tear each other apart. We won't give Luna up, I love her and she is such a sweet girl. Did you ever make any progress? I hope things are going better for you now
So glad I found your channel! We have a Aussie rescue was also per blue healer. Her name is Molly but she acts like Ma Barker. We recently adopted a very sweet little hound border collie mix. Seriously the sweetest thing. She bullies him all the time and it’s so ugly. She also bullies other dogs and has bit me once. I tried all the sweet and nice training tricks on the Internet and finally found your UA-cam channel. Once I started growling telling her no and getting up, she started surrendering right away and the behaviors cutting back already. Thank you for being brave enough to share this training with the world.
Thank you for this video and for the disclaimer in the beginning. Not to shame this woman! Bless her heart for rescuing these dogs and she's taking the proper steps to try to fix the problem!
Joel, I have a pit/shep mix that I adopted in Sep'22 and luckily I found your videos. Since he hit 4 months we've been using your methods and I get many many compliments at the dog park about how my 7-month old pup is so well behaved. The no nonsense style clicked with me (and my dog) right away -- we really appreciate the information you're sharing.
At least this lady tried to fix the problem and actually reached out for help! Too many people are too quick to just get a dog, hit an issue and get rid and pass that dog on to someone else. Often anyone else! Which creates more problems because that dog then ends up passed about without anyone helping to train that dogs issues.
Thank you Beckman, I have a small refuge and have suffered with fights all the time, suck sadness to see them fight and want to kill or many ganging up on one, THANK YOU YOUR HELPING ME KEEP GOING FORWARD! 🙏 THANK YOU YOU LITERALLY SAID THE TRUTH. THANKS BLESSINGS BROTHER
Thanks for this Joel. I forwarded this video to my colleague who had asked me how to handle 1 of his 3 dogs. He ended up watching a bunch of your other videos and said you have really great tips and tricks.
Can you believe I'm here because of two 6 month old pugs fighting. Mainly resource guarding but lately, the female will just start bickering at the male when we're just chilling on the couch. Will definitely start to implement this, great video.
Your methods are the best and logical approach to dog training. My family always owned akitas and this way of being with the dogs was the way we had always done it since they arent always the friendliest, and other family owned other strong breeds. At one point we had to foster my aunts akita, who was a good girl, but our akita at the time was not, she was a dog fighter. They had a few real bad fights, but overall we used the same militant type methods and those 2 could be loose in the house in the same rooms without trying to kill eachother. As long as not a crumb of food was involved it was alright. Still had to separate them even to bring in groceries from the car, but that was good enough considering a fight usually involved choking out, hose blasts, even pepper spray from a cop once, and then a vet visit. But this type of training is why one day when I was walking my reactive akita and an Australian shepherd that had got out of his fence and ran right up to my akita face to face, she did not attempt to kill the aussie, she could have but didn't. I was a teen, my dog was twice the size, but the respect she had for me override and one good "CHT!" and she stood there like a statue while I shooed the other dog away. I'll never forget that feeling of being out in the wild worst case scenario, and frankly at first being pretty scared of a potential fight, but knocked that off in my head and went to calm assertive and still having full control. That was it for me, I felt like if I could do that I could do anything
WOW, we introduced a rescue puppy Cocker Spaniel with out 4 year old Scottish Border Collie. They have been fighting since the CS arrived, three months ago. Found this video........ after watching the video I followed your advice. It just works, they now exist in the house together without fighting and we took this into the garden........ it works there too. The CS has puppy zoomies and the BC just sits and watches. This morning we took them onto our village green and they just ran around with each other......... THANKS :)
Hey Joel. I had to dogsit 2 young dogs for a friend yesterday and just wanted to give a big thank you! Normally when those dogs are together at my house, it's non stop barking and fighting. It also gets my dog all riled up. I used what you taught and it was so peaceful yesterday. ❤
I love the lack of judgement. Reason doesn’t matter end of day. Because if her the dogs are with someone who wants them when they could be sitting in a shelter and instead of being like I can’t handle this they’re going she is trying to fix it. Respect to her and to you.
i learned this from watching Cesar long ago his first shows. finger jabs, toe kicks to 'snap them out of that bad behavior moment' thanks for this refresher.
Love this video. I'm a dog walker and my client's wonderful pup began getting aggressive only when I was with their 3 dogs. Did not do it with the pet parents at all. I asked them if I could implement this technique and they happily obliged (and said they would as well, if it happened when they're at home). Thanks so much!
Thank you for this education! I started taking control the way you directed. Wow. Have I seen a change in my 3 shitzu’s and 10 month old poodle. The female Shitzu was the problem which caused the poodle puppy to react. I created the Shitzu monster. So I am correcting the problem I created. Really is working! Really can’t thank you enough! I’m the boss.
I don’t even own a dog, but I love learning all of the things you have to offer. I hope that one day I won’t be working such long hours that I can justify getting a dog, because I really miss having dogs around.
You HAVE to get up and get to the dogs when they misbehave. My new dog loves jumping on counters and stuff, and nothing changed when I just yelled HEY and didn't get up. When I did, and punished him for it after the HEY, he learned.
Hi Joel, your technique for the four dogs works. I personally have four dogs and when and if they fight I’ve always done this procedure even before I knew it was a technique I only did it because it worked. Nice to know I was doing it correctly. Love your channel and keep up the excellent work.
I have a German Shepard, a Pit Terrier, an Australian Shepherd, and a Corgi. All of them are SO good-except the Corgi. He’s a little pain in the ass, and jumps and bullies all the other dogs-AND ME! This method is REALLY working!!! I feel like I’m actually getting my control, and my home back. Thank you!
Thanks for direction. I have a 20month old female (spayed) doberman, and a 17wk GSP male. They have been best buddies, inseparable, sleeping together, playing, laying, etc now the doberman is sick of this puppy and is snarling and jumping on him constantly (no hard biting, looks controlling). It seems to have happened overnight. I know the sneaky GSP is challenging her, hes extremely confident, but my husband doesn't see it. Therefore, we've been at odd on how to handle this. The female has been the easiest dog to train, like you said, smart, quick. She is now disturbed and tense all the time. We've got to become very dominant over this situation. I hope I can get my him to watch this. We have to be in agreement. Things could get out of hand. And besides, I miss my peaceful home!
I have 4 chiweenies 2 are female littermates that are not spayed. I have the mom ( not spayed) and the dad who is neutered now too. Everything you explained is what I do and they all get along extremely well. The female littermates are so well behaved too they are better then there parents no joke. No fighting I feed them all next to eachother. Thank you for telling people this. It's very important!
Really enjoying your videos Joel. Your style of training is exactly what dog owners need to see. I try and remind my clients with breeds known for being “challenging” that in the animal kingdom the top dog is ruler of the house, enforcer of the rules etc. Consistency and follow up is key. Our relationship with our dogs require more than love and food; rules and structure truly enhance that relationship.
So true. They need to know they don’t have to fight to be safe. That they will always have you to protect them from harm. They can actually relax more when the owner is in control
Joel, I am so glad to be following you. I am a mostly positive dog trainer and have a couple of clients that need this training. They have no obedience training either so we're coming in from behind the 8 ball. But this is good stuff. Thank you.
So happy I found this. I adopted a dane/mastiff from the shelter. Took a while to integrate her with my very docile Dane. They got along great... for awhile. Then suddenly a very major fight that ended up both dogs at vet. Lots of stitches and drains.
We recently got a frenchie who got along with our bulldog. Recently they fought and now the frenchie can’t see her or any other dog because she wants to fight fight her.
@@aldoromero7894 the dane , Skye, is very cautious of the dane/mastiff, Piper. Piper just watches the Skye waiting for her to make the wrong move. I keep them separated when I am not home. When I am home I just make sure they don't come face to face. I think their relationship ship is permanently damaged.
This video is amazing. I’ve watched a few other videos and they never really gave an answer. They just said it situational followed by no explanation or real remedy.
This was very helpful! I have 4 dogs and only two of them fight with each other from time to time. This weekend was the worst one. Resulted in me getting 3 stitches in my finger and taking one of them to the vet. Ive had someone tell me this week I need to take control of their behavior. And this is what I needed! Thank you!
