0:01 *Pain* or *Uncomfortableness* : choose your sensation 0:16 Prince tries to take a leak and is interrupted by a little bit over zealous Golden retriever (Joel stands by leaning on the fence putting out the vibe with his dorky treat pouch) 0:21 body language slow-mo.explanation 1:02 Prince is distraught from stopping his stream early and uses the "umbrella technique" in an effort to get the Golden to knock himself out on a pole 1:39 Nobody puts Princey in the corner! Prince tries a slick southpaw jab but Pusher the Golden slips it 2:21 Pusher tries to sneak a cheap shot in as Prince trots by the fence to gain an advantage 2:53 teaching spatial boundaries one closed mouth at a time 3:20 GO-GO Gadget- helicopter tail 3:31 Joel Talking really fast to pimp his training programs 3:58 A month later.....Pusher comes back and Prince @ 4:05 gives him the ole' Rick James. *SLAP!* 5:18 learning some act right 5:32 Prince steps on The Pushers head briefly but he's Golden, he ain't havin' none of that 6:07 Joel admits that the dog park is an ok place if your crafty 6:14 Prince practicing his break dance moves because he saw Dad doing the robot a week ago 6:44 good rough doggy play 7:27 The Golden baits Prince to jump into the pool so he can drown him 7:44 If you wear roses on your eyes the thorns will blind you eventually 8:10 People with perfect dogs and kids are the worst!
I appreciate your knowledge and expertise in your chosen subject area, Joel, (not to mention the camerawork and editing) but the real star of this show is Prince. 😛Such a beautiful, intelligent and athletic dog. His training really shows through. One of the best channels on UA-cam. Thank you.
Prince planting his head on the ground is adorable and hilarious. I haven't seen a video of Prince playing like this, I highly enjoyed it! And what a difference neutering did to the golden!
Another awesome video. These videos remind me so much of watching Cesar Milan for the first time. Seeing a trainer use these same methods and none of that treat BS or coddling a dog. This is the only way to see results. Allowing dogs to do what they do and intervene when things are ABOUT to go too far not when they've already gone too far.
Joel is always on top of things, even when it seems like he's not paying attention - he is and stops stuff BEFORE anything happens. Cesar has a vet on call and seems to have lots of fights - just sayin'.
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! ❤️💕
Awe, that's so sweet of you to want to give encouragement to everyone that reads your comment and the Lupercalia symbols are so appropriate with dog people😂 I would recommend not telling "anyone reading this" that they're doing great and that they and their dog will thank them. Not only is that untrue (as many people here don't even own a dog) but many are not doing great and they're here trying to learn how to do great, but your sentiments are so, so self-rewarding. You probably felt so squishy and lovey when you tapped send 😂😂😂
@underduress5761 Thanks! As you said, the fact that they're here watching dog training videos says that, even those who aren't doing great, are still trying to improve. In my mind, "doing great" means trying to get better with each step. They may not "be great" yet, but they're doing what's necessary to become great, and that deserves applause. Just trying to spread some positivity. 🐶❤️
@@SomeMinorDogTraining Not true. Apart from the fact that there are people that read your comment That don't train dogs and don't even have dogs, there are also those that come here to attempt to vilify Joel and they do not want to learn the right way to train. But at least you make yourself feel like you're a positive person...love, love, love 🤦♂️
@@underduress5761 I'm not sure why you have such a problem with someone trying to spread positivity, especially in an industry that's so filled with in-fighting and negativity. There are a lot of people who DO watch these videos to learn and grow, and, unfortunately, the Internet doesn't allow for me to ONLY show comments to those people. And, because there's so much negativity in dog training, those people who ARE trying don't get that encouragement. BUT.... Because there are some people who may view the comment but aren't actually trying to better themselves, you're saying that those that ARE trying shouldn't get that encouragement. That's what I mean about the negativity. God forbid someone tries to be nice. 🤷🏾♂️🙄
4:48 This is my sister's dog. Exact same problem with a side of fear strangely enough. We love him, but he has a jerky side and will mess with dogs that he knows he can out pace or out nimble because he's so athletic. Our older dog who just passed was an amazing helper dog and kept him in check if around, but since he's gone, that extra help is also gone. But we're doing our best. The next step for him is to be neutered as well to help curve that jerky behavior. Awesome work, as always!
So fun to watch, thanks for pointing out the subtle stuff. Awesome to see Prince bringing the best out of another awesome dog. It’s like this dog wants to be king of the school yard. Prince is like “nah, that’s my job . . . but you can be my side-kick”. The other dog responds “hmmm, yeah - ok” 😂. Would love to hear more about rope-a-dope some time please. 6:52 - looks like some corn-cobbing from Prince? - that’s kinda cool to see. I gotta say, I’m missing the podcasts (but totally understand you’re super busy) 🙂.
This was how my dog was. I would discipline him but it was covid and social distancing so no other dog put him in his place in his teenage year. Now he is so alpha and dominant I don't let him off leash without muzzle on
Thanks for all the helpful videos over the years! The recall go-get was a game changer. Does anyone have any links or helpful advice for dog-dog resource guarding? I’m currently doing counter conditioning exercises but if there’s anything supplementary out there would love to hear of some other methods. Thanks!
This is the stuff I get hung up on, because I want my dogs to be able to play and rough house, but I can't tell what is playful from what is bad manners and I'm afraid of it escalating out of my control.
I've got the same thing going on. My golden is 9 months, and I'm watching my dads 7 year old aussie. The golden, still being a pup, almost demands to be played with and she'll bark at or harrass him. Sometimes he engages sometimes he doesn't and i give it time to see if she takes the hint, which she usually does but sometimes I have to do what joel did and grab her and and get her to knock it off. But after some time the aussie finally started to let loose and they play so hard and so long now. But now the new problem is how far do I let it go because they'll start nipping eachother too hard and one will let out a faint cry but they seem to respect the warning, and I'm trying to let the older dog correct the younger dog as long as he doesn't looked like hes stressed or uncomfortable. Which he's usually game, but then they escalate till ears are getting chomped and thats where I draw the line. But I'm conflicted, do I let the 2 rough players play rough, or should I be reeling in the golden more often. Shes super friendly but she comes on strong to other dogs because shes just ready to go go go. So I'm trying to nail down the manners of approaching exciting things like animals and people with respect lol
Same here it’s hard to distinguish rough play and bad mannerisms my boy is very playful and gets really excited and gets all up in they’re face but he doesn’t growl or show aggression, he does smell them and hyperly go around them then back up to face wanting to play but the way he does it seems to be not respecting his or her boundaries at times. I figure that’s how dogs are and if there’s no aggression they’re cool but there’s times to where that’s not the case I don’t understand how it went from cool to almost getting into a fight.
@@whatsthekeytothekeykatI'd let them play until you see something that's obviously too much for one dog or the other and they don't naturally back off a touch. That's when you may intervene. This is really dependant on the breeds, dog and how well you know them I think. Trick is I think your tone when you stop WrestleMania. Don't make it so it's the end of the world. I rung the bell, rounds over for now...that's it. No harm no discipline
If they're your dogs, let them play. Dogs play pretty rough with each other as seen here. K'eyush and his friend who recently passed away, Sherpa, in their compilation, have their teeth on each other in fairly vicious looking expressions in nearly every photo. If one of the dogs starts a yap or whine or goes to their bed or crate, it's evident they've had enough as is a growl or snarl.
Dear Joel: Thank you for this excellent play-by-play analysis! With the slow-mo, your phone no. is visible on Princey’s collar: 5:29, 5:55, etc. You may want to blur it.
@@JoeR203 😂 I just tried. I got Voicemail: Hi, this is Prince I can't come to the phone right now I'm too busy peeing on everything in the yard and pushing dogs into the pool! Leave a message!
This is what I hate about Golden Retrievers right now. They used to be such a great breed but, in the last 5 years, I've seen them go downhill. I had 3 in my pack last year and not one of them had any kind of manners when it came to me or other dogs. I have to admit it was also the owners who babied them but still, Goldens used to be one of the best dogs to be great around children but I have found of late, that they've just gone downhill in intelligence where they just want to jump and play and don't have any common sense in them.
My neighbors 2 doors down have one that's very over zealous too. They fostered a monster sized golden doodle, just got it adopted recently. That thing thought it was a badass. I'd take the golden any day over that doodle.