And it doesn't matter if she rescued them or not, like my guys I've had since they were 7 weeks old, doesn't mean they still won't have issues. The pup at 14 months old thought he would try to take over. They can now be in the same room without muzzles, they just have to be calm. It helps when they get out on their own individual walk too. That means 3 walks for me. Try to vary who goes first so the same dog doesn't get you when you're tired from the other walks. My Red Zeppelin is the 4 yr old red Dobe, (Zepp for short), full brother to the 2 yr old Zoso, and a Beagle/JRT mix Female. Zeppelin is very laid back but wasn't going to let the pup take over either. We separated them via Baby gates from the time it happened. I still have to do things in a certain order so they can all chill in the same room. The exercise definitely helps and not rehearsing the aggression. Every single time they do, it's like a huge set back. Working on the back yard with muzzles on everyone. Short sessions at first. Finally got a play bow in the house by Zeppelin to Zoso. Have also found from another trainer to work obedience almost exclusively on the one that's not confident - in this case the growler, Zoso. Hope to start doing Agility with the pup soon too. Of course, the instructors he's had other classes with just don't see the aggression. Zepp avoids, avoids, avoids, until he's done or I step in. Have also taught both dogs to look away (from each other).
Glad to hear you talk about your experience/ we are doing walks together with the dogs that fought, Rev and Winter then another separate one with the chihuahua - Dink. It’s a lot. Just getting to the point that we are ready fingers crossed- to reintroduce Rev and Winter with muzzles on out back. It’s just like- man, it’s a lot. I’m learning so much from this channel and Joel- and I like hearing from others how they are working with their packs. 💗 so thanks again for sharing. A question for Joel- after Winter lunged at and got a good hold on Rev ‘s neck - with all the growling and noise that goes along with it- he FREAKS OUT on walks now when walking past a fenced dog, or a dog on the other side of the street. We are walking Rev and Winter together- and he does it when it’s just him alone too- any ideas or thoughts to “shake” him out of that? Would love to hear that addressed or a video - even just a talking vid like this one - may be hard to recreate with the guys you’ve got there/ but it would really be appreciated 👍
Not sure how to reply to just one person, but have commented before on one of the other videos. My Beagle/JRT Mix's revert to mode is barking. At home I taught her sneezes when we first got puppies so I could praise good sneezes. On walks if I catch her before she starts barking, we're good. Am always scanning so I can say No bark or we're going home, before she sees something. The very first time you say it though, you have to follow through. Too bad, walk's over. Then the next walk, usually all you have to say is no bark or the walk is over. Your choice. It's like they actually start thinking about it. Do I want to keep walking? Is the bark worth it? Now, with dogs in their own yard, I say No bark, he's doing his job. That's his house. You would do the same thing if that was your yard. It's like they start thinking - oh yeah, you're right. Should they bark, same consequence, walk's over until the next time, maybe not til the next day even.
If you know what you're doing and working with a dog from a puppy age, assuming the animal is properly socialized, this shouldn't be an issue. Correct issues as soon as they come up and you become cognizant of problem behavior. With rescued animals you often don't know what you're getting and you have to work a lot harder to correct certain behaviors, it may be impossible to completely eliminate some of them. Still, they deserve a chance so props to people who adopt rescues.
Joel your advice has been invaluable when it kicks off there's no giving them a high value treat. I don't want to shock them to be even more reactive. I have been following this advice and I am noticing an improvement, early days, and it may have to be boot camp for a long while, but we'll make it
If people would also train their kids like this! 100% follow through! I love this and it is a helpful reminder even with one dog, 100% follow through!!
So glad I came across this video. This makes more sense than any other video I’ve watched to try to stop dogs from REALLY fighting and hopefully keep my Red Healer and Australian Shepherd from hurting each other more than they have already as well as prevent any further harm to those around them. They have caused all sorts of injuries to themselves. I’ve been trying all sorts of tactics including rewards, exercising, kenneling. last night they got in a bad fight that injured themselves and even worse my two girls when they tried to separate them and I came across this video. I was beginning to think the only way to settle it was to let them fight it out to let them establish who is the alpha instead of breaking it up just to have them fight again later. The entire family has watched this and we have all been doing our best to implement this with the elements you mentioned. It makes sense, we are very hopeful that this will do it. Thanks for the video.
Thank you so much for your videos, I just discovered them and am implementing tmrw. I was on a Facebook group and got judged very harshly for having a puppy. Judgement free zone is exactly what I needed to see.
Thank you so much for this video. I have had my dog si se she was a pup, almost 9 years now, and a dog in need showed up on my door step. My dog is a schnauzer pit mix and can be territorial at times, but she wants to play with other dogs… but she has a habit of snapping. The new dog is a pit, she’s been in the house for a week, and is incredibly calm, but she is ALL MUSCLE! My dog doesn’t stand a chance if things went south. I am preparing to introduce them. They have smelled each other before, did okay, then showed some aggression, but both dogs responded to me on day one. I didn’t want to spend the time at first because I was trying to find owners. It’s been a week now and I’m in love with the new dog, and I want to keep her, and Penelope needs a friend if she can figure out her stuff. I have purchased muzzles and I am working on both dogs accept the muzzles with positivity and treats, both have responded well. We are taking the dogs to the park tomorrow in separate cars foe introductions. I’ve been binge watching you today! I don’t want to miss a que! And I want to do this right. Both dogs see me as alpha and listen to me very well. I’m going to give them plenty of separate time in the house after introductions and completely supervised together time. Any other tips? Am I missing anything?
Oh my goodness! That doberman is adorable. After the first correction, he was like; "I'm a good boy! I don't know about that other dog, but I'm a good boy for sure!"
Oh thank you for this video! I have 6 Australian Shepherd’s and 2 of them have attitude problems! This video is wonderful! Yes I live on 11 acres, but they fight in my living room for no good reason. Thank you!
thank you for this, i have a 5 year old boy that i picked up on side of the road at Christmas about 4 years ago. He's my baby, goes to work with me and everything, he's about 35lbs, he's some mix of hound dog. the closest breed I've ever found is a pharaoh hound. now about 2 years ago i also rescued a 4month old German Shepard, Malinois and rottweiler mut mix. so for the first year it was just these two, unneutered boy dogs. they were doing great because the youngest hadnt went through dog puberty yet..... now, about 6 months ago i rescued an old, very old, female Australian shepard on Easter. she basically has no teeth and is half blind but when i found her, she had been laying in the same spot on the side of a dirt road for about 7 hours, covered in dirt and ticks/fleas. i took her to a vet and now her old butt is thriving. now recently, my two males, aged 4 1/2 and about 2, are fighting. well, i think the younger one is just being aggressive and trying to take over dominance of the older boy. they have gotten into fights before but nothing like what happened last week. they all 3 sleep with me and have always doing pretty good considering we live in a small house with my teenage son. it was morning and i had the 2 boys standing next to my bed, wagging their tails and i was petting them both. out of nowhere when the older one bent over to sniff the younger ones toes, the younger one snapped. he grabbed my older boy by the side of his neck so i had to jump in between them. i pulled the younger one off almost immediately but he had already managed to break the older ones skin near and on his poor ear. not to mention after i pulled them apart, i got bit at least 4 times in various places. im 33, 110lb old lady. thank God my 14yr old is homeschooled and was able to put the younger one in a chokehold and take him outside. and since then, the younger one literally starts snarling and growling sometimes when he sees the older one. the old one is just terrified i think. now, the older one who isnt extremely old, will immediately raise his hair anytime he sees the younger one but i try to think its out of fear. the older one has always been a scaredy cat seriously. but he has walked past the younger one with his hair raised and the younger one will pay no attention but its like every so often the younger one snaps. and the younger one is a menace and he definitely has the protector and hunter side of him. He killed a full grown male deer about 6 months ago... so my older boy would be dead in no time if the younger one ever had the opportunity and wanted to. im going to start doing what you taught in this video.. i guess i wanted to ask how you feel about muzzles? i was thinking about getting one, [possibly 2, and make both males wear them at first] and then trying to let them interact and use the techniques you showed if they act aggressive? but we have a big area for them to be outside and yesterday we took the younger one to the river to swim and play all day because i was thinking maybe he was just jealous of the older one getting to go to work with me everyday. he really is a very good, sweet dog the younger one. hes actually my sons dog and the older male is mine. i really wish i would have introduced them from the beginning so i wouldnt have had to keep using younger and older dog but i honestly didnt intend to write this much. the younger one is Snoopy and the older one is Charlie.. charlie had his name when i found him and we named snoopy.. we call him Snoopy-poopy lol hes crazy. thank you and God bless.
I think it would be good to do a video showing the signs that the dogs are going to fight. Also I wanted to tell you one of my neighbors complimented me on how my pitbull no longer drags me around! Yay! 🐾 I told him about ur videos!!!
You said it so right! Admirable! This is the situation, this is what you have to do. Practise is the mother of learning, they say. I applied some of your techniques to our huskyta (a mix between a Husky and an Akita), such a clever boy! But also disrespectful sometimes and we need consistency. I gladly say your techniques improved him a lot and he start to got it! Work in progress 💪 I admire your work! Happy I found you.
Hi Joel!! Amazing video!!! I have recommended your channel to a guy who has been struggling with his dominant Rottweiler puppy that he paid $3,000 for and another $1,700 for dog obedience training sessions.❤
11:46 The look on your face, as you watch Zeppelin walk straight to the bed like a Good Boy, is absolutely priceless. I've never seen the concept of ". . ." so perfectly demonstrated on a human face :D
I think also after that, he says "bed" like 5 times talking and the dog is looking like "is that for me?". The he says "ZEPPELIN you're smartest dog I've ever seen" 12:06 , and he goes "oh that is for me" and goes to the bed.
Awww all of them are all so cute, playful and obedient 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰 i agree, we have 3 GSDs and we treat and discipline them like children and kids, and they are well mannered and trained.
I am in the same situation, took dogs in who were on the street and in trouble and the local shelters were not taking dogs. Two had litters on the street in the middle of winter. Thankfully when I was younger I did rehab with Pitbulls so I know the drill. Stay calm, move with confidence, make yourself bigger by standing, allow no argument when they are asked to do something. Follow through until they do as they are asked and are calm and submissive. Watch body language, the dog will tell you when the are ready to fight. My headache right now is a labsky who every now and then thinks he's boss, but we are working through it and now 98% of the time he is perfect.
Got my 4.5 year old heeler & new rescue 7 month old saluki to the dog park this morning. My new rescue was fantastic. Had fear going in, but we broke thru that.. but good lord my older dog could not stop mounting. I had to leash five times to calm him. & even then had numerous corrections while on leash. Was thankful the other 12 dogs & parents appreciated the correction. Had one parent even say he was prior animal control & that ppl are too forgiving with dogs & it creates bad habits & it always leads to him being called. Such a great mix of dogs there, puppies to elder. Very cool!
Anybody who thinks Joel is just "mean to dogs" needs to see how awkward and apologetic he comes across while using these three as his examples. He even acknowledges "they're not being harmed by this", but still gives the impression that he feels pretty bad for demonstrating corrections on dogs that aren't doing anything wrong. The dogs, for their part, just seem a little confused, but certainly not devastated :D
Another great video from Beckman's Dog Training, my partner I had four dogs at one time and they were fighting as well. We had a collie, pit bull, english bulldog, and a great pyrenees. Big guys and gals. We hired a trainer and they taught us a lot of the same things Joel does, intervening right before it was about to happen. The things I want add to this video are that we had to establish a pack order. So, like Joel touched on in the video, WE are the pack leader, and then we ranked each dog in order of when they were acquired. Then, we had to establish that order for everything we did. Everything. How you greet them, how you let them in and out of the door for potty breaks, how we feed them (this was big) how we give them treats, everything. We started walking them one at a time in order, things like that (we eventually walked all four together). Our trainer suspected they were bucking for position which may have been where the fights were coming from. By doing all this, we were constantly reinforcing their position in the pack. The fights stopped very quickly and it just made having the pack that much more enjoyable. Everyone was more happy when they knew their place. It was empowering for us, and you could see the dogs begin to relax and just enjoy being a dog in the pack. It was very militant as Joel said, especially in the beginning, but it paid dividends. Breaking up dog fights in your living room really sucks. Thanks for the video and I hope the lady with her four dogs is making progress and finding solutions ❤
We have the exact same problem with 2 boxers. 2 fights on Easter Day and 6 bandages to hand trying to separate them. Your Visio is spot on, thanks for the info.
Couple things i want to note. Everything you said is true. Points is "be the boss" so many people don't " take control" for fear of being "mean" . My wife i s guilty. That said i rescued a pitty that just couldnt be broke. My charlie dog is good untill a snap. Tried for months to curb the pitties behavior, nothing worked. Finally had to surrender him to a rescue. Finally i think most people are scared if dogs fight and unable to walk into them. Rendering them incapable of correcting correctable behavior. Ive been around ambulls my whole life and for the most part be in control and have social dogs. The pittie and another the exception. My point. The owner/handler needs to be alpha
Key phrase is it has to be "militant style", majority of people do not do things 100%, and really believe they did everything they could! "Short term pain, long term gain" relatively speaking! Or admit you aren't willing to do 100%!
THANKYOU IM ON TARGET,,uk kez here ,,i got a 6 to 7 year old jack russle terrier,,got a new puppy as my nephew needed a home for him,,all gr8 till the jack attacted the bill dog XL,, for months jack is a rescue dog,,,but now bailet the bully not taking shit no more,,bull has attact the jack 2 times both i got in between them ending in my hand getting the the end of it as so the jack russle ,,,this is gr8 glad ifound you,,,,
100%. I have two boys: a husky mix and a husky malamute. They are both young 2 years and 18 months old. Thanks to these videos they are doing pretty good. I've learned a lot and I would love to come visit, but we are too far away. So thanks for the videos. This technique is so important in our house. I didn't even know it was a technique, but my dogs need me to let them know when they are going too far. I was just doing it naturally, by chance. I'm so happy to feel like I have permission to tell them to stop. The only problem is my hubby gets mad at me because it startles him sometimes. I've kept it up anyway and the dogs don't ever escalate into a fight. I'm also concerned that if they are allowed to play rough at home they'll do the same thing at a dog park or when friend's dogs come over. Both dogs have been attacked at the dog park. I think it partly because other owners think their dogs won't bite and don't understand the warning signs. I've started stepping up for my boys at the park or just leaving when I see things starting to go wrong. There are some dogs (not mine) that are known to bite other dogs, but the owners keep bringing them to the park, regardless. Again I just leave and don't interact if possible. We can always go for a nice walk.
I love the "be the fricken boss!" and take control. I agree!! It's a pack of animals, not a kindergarten class. Here's our situation. We rescue and foster abused French Bulldogs. We currently have 5 in the house. Our raised-from-puppy boy (3.5 yrs old) and our foster grandpa (around 8 yrs old) and who has now become comfortable with us and the home after about 6 mos, are now fighting regularly. Grandpa is pretty clearly "claiming" us and is not happy with the other two that we raised from puppies. The fighting is mainly between the two boys. The 4 year old female and Grandpa tolerate, barely, they have fought before but not nearly as often as he does with the 3.5 year old male. Here's my question: we clearly see the body language "gear up" to fight. It's literally simultaneously between both. Can't tell who exactly elevates first. I have been doing what you explain even before I found your videos. As soon as I notice, I'm up quickly, HEY! CLAP! Spray bottle with water! Air horn.... we've tried it all. Used to work. Now doesn't. Now my forceful intervention to stop it before they launch seems to trigger them so they can get into it BEFORE I can get to them. Not sure what to do now. Any suggestions? Right now we just crate and rotate but MUST find a solution. We'd like to keep the 8 year old rescue but this is a huge roadblock that developed since he became comfy in our house. Thanks!!! Todd C
I like this video. I have two male Siberian Huskies and one tends to be a handful. They are a month apart in age and had gotten I to it a couple of times in the past. I worked hard to establish being the alpha and they know when they are being bad and when I’m getting involved. I show them that I’m more dominant then them. My older one has been getting trained by me since I got him at 8 weeks old and he just turned 1. We have an amazing bond.
I just want to say how happy I am to hear such wonderful advice. God bless you my good man. I don't even believe in God and I have to say you are doing the Lord's work.
I had a female spayed Bullmastiff & a neutered male American Bulldog that got along great…I then rescued a spayed female Bullmastiff! She liked the other Bullmastiff but was always ready to attack the American Bulldog. He’d just walk by her & she’d attack! One day I was getting ready to feed them & had two stainless steel bowls in my hand, Gracie (Bullmastiff) went after Dempsey ( American Bulldog). I had had enough & so I came down on their heads with the bowls as hard as I could. This stopped the fight immediately…I never had to break up a fight again, not even growls! I became the character the dogs needed, at the time, (militant, loving, teacher etc) No food aggression, we all walked at the same time (other dogs would run out on the sidewalk after them…they knew better than to fight.) I’m the boss & it was my job to handle things! My Bullmastiff’s played like gladiators but, I could sense when to intervene! Joel, you’re right…it’s about being diligent & in charge! My 3 dogs weighing 375 pounds became best friends!
Aww how good is Zeppelin?! Thank you for this, we had a trainer in to help , one session and he showed me where I was going wrong. He's very similar to you (I'm in UK so defo couldn't afford to have you over haha)
Such practical, sound advice. Our 2 male Bostons (ages 3 and 1 1/2) will get too rough and aggressive during play. I’ve been using a squirt bottle which effectively stops it for the moment, but doesn’t prevent it. Hopefully this will teach them to play nice from the get-go. Most of the time they get along well, but they’re both pretty competitive. Thanks again for this helpful direction. 😊
Thank you so much for the great guidance. It really points me in the right direction. I have a 2 1/2 year old lab - the soul of gentleness -- and a 3 1/2 month old rescue mix (border collie/pit bull mix), which I got a month ago. I was told to let my lab teach the puppy dog behavior skills, that the lab would let the puppy know when she crosses the line, such as nip her too hard. Well, I've been doing that, and a month into it, the puppy is really crossing the line, in my human opinion. She is constantly going after my lab, grabbing her by the ears and lips and jowls, biting at her legs, to the point that she cries out. My lab just does not have the temperament to protect herself. So, I decided that I need to intervene - maybe allow a little playful nipping, but intervene and set limits as soon as I see that it's escalating. Your video helped me know exactly how to go about it. Thank you. Very much appreciated!