I'd see this a lot when I use to frequent the DP years ago, the way this Golden is. A lot of Goldens seem very similar. Its almost like the kid that wants friends sooo bad they interact to the point its obnoxious. No fault on owner or dog. That dog seems good natured unfortunately other dogs may not like this level. just needs to get more comfortable in his fur and an outlet for his excited energy maybe.
100. My golden is very “difficult”. Comes across as “reactive” to people and other dogs but it’s really frustration from over excitement ! He’s 1year5 months. I work on exposure training. He goes to doggy daycare twice a week. It helps tremendously
You mentioned your training program for people wanting to train as well as an online aggression course. Two things: 1) I’d love for your to provide a list of trainers who have been through your program so that those of us who live in different states can connect with trainers near us 2) could not find this “aggression” course. Am I misunderstanding?
My dog (Labrador retriever intact) is so territorial that he poop marks. He's playful at the dog park, but if he finds a neutered male that he likes, he'll consistently try to hump that dog. Any videos/suggestions? He's been corrected once at a dog park by an older dog but we left due to feeling embarrassed by the other dog owners.
Every time he starts humping, leave the dog park. That's the end of that play session. Don't even let him get that far, correct him if he even thinks of doing it. He knows, he will learn. Be consistent, though. Watch him closely and be proactive.
Yup have a lab/border collie mix in training that is like this. Athletic is an understatement at this point. I let a much older, bigger male correct the heck out of him one time, he went sprinting tail between his legs. And this was a podenco, so the sprinting did not help that much either😂 Anyway he is MUCH more careful now with personal space and random macho behavior. Just takes the right dog and has to be safe.
Please can you do a video for Rescue dogs taht are afraid of everything, cars, people in street, noises from everywhere... In my case I have a rescue Malinois that are extremaly fearfull, nothing like a normal Malinois. Your videos are helping me to train her but still feel like I don't know how to help with this.
He has a few. There's one with an Aussie that's mostly a genetic fear. Praise when they go out of their comfort zone - like when they are brave or curious and stop the praise when they retreat. Keep a journal - you might ID some triggers. Watch what you're petting. In our brain we try to console the dog by saying it's ok, no biggie, but to the dog, you're telling them yeah, keep acting anxious - that's what I want you to do. Chirag Patel has a great video of a fearful with people dog. Treat and retreet. Scary stimulus throws a treat then walks away from the dog - so no spatial pressure on the dog. That starts making the dog more interested usually. Kind of like Steve Young with scared horses. Pressure on with one eye, then when the horse looks at Steve with both eyes, Steve backs off - so the horse realizes that peace is with Steve. When I teach group classes, if any of the dogs are scared, no pressure, just get the dog to take treats. Good things happen here. Each class they come a little bit more out of their shells. Doggy U has a puppy video where you go to a new place (at a distance from all the commotion), place their mat down, bring out the stuffed Kong with their meal inside and do nothing. Now it's a good thing to observe the environment without having to interact with people or things - just chillin'. Hope that helps.
Suzanne Clothier's automatic check in is the first thing we teach in any of our classes. So without bribing them or begging for their attention, you're simply waiting for them to look at you. As soon as they do, Yes, pause, treat. If you have a breed that tends to get chunky, use their meal. If you Yes it, you have to treat it. If you don't have treats, at least acknowledge that look - thanks for checking in, good job. The challenge then is acknowledging every single time they look at you. The power of permission and building your dog's confidence - Susan Garrett. Kikopup has a few scared dog videos too.
My male unneutered lab used to be cringingly submissive to a golden retriever at rhe beach - rolling on his back tail between his legs. The other day we bumped into his old nemesis and they got on like a house on fire - lots of play bowing and reciprocal chasies. The golden retriever had recieved puberty blockers, his testicles had shrunk and he was far more relaxed. Not sure if this is a permanent change, but I think it could be a useful way to check on the effects of castration on your dog. Some dogcs find the loss of testosterone alters them so they lose all confidence and become reclusive.
I heard him say "Both my Doberman's do this thing" and "both my dogs", and assumed he was referring to Bosco and Prince :) sometimes I still refer to my deceased dog as "my dog" as if he is still around :)
I think we do animals a great disservice by not allowing them to be raised til adulthood by their actual parents. This goes for both dogs and horses etc. Animal parents teach their babies how to act and interact with others, but when humans take puppies and horse foals away from the family of their own species they don't learn how to correctly act. Dogs don't learn good socialization and horses don't understand the concepts of pressure and release when they are taken away as babies and raised by humans.