My partner & I have a 5yr old GSD/Mastiff & 11m old Pitbull- both male, both unaltered until next month. The GSD mix resource guards food & toys, but recently has started attacking the pitbull for running past him . I know it’s an attack because he doesn’t growl or make eye contact- he goes after his throat & shakes. He stops as soon as we say hey! Or No!. But the challenge has been stopping it, before he attacks.
Oh man I love your training I am going to start with this video training thank u so much I have two Chinese. Sharpei girls I had them both since they where babys one is suki she is almost 2 and one is Kim yo she is 15 months old and they where complety fine 1 month ago till suki had to have eye surgery now they fight everyday all day .. And by your video I have been doing it wrong by keeping them apart one in one room one in another room for about 3 weeks so now that I know I am doing it wrong I am going to do it right .. Thank the lord for people like u who take the time to help us .. Much love
I have a 10 year old lab, an 8 year old Maltese and a 6 month lab pup. Pup wants to dominate the Maltese. Pup respects older lab . I correct the pup when i see her trying to cut the Maltese off from where he wants to walk , etc using your method, but when I look out the window the pups hackles are up and she's playing the bully game. How do I embed respect in her when I'm too far away in the moment to intervene/correct? At times they play OK, and will lick each others faces when lying down, but then pup gets rambunctious and the same syndrome plays out. The Maltese is a nervous dog to begin with. LOVE your videos, and you probably won't see this comment, but asking anyway in hopes that you do.Love and respect from the land down under.
Thank you so much! I brought a rescue from the pound home (female who just got spade while she was still in heat)and the initial meet and greet with my other two dogs (both male one intacked and the other neutered) went well. Then two days later my rescue female attacks my older neutered male and went straight for the neck, luckily the wounds were superficial. They be been doing this all day with them and she immediately submits.
Thank you for this instruction, I have two unneutered dachshunds and we have regular fights - I am going to follow this and will report back - thank you very much
I rescued two dogs one is a Cur dog I think a hunting dog and the others a German shepherd and I have never had dogs before and the alternative would have been both of them would have been put to sleep. I appreciate the information you share!
Great video! I really like that you pointed out early on, "Doesn't matter if the lady shouldn't have gotten these dogs. She has them. Its my job to help her." People tend to be so judgmental of others on the internet. It's great to keep the discussion focused on being helpful.
Nicely written!!!
Yep- this right here. 👏👏👏
100% agree that shaming is wrong
You mentioned Newfies being stubborn-are there any videos you’re done on this? Loved this one - wish more dog trainers would concentrating on multiple dog households who have problems
Amen !
That Doberman never took his eyes off you 🥰 was so connected to you as if he was waiting for you to tell him what to do aww 🥰
I love how you tried to get aggressive dog group together possible, but they ended up being so relaxed and sweet and just chilling with each other😂
For anyone reading this: I know that dog training can be difficult sometimes, but you're doing great. Keep up the good work, and your dog (and your own sanity) will thank you for it! ❤️💕
What if there are two dogs (13year old dachshund) 4 year old Corgi,both males,about once a week the young Corgi jumps on the old dachshund and really gets at him,the dachshund has problems with his back by his tail so he can’t even fight back,and there is NO WARNING
@@coreybirmingham5497 I would recommend putting a leash on the corgi when they're together (even inside), and not letting him do that. Teach him a solid Place cue, so they can learn to be calm around each other. It's fine to let them play and interact, but you need to control the intensity to ensure that the Corgi is not putting the other dog (and himself) in a bad situation.
😢😢😢😢 thanks
@@beanburrito8903 you've got this. Puppyhood can be challenging for EVERYONE. Just hang in there. ❤️💕
I really needed this .. thank you
I am laughing because Misha had to be like oh shit what did I do. People need to notice how your three dogs were WATCHING JOEL. That is control. That is proof Joel knows what he is talking about. Great video.
AMEN! Glad to see a trainer who can actually handle big, independent dogs. I live in a “positive training only” hell. Works for things you WANT them to do, but sometimes my dog needs to hear NO. Thanks!!
Joel, I’m so happy that you call people out before they start shaming people or leaving negative comments. I don’t read comments anymore because it’s not worth my time. Keep doing what you do you’re helping so many!!!
So many people think their dogs are fighting when they are only playing. Some people can't recognize when a dog is bullying a submissive dog. And some people cannot recognize when a situation is escalating and can't intervene in time. This is a great topic. Thanks for this video.
Need this addressed for sure
That is for sure a problem there is definitely a huge difference in play fighting and real fighting. Real fighting produces wounds! My husband used to think that I was being dramatic when I said the dogs were fighting because he thought I didn't know the difference between play and fight until he was actually home once when I fight broke out. But in general when dad's home they don't do it!
Yeah, I’m interested in knowing how to spot the difference.
We have just introduced a third dog to the house and there is a lot of rough play/fights that I don’t like, but my partner says it’s just play.
My roommates dogs are sisters and they suddenly started viscously fighting when they’re near each other. I’m trying to find out how to re integrate them and fix this problem if possible
@@clarathompson3527when they are playing they tend to go for each other with a side mouth rather than full forward ..they back off, lower themselves them bounce up...thinkn ads playing rough with small kids, they bat at each other .... When its a fight they will snarl..with lip up at side showing long teeth and they don't back off for a moment.
My whole energy has gotten clearer learning about my dog. I’m having him wait at door each time he goes in and out, even when door is open. I dog sit a dog of same size (75lbs.). I am practicing these techniques with them both. Works great. When I correct them, I go get them and make them sit and stay for a bit. They are listening so much better now. Fascinating in practice. Thank you so much. I also like it Joel when you say, “you guys” when talking to your viewers.
Let’s go! This guy is the real deal, Straight to the point with clear concise instructions. Well done man 👏
Dobermans are by far the smartest breed I have ever owned! My Dobergirl learned most of the commands in one training session. She is 11 years old now but she remembers things from when she was a puppy. They are a phenomenal breed, and one that I cherish very much! Thank you Joel for all of the training videos you have produced. I have learned so much and you have made my training sessions more impactful!
Ruff housing allowed OCCASIONALLY with the males, supervised only although,the continued event with male 9 month mastiff wanting to push the female english bulldog by barking in her face, it is so wrong. I have not found a quick stop because it is during the excitement of play,getting up in morning or beginning a walk.The bulldog reaction is growl and snap and the big pup enjoys that and not getting hurt yet. HMMM PSYCHOLOGY ANYONE.
I agree Dobermans are super smar, used to own 3 of themt. We have 2 amazing German Pinchers that are just as smart. They look like Dobermans but are only 40 lbs, shorter & not as long.
10:05 'This dog, American Bulldog, is the most difficult out of these two breeds'
American bulldog: passed out on the floor 😂
Mr. Beckman is the only trainer I've ever followed where I have learned something new and helpful from every single video he puts out. Such great content, thank you so much!!!
Omg I really needed this video!! I have a 10month old Labrador who bullies my 9year old Lab. Both females but the senior is so submissive she never corrects the puppy for being too rough. Thank you for making this video!
Wow, we've trained our Belgian Malinois puppies today with this technique and I'm blown away!! I can't thank you enough!! ❤ Truly amazing, this is truly the best advice I've found on UA-cam/online so far. Thank you ❤
I feel so much better knowing I was doing this right prior to watching this video. My husband was like you are being mean. I’m like no I am being the boss I don’t have to say there names 5 times to get their attention I do exactly what he does when play gets to rough with my pittie I have 2 siblings and they play rough. I know by the sound and if it’s too much I just stop it and separate and they are fine. No blood no injuries. They listen to me immediately but it took time and practice especially as they are maturing. I’m glad I found these videos they are very helpful thanks!
Every dog owner needs to watch this. Enough with the positive reinforcement, overly lenient methods. As the owner you are the leader and it's your responsibility to establish order. Show love by teaching them and keeping them safe. The dogs wont hate you for it, they'll respect you and they will stop bad behaviour. Not so much because they are afraid of the punishment, but because they are afraid to disappoint you. At the end of the day they want to please you. You are their whole world and you love them
This guy knows what he’s talking about - SUBSCRIBED. I’m sick of seeing other so called celebrity dog trainers trying to correct serious behavioural issues in dangerous dogs by giving them a treat.
A few seconds in and tears
are rolled down my face. I felt like you are talking about me. I rescued 5 dogs
nobody wanted (dumped in front of my house/ found almost dead, handicapped
etc). For the first two years it all was ok. My Bailey (1st recue) was annoyed
by Molly (5th rescue/ roughly a year old back then) who was that overactive
puppy, lunging, nibbling, running into other dogs ( exactly like the white one
you showed in your video " Fix rough play before it becomes
aggression"). A friend of mine ( not anymore) adopted Molly after 2 month
and then dumped her back at my place 2 month later. For a while Bailey just ignored Molly who could not find
anybody to play with. 1 year later a Staffordshire from next door
got into our garden and all 6 dogs were fighting. It was a bloody mess with
lots of bad injuries). Since then I am traumatized. Another year later that overreactive behaviour of
Molly turned into aggression and she got into a bloody fight with Bailey. I had
to get him stitched back together. Back then Bailey (about 6years old at that
time) was not doing well and Molly saw her chance to dominate him. Before that
she just backed off when he was growling. I got bitten multiple times over the
years separating them. They keep attacking each other, they need separate areas. Since 3 years I have my home divided
in two areas. Molly (6) and Bailey (9) cannot be together and I have trouble
giving them all the same attention as I cannot cut myself in two. I have a big
garden and I know they need to get outside more beside that but unfortunately
they also don't like other dogs. There are so many free roaming dogs of
careless owners in our neighbourhood that I rarely walk them. Too much terror.
The ones staying at home never stop barking (another issue). One of my other
dogs ( handicapped bossy Panda) is also animating Molly in her aggression
towards other dogs. She just sees another dog and turns from the sweet people
loving girl into a T-Rex. I can hardly leave the house, work or see my family
in another country. It takes a toll on my health, my social life and I barely
have income. I am looking for online work as I am tight to the house. I had
quite some breakdowns, all alone overwhelmed with this situation. I once
thought no matter how difficult the situation is, I can handle it but I have to
admit I desperately need help. I dream of a life in peace with my happy 4 dogs
( one died 2 years ago at the age of 18). They need dog friends and have
adventures. We want to be able to sit all in one car and travel. I also want
them to be good with a dog sitter, so I can see my human family more often
(seen them 3 times in 8 years). We used to do hikes and beach walks before the
fights started. My dogs are my everything and I would never give them up.
NEVER! I do everything for them, we are family. I recently fell over your
videos and watch nonstop. I intuitively did a lot of these things already which
gives me confidence but it is a lot to fix here, not just the aggression. If
you are still reading, thank you for that. I did not want to flood you but had
to get rid of it! I am alone with it as I usually just get bad comments from
people advising me to give up on my dogs which is not an option! I gave them a
promises and I love them unconditionally! Bailey is 9 now and Molly about 6. I
have not given up hope! Thank you for not judging!
My heart breaks for you. You made your promises so that you can do this. Start Joel’s doorway method with one dog at a time, then move to the Loose Leash Walking method with the first dog you started with. Stick with each step of each video per dog until they have it down pat. Then go to the second dog and so on. It will take time, patience, and consistency, but mainly it will be your attitude. Say what you mean and mean what you say. You can do it. You have to find your bug attitude voice, or else it won't work. They want to know their boundaries. Don't we all want to know what is acceptable and what is not? We are all much happier knowing what the rules and boundaries are so we don't get into trouble. Agree? Tomorrow and the next day will go by whether you do nothing or put the work in. You will feel better as you will be doing something to change the situation. If what you are doing isn't working, change what you are doing. Get into the mindset. Make yourself. Good Luck. 🌟
@@User7688.--_ Beautifully said 🙏
Carry pepper spray for self defense and do you use a soft muzzle at home? It helps a lot with calming their mouthyness and aggression. Basket muzzles work too and even more effective
So how are things going now?
My situation is kind of like yours. Two dogs I love so much but they can't stand each other. Had Rue since he was a few weeks old, he is 5 now. Then got Luna in May '23. They got in with each other really well for 5-6 months, very happy. Then one day it all flipped and we've been trying to get them to calm since. They will tear each other apart.
We won't give Luna up, I love her and she is such a sweet girl.
Did you ever make any progress? I hope things are going better for you now
So glad I found your channel! We have a Aussie rescue was also per blue healer. Her name is Molly but she acts like Ma Barker. We recently adopted a very sweet little hound border collie mix. Seriously the sweetest thing. She bullies him all the time and it’s so ugly. She also bullies other dogs and has bit me once. I tried all the sweet and nice training tricks on the Internet and finally found your UA-cam channel. Once I started growling telling her no and getting up, she started surrendering right away and the behaviors cutting back already. Thank you for being brave enough to share this training with the world.
Thank you for this video and for the disclaimer in the beginning. Not to shame this woman! Bless her heart for rescuing these dogs and she's taking the proper steps to try to fix the problem!
Joel, I have a pit/shep mix that I adopted in Sep'22 and luckily I found your videos. Since he hit 4 months we've been using your methods and I get many many compliments at the dog park about how my 7-month old pup is so well behaved. The no nonsense style clicked with me (and my dog) right away -- we really appreciate the information you're sharing.
At least this lady tried to fix the problem and actually reached out for help! Too many people are too quick to just get a dog, hit an issue and get rid and pass that dog on to someone else. Often anyone else! Which creates more problems because that dog then ends up passed about without anyone helping to train that dogs issues.
Thank you Beckman, I have a small refuge and have suffered with fights all the time, suck sadness to see them fight and want to kill or many ganging up on one, THANK YOU YOUR HELPING ME KEEP GOING FORWARD! 🙏 THANK YOU YOU LITERALLY SAID THE TRUTH. THANKS BLESSINGS BROTHER
It is awesome how theses three pups are listening to you. Like well mannered students in the classroom.
Thanks for this Joel. I forwarded this video to my colleague who had asked me how to handle 1 of his 3 dogs. He ended up watching a bunch of your other videos and said you have really great tips and tricks.
Can you believe I'm here because of two 6 month old pugs fighting. Mainly resource guarding but lately, the female will just start bickering at the male when we're just chilling on the couch. Will definitely start to implement this, great video.
Your methods are the best and logical approach to dog training. My family always owned akitas and this way of being with the dogs was the way we had always done it since they arent always the friendliest, and other family owned other strong breeds. At one point we had to foster my aunts akita, who was a good girl, but our akita at the time was not, she was a dog fighter. They had a few real bad fights, but overall we used the same militant type methods and those 2 could be loose in the house in the same rooms without trying to kill eachother. As long as not a crumb of food was involved it was alright. Still had to separate them even to bring in groceries from the car, but that was good enough considering a fight usually involved choking out, hose blasts, even pepper spray from a cop once, and then a vet visit.
But this type of training is why one day when I was walking my reactive akita and an Australian shepherd that had got out of his fence and ran right up to my akita face to face, she did not attempt to kill the aussie, she could have but didn't. I was a teen, my dog was twice the size, but the respect she had for me override and one good "CHT!" and she stood there like a statue while I shooed the other dog away. I'll never forget that feeling of being out in the wild worst case scenario, and frankly at first being pretty scared of a potential fight, but knocked that off in my head and went to calm assertive and still having full control. That was it for me, I felt like if I could do that I could do anything
WOW, we introduced a rescue puppy Cocker Spaniel with out 4 year old Scottish Border Collie. They have been fighting since the CS arrived, three months ago. Found this video........ after watching the video I followed your advice. It just works, they now exist in the house together without fighting and we took this into the garden........ it works there too. The CS has puppy zoomies and the BC just sits and watches. This morning we took them onto our village green and they just ran around with each other......... THANKS :)
Hey Joel. I had to dogsit 2 young dogs for a friend yesterday and just wanted to give a big thank you! Normally when those dogs are together at my house, it's non stop barking and fighting. It also gets my dog all riled up. I used what you taught and it was so peaceful yesterday. ❤
don't shame anyone. Great advice. I love this part. It's so true.
I love the lack of judgement. Reason doesn’t matter end of day. Because if her the dogs are with someone who wants them when they could be sitting in a shelter and instead of being like I can’t handle this they’re going she is trying to fix it. Respect to her and to you.
Zepplin so good!!!! definitely these vids can be watched over & over & continue to learn🤗❤️🐾
i learned this from watching Cesar long ago his first shows. finger jabs, toe kicks to 'snap them out of that bad behavior moment' thanks for this refresher.
Love this video. I'm a dog walker and my client's wonderful pup began getting aggressive only when I was with their 3 dogs. Did not do it with the pet parents at all. I asked them if I could implement this technique and they happily obliged (and said they would as well, if it happened when they're at home). Thanks so much!