I don't know why harnesses in general have become so popular, but the only dogs that I think should wear any kind of harness would be working dogs like sled dogs or tracking dogs.
@@underduress5761 sled dogs, tracking dogs, service dogs, dogs with poor motor control, dogs with collapsed tracheas, dogs with neck injuries... Plenty of reasons for a harness. Also dogs in general should have multiple types of gear. A well trained dog will have minimum standards of behavior regardless of gear. Mine knows harness = her time, collar = my time.
I’m not a trainer, or professional at all.. But isn’t it common for Intact males/dominant females to scent mark a lot? Not always a sign of stress, or so I thought…
How do you interpret the behavior? I've read it could be a dog trying to assert it's place in the hierarchy, a sign of affection amongst a few other things but it depends on the angle/lense. For example on a Viktoria still Unwell forum I read that it is a sign of aggression basically. It clearly isn't in this case. I think it depends on the entire situation and interaction not just a snippet in time of one. It's not a crime in the dog world to posture one way or another. It's how they figure things out a lot of.the time. I assume you're leaning towards the "D" word that we can't use.
Weird editing on this one....confusion at parts towards the end which dog he is referring to, and when they are having fun together he heaps on negativity. Maybe to keep the customer mentality in the viewership.
Dude, why aren't there any videos with your Red Doberaman on your channel . I saw one where he cooly dismisses as aggressor and became a fan . That's some dog man
C'mon Beckman . The walk from your front gate to where Prince engages the dog takes longer than 5 seconds. That alone means the dog was on your property longer than 5 seconds.
Why neuter a presumably perfectly healthy dog? What a shame! Horrible health consequences later on from removing crucial parts of the endocrine system.
When I checked last, I recall some peer reviewed papers indicated that neutering has fairly minimal if any negative health effects when it occurs after ~ 1 year, depending on breed. Please someone correct me if I am wrong, I am too lazy to look this up again for a UA-cam comment.
As someone who is not too lazy to do extensive research ( enough to penetrate the propaganda of “The Pet Industrial Complex “ who has obvious conflicts of interest since vets make so much $ from these unnecessary surgeries) I can assure you there is very much harm and if you had common sense you would realize nature gave them testicles and ovaries for a good reason.
Both my brother got females from the same litter as puppies, one was spayed at the earliest, and the other was given 2 heat cycles. Both dogs look completely different, the one that was nspayed early looks "puppyish" still, the other one is filled out and looks more mature. All the hormones you need to grow, should be there or stunted growth is a problem.
Because people cannot be responsible and keep them from breeding. Which is a huge problem. I'd rather people spay and neuter and guarantee the dog isn't gonna have pups then to have a dog that constantly gets out and either comes home pregnant or goes out and makes more puppies that ppl dump on my property.
Prince only pees on things he's allowed to. This is a board and train facility where dogs live. Dogs leave their mark as a form of communication. If Prince was pissing on people's legs and personal property and things he isn't supposed to then that would require correction.
That dog wants to play. That dog doesn't want to fight. My dog is dominant and if he goes neck to neck with a dominant dog the fight will be on. I think you're doing a disservice to people by using Prince to train dogs that dog wants to fight. I understand you use a muzzle with a dog who wants to fight, most people don't understand that and somebody gonna get hurt. My dog might whoop Prince and that means serious injuries to one dog or the other.
I don't think he's doing a disservice to anyone. If anything he's showing them the real temperament of what their dog may truly be but in a more controlled environment. Let's be honest here, people with vicious dogs aren't bringing them in for training. Those dogs are getting let go or being totally isolated from everything. I don't know what kind of dog you have but I've seen you in here before, I'd assume you'd correct your dog if he wanted to go balls to.the wall just because another dog was somewhat dominant in nature but not actually provoking a fight? That's where the human steps in as a good owner to show the dog what it's doing isn't necessary all the time. Creates some inhibition and lets the dog know this isn't necessary all the time. There's a lot to this and different breeds are more hell bent on what they wanna do but guidance is what they need and want in the end right?
@rptrick79 I don't give a shit if Prince was at his house. The dog that was being trained wanted to play and needed to learn some manners. Granted. Oh that dog's behavior might have changed after his testicles were cut off. 😁 Maybe.