Thank you for this education! I started taking control the way you directed. Wow. Have I seen a change in my 3 shitzu’s and 10 month old poodle. The female Shitzu was the problem which caused the poodle puppy to react. I created the Shitzu monster. So I am correcting the problem I created. Really is working! Really can’t thank you enough! I’m the boss.
I don’t even own a dog, but I love learning all of the things you have to offer. I hope that one day I won’t be working such long hours that I can justify getting a dog, because I really miss having dogs around.
That day will come, for now enjoy watching Joel vids ☺️☺️☺️
You HAVE to get up and get to the dogs when they misbehave. My new dog loves jumping on counters and stuff, and nothing changed when I just yelled HEY and didn't get up. When I did, and punished him for it after the HEY, he learned.
Hi Joel, your technique for the four dogs works. I personally have four dogs and when and if they fight I’ve always done this procedure even before I knew it was a technique I only did it because it worked. Nice to know I was doing it correctly. Love your channel and keep up the excellent work.
They did well taking 1 for the team thanks Joel
I have a German Shepard, a Pit Terrier, an Australian Shepherd, and a Corgi. All of them are SO good-except the Corgi. He’s a little pain in the ass, and jumps and bullies all the other dogs-AND ME! This method is REALLY working!!! I feel like I’m actually getting my control, and my home back. Thank you!
Thanks for direction. I have a 20month old female (spayed) doberman, and a 17wk GSP male. They have been best buddies, inseparable, sleeping together, playing, laying, etc now the doberman is sick of this puppy and is snarling and jumping on him constantly (no hard biting, looks controlling). It seems to have happened overnight. I know the sneaky GSP is challenging her, hes extremely confident, but my husband doesn't see it. Therefore, we've been at odd on how to handle this. The female has been the easiest dog to train, like you said, smart, quick. She is now disturbed and tense all the time. We've got to become very dominant over this situation. I hope I can get my him to watch this. We have to be in agreement. Things could get out of hand. And besides, I miss my peaceful home!
I have 4 chiweenies 2 are female littermates that are not spayed. I have the mom ( not spayed) and the dad who is neutered now too. Everything you explained is what I do and they all get along extremely well. The female littermates are so well behaved too they are better then there parents no joke. No fighting I feed them all next to eachother. Thank you for telling people this. It's very important!
Really enjoying your videos Joel. Your style of training is exactly what dog owners need to see.
I try and remind my clients with breeds known for being “challenging” that in the animal kingdom the top dog is ruler of the house, enforcer of the rules etc. Consistency and follow up is key.
Our relationship with our dogs require more than love and food; rules and structure truly enhance that relationship.
So true. They need to know they don’t have to fight to be safe. That they will always have you to protect them from harm. They can actually relax more when the owner is in control
I cant tell you how much I appreciate this video!! 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Joel, I am so glad to be following you. I am a mostly positive dog trainer and have a couple of clients that need this training. They have no obedience training either so we're coming in from behind the 8 ball. But this is good stuff. Thank you.
Loved watching these 3 dogs you trained just hanging out, they were so tuned into you! just shows such good training!
So happy I found this. I adopted a dane/mastiff from the shelter. Took a while to integrate her with my very docile Dane. They got along great... for awhile. Then suddenly a very major fight that ended up both dogs at vet. Lots of stitches and drains.
Are they still aggressive with each other?
We recently got a frenchie who got along with our bulldog. Recently they fought and now the frenchie can’t see her or any other dog because she wants to fight fight her.
@@aldoromero7894 the dane , Skye, is very cautious of the dane/mastiff, Piper. Piper just watches the Skye waiting for her to make the wrong move. I keep them separated when I am not home. When I am home I just make sure they don't come face to face. I think their relationship ship is permanently damaged.
This video is amazing. I’ve watched a few other videos and they never really gave an answer. They just said it situational followed by no explanation or real remedy.
This was very helpful! I have 4 dogs and only two of them fight with each other from time to time. This weekend was the worst one. Resulted in me getting 3 stitches in my finger and taking one of them to the vet. Ive had someone tell me this week I need to take control of their behavior. And this is what I needed! Thank you!
And it doesn't matter if she rescued them or not, like my guys I've had since they were 7 weeks old, doesn't mean they still won't have issues. The pup at 14 months old thought he would try to take over. They can now be in the same room without muzzles, they just have to be calm. It helps when they get out on their own individual walk too. That means 3 walks for me. Try to vary who goes first so the same dog doesn't get you when you're tired from the other walks. My Red Zeppelin is the 4 yr old red Dobe, (Zepp for short), full brother to the 2 yr old Zoso, and a Beagle/JRT mix Female. Zeppelin is very laid back but wasn't going to let the pup take over either. We separated them via Baby gates from the time it happened. I still have to do things in a certain order so they can all chill in the same room. The exercise definitely helps and not rehearsing the aggression. Every single time they do, it's like a huge set back. Working on the back yard with muzzles on everyone. Short sessions at first. Finally got a play bow in the house by Zeppelin to Zoso. Have also found from another trainer to work obedience almost exclusively on the one that's not confident - in this case the growler, Zoso. Hope to start doing Agility with the pup soon too. Of course, the instructors he's had other classes with just don't see the aggression. Zepp avoids, avoids, avoids, until he's done or I step in. Have also taught both dogs to look away (from each other).
Glad to hear you talk about your experience/ we are doing walks together with the dogs that fought, Rev and Winter then another separate one with the chihuahua - Dink. It’s a lot. Just getting to the point that we are ready fingers crossed- to reintroduce Rev and Winter with muzzles on out back. It’s just like- man, it’s a lot. I’m learning so much from this channel and Joel- and I like hearing from others how they are working with their packs. 💗 so thanks again for sharing.
A question for Joel- after Winter lunged at and got a good hold on Rev ‘s neck - with all the growling and noise that goes along with it- he FREAKS OUT on walks now when walking past a fenced dog, or a dog on the other side of the street. We are walking Rev and Winter together- and he does it when it’s just him alone too- any ideas or thoughts to “shake” him out of that? Would love to hear that addressed or a video - even just a talking vid like this one - may be hard to recreate with the guys you’ve got there/ but it would really be appreciated 👍
Not sure how to reply to just one person, but have commented before on one of the other videos. My Beagle/JRT Mix's revert to mode is barking. At home I taught her sneezes when we first got puppies so I could praise good sneezes. On walks if I catch her before she starts barking, we're good. Am always scanning so I can say No bark or we're going home, before she sees something. The very first time you say it though, you have to follow through. Too bad, walk's over. Then the next walk, usually all you have to say is no bark or the walk is over. Your choice. It's like they actually start thinking about it. Do I want to keep walking? Is the bark worth it? Now, with dogs in their own yard, I say No bark, he's doing his job. That's his house. You would do the same thing if that was your yard. It's like they start thinking - oh yeah, you're right. Should they bark, same consequence, walk's over until the next time, maybe not til the next day even.
If you know what you're doing and working with a dog from a puppy age, assuming the animal is properly socialized, this shouldn't be an issue. Correct issues as soon as they come up and you become cognizant of problem behavior.
With rescued animals you often don't know what you're getting and you have to work a lot harder to correct certain behaviors, it may be impossible to completely eliminate some of them. Still, they deserve a chance so props to people who adopt rescues.
I’m so glad it’s not just me that has to go on several walks lol I have 2 pittie and that means 2 walks. Hell I’m tired by the end lol
Joel your advice has been invaluable when it kicks off there's no giving them a high value treat. I don't want to shock them to be even more reactive. I have been following this advice and I am noticing an improvement, early days, and it may have to be boot camp for a long while, but we'll make it
If people would also train their kids like this! 100% follow through! I love this and it is a helpful reminder even with one dog, 100% follow through!!
Thank you for being clear behavior of the dogs and what is needed to be done 👍
So glad I came across this video. This makes more sense than any other video I’ve watched to try to stop dogs from REALLY fighting and hopefully keep my Red Healer and Australian Shepherd from hurting each other more than they have already as well as prevent any further harm to those around them. They have caused all sorts of injuries to themselves. I’ve been trying all sorts of tactics including rewards, exercising, kenneling. last night they got in a bad fight that injured themselves and even worse my two girls when they tried to separate them and I came across this video. I was beginning to think the only way to settle it was to let them fight it out to let them establish who is the alpha instead of breaking it up just to have them fight again later. The entire family has watched this and we have all been doing our best to implement this with the elements you mentioned. It makes sense, we are very hopeful that this will do it.
Thanks for the video.
Thank you so much for your videos, I just discovered them and am implementing tmrw. I was on a Facebook group and got judged very harshly for having a puppy. Judgement free zone is exactly what I needed to see.
Oh man, I needed this video. I've got a 3 year old female who is getting aggressive with our younger female and I'm the sitting parent that yells hey.
i love how real this video is it really helped with my three dogs
Thank you so much for this video. I have had my dog si se she was a pup, almost 9 years now, and a dog in need showed up on my door step. My dog is a schnauzer pit mix and can be territorial at times, but she wants to play with other dogs… but she has a habit of snapping. The new dog is a pit, she’s been in the house for a week, and is incredibly calm, but she is ALL MUSCLE! My dog doesn’t stand a chance if things went south. I am preparing to introduce them. They have smelled each other before, did okay, then showed some aggression, but both dogs responded to me on day one. I didn’t want to spend the time at first because I was trying to find owners. It’s been a week now and I’m in love with the new dog, and I want to keep her, and Penelope needs a friend if she can figure out her stuff. I have purchased muzzles and I am working on both dogs accept the muzzles with positivity and treats, both have responded well. We are taking the dogs to the park tomorrow in separate cars foe introductions. I’ve been binge watching you today! I don’t want to miss a que! And I want to do this right. Both dogs see me as alpha and listen to me very well. I’m going to give them plenty of separate time in the house after introductions and completely supervised together time. Any other tips? Am I missing anything?
Oh my goodness! That doberman is adorable. After the first correction, he was like; "I'm a good boy! I don't know about that other dog, but I'm a good boy for sure!"
Oh thank you for this video! I have 6 Australian Shepherd’s and 2 of them have attitude problems! This video is wonderful! Yes I live on 11 acres, but they fight in my living room for no good reason.
Thank you!
Run the dogs or the dogs run you-esp if you’ve got tenacious dogs or challenging breeds. Thank you for the straight talk Joel!
thank you for this, i have a 5 year old boy that i picked up on side of the road at Christmas about 4 years ago. He's my baby, goes to work with me and everything, he's about 35lbs, he's some mix of hound dog. the closest breed I've ever found is a pharaoh hound. now about 2 years ago i also rescued a 4month old German Shepard, Malinois and rottweiler mut mix. so for the first year it was just these two, unneutered boy dogs. they were doing great because the youngest hadnt went through dog puberty yet..... now, about 6 months ago i rescued an old, very old, female Australian shepard on Easter. she basically has no teeth and is half blind but when i found her, she had been laying in the same spot on the side of a dirt road for about 7 hours, covered in dirt and ticks/fleas. i took her to a vet and now her old butt is thriving.
now recently, my two males, aged 4 1/2 and about 2, are fighting. well, i think the younger one is just being aggressive and trying to take over dominance of the older boy. they have gotten into fights before but nothing like what happened last week. they all 3 sleep with me and have always doing pretty good considering we live in a small house with my teenage son. it was morning and i had the 2 boys standing next to my bed, wagging their tails and i was petting them both. out of nowhere when the older one bent over to sniff the younger ones toes, the younger one snapped. he grabbed my older boy by the side of his neck so i had to jump in between them. i pulled the younger one off almost immediately but he had already managed to break the older ones skin near and on his poor ear. not to mention after i pulled them apart, i got bit at least 4 times in various places. im 33, 110lb old lady. thank God my 14yr old is homeschooled and was able to put the younger one in a chokehold and take him outside. and since then, the younger one literally starts snarling and growling sometimes when he sees the older one.
the old one is just terrified i think. now, the older one who isnt extremely old, will immediately raise his hair anytime he sees the younger one but i try to think its out of fear. the older one has always been a scaredy cat seriously. but he has walked past the younger one with his hair raised and the younger one will pay no attention but its like every so often the younger one snaps. and the younger one is a menace and he definitely has the protector and hunter side of him. He killed a full grown male deer about 6 months ago... so my older boy would be dead in no time if the younger one ever had the opportunity and wanted to.
im going to start doing what you taught in this video.. i guess i wanted to ask how you feel about muzzles? i was thinking about getting one, [possibly 2, and make both males wear them at first] and then trying to let them interact and use the techniques you showed if they act aggressive? but we have a big area for them to be outside and yesterday we took the younger one to the river to swim and play all day because i was thinking maybe he was just jealous of the older one getting to go to work with me everyday. he really is a very good, sweet dog the younger one. hes actually my sons dog and the older male is mine. i really wish i would have introduced them from the beginning so i wouldnt have had to keep using younger and older dog but i honestly didnt intend to write this much. the younger one is Snoopy and the older one is Charlie.. charlie had his name when i found him and we named snoopy.. we call him Snoopy-poopy lol hes crazy.
thank you and God bless.
I think it would be good to do a video showing the signs that the dogs are going to fight. Also I wanted to tell you one of my neighbors complimented me on how my pitbull no longer drags me around! Yay! 🐾 I told him about ur videos!!!
You said it so right! Admirable!
This is the situation, this is what you have to do.
Practise is the mother of learning, they say.
I applied some of your techniques to our huskyta (a mix between a Husky and an Akita), such a clever boy! But also disrespectful sometimes and we need consistency. I gladly say your techniques improved him a lot and he start to got it! Work in progress 💪
I admire your work! Happy I found you.
Hi Joel!! Amazing video!!! I have recommended your channel to a guy who has been struggling with his dominant Rottweiler puppy that he paid $3,000 for and another $1,700 for dog obedience training sessions.❤
11:46 The look on your face, as you watch Zeppelin walk straight to the bed like a Good Boy, is absolutely priceless. I've never seen the concept of ". . ." so perfectly demonstrated on a human face :D
I think also after that, he says "bed" like 5 times talking and the dog is looking like "is that for me?". The he says "ZEPPELIN you're smartest dog I've ever seen" 12:06 , and he goes "oh that is for me" and goes to the bed.
@@coast2coast00 I went back and re-watched just to see that and it's hilarious :D
Awww all of them are all so cute, playful and obedient 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰 i agree, we have 3 GSDs and we treat and discipline them like children and kids, and they are well mannered and trained.
I am in the same situation, took dogs in who were on the street and in trouble and the local shelters were not taking dogs. Two had litters on the street in the middle of winter. Thankfully when I was younger I did rehab with Pitbulls so I know the drill. Stay calm, move with confidence, make yourself bigger by standing, allow no argument when they are asked to do something. Follow through until they do as they are asked and are calm and submissive.
Watch body language, the dog will tell you when the are ready to fight.
My headache right now is a labsky who every now and then thinks he's boss, but we are working through it and now 98% of the time he is perfect.
She deserves a award for the most patient dog owner in the world.
Got my 4.5 year old heeler & new rescue 7 month old saluki to the dog park this morning. My new rescue was fantastic. Had fear going in, but we broke thru that.. but good lord my older dog could not stop mounting. I had to leash five times to calm him. & even then had numerous corrections while on leash. Was thankful the other 12 dogs & parents appreciated the correction. Had one parent even say he was prior animal control & that ppl are too forgiving with dogs & it creates bad habits & it always leads to him being called. Such a great mix of dogs there, puppies to elder. Very cool!
They’re going to take one for the team 😂 love how you show us everything even if it doesn’t present itself
Anybody who thinks Joel is just "mean to dogs" needs to see how awkward and apologetic he comes across while using these three as his examples. He even acknowledges "they're not being harmed by this", but still gives the impression that he feels pretty bad for demonstrating corrections on dogs that aren't doing anything wrong. The dogs, for their part, just seem a little confused, but certainly not devastated :D
Another great video from Beckman's Dog Training, my partner I had four dogs at one time and they were fighting as well. We had a collie, pit bull, english bulldog, and a great pyrenees. Big guys and gals. We hired a trainer and they taught us a lot of the same things Joel does, intervening right before it was about to happen. The things I want add to this video are that we had to establish a pack order. So, like Joel touched on in the video, WE are the pack leader, and then we ranked each dog in order of when they were acquired. Then, we had to establish that order for everything we did. Everything. How you greet them, how you let them in and out of the door for potty breaks, how we feed them (this was big) how we give them treats, everything. We started walking them one at a time in order, things like that (we eventually walked all four together). Our trainer suspected they were bucking for position which may have been where the fights were coming from. By doing all this, we were constantly reinforcing their position in the pack. The fights stopped very quickly and it just made having the pack that much more enjoyable. Everyone was more happy when they knew their place. It was empowering for us, and you could see the dogs begin to relax and just enjoy being a dog in the pack. It was very militant as Joel said, especially in the beginning, but it paid dividends. Breaking up dog fights in your living room really sucks. Thanks for the video and I hope the lady with her four dogs is making progress and finding solutions ❤
This has helped me so much with my border collie and my boxer foster. Thank u so much.
Yes of course! 🤦🏽♀️ I know this, I just got lazy in my old knee surgery age. I can do this I KNOW this for Pete’s sake! Thank you for reminding me. 🙏
I could literally cry. Thank you. I needed this.