0:01 *Pain* or *Uncomfortableness* : choose your sensation
0:16 Prince tries to take a leak and is interrupted by a little bit over zealous Golden retriever (Joel stands by leaning on the fence putting out the vibe with his dorky treat pouch)
0:21 body language slow-mo.explanation
1:02 Prince is distraught from stopping his stream early and uses the "umbrella technique" in an effort to get the Golden to knock himself out on a pole
1:39 Nobody puts Princey in the corner! Prince tries a slick southpaw jab but Pusher the Golden slips it
2:21 Pusher tries to sneak a cheap shot in as Prince trots by the fence to gain an advantage
2:53 teaching spatial boundaries one closed mouth at a time
3:20 GO-GO Gadget- helicopter tail
3:31 Joel Talking really fast to pimp his training programs
3:58 A month later.....Pusher comes back and Prince @ 4:05 gives him the ole' Rick James. *SLAP!*
5:18 learning some act right
5:32 Prince steps on The Pushers head briefly but he's Golden, he ain't havin' none of that
6:07 Joel admits that the dog park is an ok place if your crafty
6:14 Prince practicing his break dance moves because he saw Dad doing the robot a week ago
6:44 good rough doggy play
7:27 The Golden baits Prince to jump into the pool so he can drown him
7:44 If you wear roses on your eyes the thorns will blind you eventually
8:10 People with perfect dogs and kids are the worst!
Go- Go Gatchet Helicopter 😂
That initial leg lift was so so solid haha elite
When they realized they were pals and rolled around together was the best 🐕
“You don’t want to be that parent, *play bow from prince*” was the best line 😂These videos are fascinating! Such incredible dog training!
Prince is the epitome of a very well balanced pup .
Well done Joel 🤝🏾
You’ve made me love Dobermans more and more
I appreciate your knowledge and expertise in your chosen subject area, Joel, (not to mention the camerawork and editing) but the real star of this show is Prince. 😛Such a beautiful, intelligent and athletic dog. His training really shows through. One of the best channels on UA-cam. Thank you.
Appreciate that!
Prince planting his head on the ground is adorable and hilarious. I haven't seen a video of Prince playing like this, I highly enjoyed it! And what a difference neutering did to the golden!
I appreciate the HDR video quality, lookin' crisp my man! And as always, another banger of a vid, thank you for your work!
I love how @ 5:00 when they realized they were in your space and both looked up like ooooo excuse us
3:12 that tail is something else 😅
About to take off into flight lmao
Mine also did helicopter when she was excited 😅
Another awesome video. These videos remind me so much of watching Cesar Milan for the first time. Seeing a trainer use these same methods and none of that treat BS or coddling a dog. This is the only way to see results. Allowing dogs to do what they do and intervene when things are ABOUT to go too far not when they've already gone too far.
Joel is always on top of things, even when it seems like he's not paying attention - he is and stops stuff BEFORE anything happens. Cesar has a vet on call and seems to have lots of fights - just sayin'.
The GR has the chuck wagon tail wag - goes all the way around. Lot of Goldens are a bit much. Great body language video between dogs. TY
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! ❤️💕
Awe, that's so sweet of you to want to give encouragement to everyone that reads your comment and the Lupercalia symbols are so appropriate with dog people😂
I would recommend not telling "anyone reading this" that they're doing great and that they and their dog will thank them. Not only is that untrue (as many people here don't even own a dog) but many are not doing great and they're here trying to learn how to do great, but your sentiments are so, so self-rewarding. You probably felt so squishy and lovey when you tapped send 😂😂😂
@underduress5761 Thanks! As you said, the fact that they're here watching dog training videos says that, even those who aren't doing great, are still trying to improve. In my mind, "doing great" means trying to get better with each step. They may not "be great" yet, but they're doing what's necessary to become great, and that deserves applause. Just trying to spread some positivity. 🐶❤️
If you watch this channel you are a great dog trainer. Patience and persistence.
@@SomeMinorDogTraining Not true. Apart from the fact that there are people that read your comment That don't train dogs and don't even have dogs, there are also those that come here to attempt to vilify Joel and they do not want to learn the right way to train. But at least you make yourself feel like you're a positive person...love, love, love 🤦♂️
@@underduress5761 I'm not sure why you have such a problem with someone trying to spread positivity, especially in an industry that's so filled with in-fighting and negativity.