We have the exact same problem with 2 boxers. 2 fights on Easter Day and 6 bandages to hand trying to separate them. Your Visio is spot on, thanks for the info.
Couple things i want to note. Everything you said is true. Points is "be the boss" so many people don't " take control" for fear of being "mean" . My wife i s guilty. That said i rescued a pitty that just couldnt be broke. My charlie dog is good untill a snap. Tried for months to curb the pitties behavior, nothing worked. Finally had to surrender him to a rescue. Finally i think most people are scared if dogs fight and unable to walk into them. Rendering them incapable of correcting correctable behavior. Ive been around ambulls my whole life and for the most part be in control and have social dogs. The pittie and another the exception. My point. The owner/handler needs to be alpha
Key phrase is it has to be "militant style", majority of people do not do things 100%, and really believe they did everything they could!
"Short term pain, long term gain" relatively speaking!
Or admit you aren't willing to do 100%!
I like that "Short term pain...long term gain"
Lovely dogs, so well focused! Zeppelin eats up your every word! Einstein would be a better name for him!
THANKYOU IM ON TARGET,,uk kez here ,,i got a 6 to 7 year old jack russle terrier,,got a new puppy as my nephew needed a home for him,,all gr8 till the jack attacted the bill dog XL,,
for months jack is a rescue dog,,,but now bailet the bully not taking shit no more,,bull has attact the jack 2 times both i got in between them ending in my hand getting the the end of it as so the jack russle ,,,this is gr8 glad ifound you,,,,
100%. I have two boys: a husky mix and a husky malamute. They are both young 2 years and 18 months old. Thanks to these videos they are doing pretty good. I've learned a lot and I would love to come visit, but we are too far away. So thanks for the videos. This technique is so important in our house. I didn't even know it was a technique, but my dogs need me to let them know when they are going too far. I was just doing it naturally, by chance. I'm so happy to feel like I have permission to tell them to stop. The only problem is my hubby gets mad at me because it startles him sometimes. I've kept it up anyway and the dogs don't ever escalate into a fight. I'm also concerned that if they are allowed to play rough at home they'll do the same thing at a dog park or when friend's dogs come over. Both dogs have been attacked at the dog park. I think it partly because other owners think their dogs won't bite and don't understand the warning signs. I've started stepping up for my boys at the park or just leaving when I see things starting to go wrong. There are some dogs (not mine) that are known to bite other dogs, but the owners keep bringing them to the park, regardless. Again I just leave and don't interact if possible. We can always go for a nice walk.
I love the "be the fricken boss!" and take control. I agree!! It's a pack of animals, not a kindergarten class. Here's our situation. We rescue and foster abused French Bulldogs. We currently have 5 in the house. Our raised-from-puppy boy (3.5 yrs old) and our foster grandpa (around 8 yrs old) and who has now become comfortable with us and the home after about 6 mos, are now fighting regularly. Grandpa is pretty clearly "claiming" us and is not happy with the other two that we raised from puppies. The fighting is mainly between the two boys. The 4 year old female and Grandpa tolerate, barely, they have fought before but not nearly as often as he does with the 3.5 year old male. Here's my question: we clearly see the body language "gear up" to fight. It's literally simultaneously between both. Can't tell who exactly elevates first. I have been doing what you explain even before I found your videos. As soon as I notice, I'm up quickly, HEY! CLAP! Spray bottle with water! Air horn.... we've tried it all. Used to work. Now doesn't. Now my forceful intervention to stop it before they launch seems to trigger them so they can get into it BEFORE I can get to them. Not sure what to do now. Any suggestions? Right now we just crate and rotate but MUST find a solution. We'd like to keep the 8 year old rescue but this is a huge roadblock that developed since he became comfy in our house. Thanks!!! Todd C
I like this video. I have two male Siberian Huskies and one tends to be a handful. They are a month apart in age and had gotten I to it a couple of times in the past. I worked hard to establish being the alpha and they know when they are being bad and when I’m getting involved. I show them that I’m more dominant then them. My older one has been getting trained by me since I got him at 8 weeks old and he just turned 1. We have an amazing bond.
Good video and a good talk. :) Thank you doggo's for taking one for the team. :)
I just want to say how happy I am to hear such wonderful advice. God bless you my good man. I don't even believe in God and I have to say you are doing the Lord's work.
You give me hope 🙏
Thanks
Real advice
It’s nice to let the dogs know that you make the house rules, with out being a jerk! Just being clear boundaries . 👍
I had a female spayed Bullmastiff & a neutered male American Bulldog that got along great…I then rescued a spayed female Bullmastiff! She liked the other Bullmastiff but was always ready to attack the American Bulldog. He’d just walk by her & she’d attack! One day I was getting ready to feed them & had two stainless steel bowls in my hand, Gracie (Bullmastiff) went after Dempsey ( American Bulldog). I had had enough & so I came down on their heads with the bowls as hard as I could. This stopped the fight immediately…I never had to break up a fight again, not even growls! I became the character the dogs needed, at the time, (militant, loving, teacher etc) No food aggression, we all walked at the same time (other dogs would run out on the sidewalk after them…they knew better than to fight.) I’m the boss & it was my job to handle things! My Bullmastiff’s played like gladiators but, I could sense when to intervene! Joel, you’re right…it’s about being diligent & in charge! My 3 dogs weighing 375 pounds became best friends!
Aww how good is Zeppelin?!
Thank you for this, we had a trainer in to help , one session and he showed me where I was going wrong. He's very similar to you (I'm in UK so defo couldn't afford to have you over haha)
Such practical, sound advice. Our 2 male Bostons (ages 3 and 1 1/2) will get too rough and aggressive during play. I’ve been using a squirt bottle which effectively stops it for the moment, but doesn’t prevent it.
Hopefully this will teach them to play nice from the get-go. Most of the time they get along well, but they’re both pretty competitive.
Thanks again for this helpful direction. 😊
Thank you so much for the great guidance. It really points me in the right direction. I have a 2 1/2 year old lab - the soul of gentleness -- and a 3 1/2 month old rescue mix (border collie/pit bull mix), which I got a month ago. I was told to let my lab teach the puppy dog behavior skills, that the lab would let the puppy know when she crosses the line, such as nip her too hard. Well, I've been doing that, and a month into it, the puppy is really crossing the line, in my human opinion. She is constantly going after my lab, grabbing her by the ears and lips and jowls, biting at her legs, to the point that she cries out. My lab just does not have the temperament to protect herself. So, I decided that I need to intervene - maybe allow a little playful nipping, but intervene and set limits as soon as I see that it's escalating. Your video helped me know exactly how to go about it. Thank you. Very much appreciated!
My partner & I have a 5yr old GSD/Mastiff & 11m old Pitbull- both male, both unaltered until next month. The GSD mix resource guards food & toys, but recently has started attacking the pitbull for running past him . I know it’s an attack because he doesn’t growl or make eye contact- he goes after his throat & shakes. He stops as soon as we say hey! Or No!. But the challenge has been stopping it, before he attacks.
Oh man I love your training I am going to start with this video training thank u so much I have two Chinese. Sharpei girls I had them both since they where babys one is suki she is almost 2 and one is Kim yo she is 15 months old and they where complety fine 1 month ago till suki had to have eye surgery now they fight everyday all day .. And by your video I have been doing it wrong by keeping them apart one in one room one in another room for about 3 weeks so now that I know I am doing it wrong I am going to do it right .. Thank the lord for people like u who take the time to help us .. Much love
I have a 10 year old lab, an 8 year old Maltese and a 6 month lab pup. Pup wants to dominate the Maltese. Pup respects older lab . I correct the pup when i see her trying to cut the Maltese off from where he wants to walk , etc using your method, but when I look out the window the pups hackles are up and she's playing the bully game. How do I embed respect in her when I'm too far away in the moment to intervene/correct? At times they play OK, and will lick each others faces when lying down, but then pup gets rambunctious and the same syndrome plays out. The Maltese is a nervous dog to begin with. LOVE your videos, and you probably won't see this comment, but asking anyway in hopes that you do.Love and respect from the land down under.
Thank you so much! I brought a rescue from the pound home (female who just got spade while she was still in heat)and the initial meet and greet with my other two dogs (both male one intacked and the other neutered) went well. Then two days later my rescue female attacks my older neutered male and went straight for the neck, luckily the wounds were superficial. They be been doing this all day with them and she immediately submits.
Zeppelin!
What a great name for a beautiful baby 🐶❤️
Thank you for this instruction, I have two unneutered dachshunds and we have regular fights - I am going to follow this and will report back - thank you very much
I rescued two dogs one is a Cur dog I think a hunting dog and the others a German shepherd and I have never had dogs before and the alternative would have been both of them would have been put to sleep. I appreciate the information you share!
Fantastic video! I love your approach and content. I definitely need your help with my dogs.