There are a lot of people who DO watch these videos to learn and grow, and, unfortunately, the Internet doesn't allow for me to ONLY show comments to those people. And, because there's so much negativity in dog training, those people who ARE trying don't get that encouragement. BUT.... Because there are some people who may view the comment but aren't actually trying to better themselves, you're saying that those that ARE trying shouldn't get that encouragement. That's what I mean about the negativity. God forbid someone tries to be nice. 🤷🏾♂️🙄
4:48 This is my sister's dog. Exact same problem with a side of fear strangely enough. We love him, but he has a jerky side and will mess with dogs that he knows he can out pace or out nimble because he's so athletic. Our older dog who just passed was an amazing helper dog and kept him in check if around, but since he's gone, that extra help is also gone. But we're doing our best. The next step for him is to be neutered as well to help curve that jerky behavior.
Awesome work, as always!
So fun to watch, thanks for pointing out the subtle stuff. Awesome to see Prince bringing the best out of another awesome dog. It’s like this dog wants to be king of the school yard. Prince is like “nah, that’s my job . . . but you can be my side-kick”. The other dog responds “hmmm, yeah - ok” 😂. Would love to hear more about rope-a-dope some time please. 6:52 - looks like some corn-cobbing from Prince? - that’s kinda cool to see. I gotta say, I’m missing the podcasts (but totally understand you’re super busy) 🙂.
👍🏼😂👍🏼
Prince is one awesome dog. I would get attached fast with a dog like Prince ♡!🤴!♡ Thank you for your videos.
This was how my dog was. I would discipline him but it was covid and social distancing so no other dog put him in his place in his teenage year. Now he is so alpha and dominant I don't let him off leash without muzzle on
It's not too late to introduce him to other dogs and make corrections; it's just a longer battle
Thanks for all the helpful videos over the years! The recall go-get was a game changer.
Does anyone have any links or helpful advice for dog-dog resource guarding? I’m currently doing counter conditioning exercises but if there’s anything supplementary out there would love to hear of some other methods. Thanks!
I think Prince enjoys the athletic duel he gets from this pup. He get to sharpen his pencil a tad.
What a play. Prince is beautiful
Love the title! 😉😉
LOL I have never seen prince like another dog like this, so adorable
The dog was submissive. Especially after he had his testicles removed.
Prince did a little leg sweep there at the beginning. 😉
This is the stuff I get hung up on, because I want my dogs to be able to play and rough house, but I can't tell what is playful from what is bad manners and I'm afraid of it escalating out of my control.
I've got the same thing going on. My golden is 9 months, and I'm watching my dads 7 year old aussie. The golden, still being a pup, almost demands to be played with and she'll bark at or harrass him. Sometimes he engages sometimes he doesn't and i give it time to see if she takes the hint, which she usually does but sometimes I have to do what joel did and grab her and and get her to knock it off. But after some time the aussie finally started to let loose and they play so hard and so long now. But now the new problem is how far do I let it go because they'll start nipping eachother too hard and one will let out a faint cry but they seem to respect the warning, and I'm trying to let the older dog correct the younger dog as long as he doesn't looked like hes stressed or uncomfortable. Which he's usually game, but then they escalate till ears are getting chomped and thats where I draw the line. But I'm conflicted, do I let the 2 rough players play rough, or should I be reeling in the golden more often. Shes super friendly but she comes on strong to other dogs because shes just ready to go go go. So I'm trying to nail down the manners of approaching exciting things like animals and people with respect lol
Same here it’s hard to distinguish rough play and bad mannerisms my boy is very playful and gets really excited and gets all up in they’re face but he doesn’t growl or show aggression, he does smell them and hyperly go around them then back up to face wanting to play but the way he does it seems to be not respecting his or her boundaries at times. I figure that’s how dogs are and if there’s no aggression they’re cool but there’s times to where that’s not the case I don’t understand how it went from cool to almost getting into a fight.
@@whatsthekeytothekeykatI'd let them play until you see something that's obviously too much for one dog or the other and they don't naturally back off a touch. That's when you may intervene. This is really dependant on the breeds, dog and how well you know them I think. Trick is I think your tone when you stop WrestleMania. Don't make it so it's the end of the world. I rung the bell, rounds over for now...that's it. No harm no discipline
If they're your dogs, let them play. Dogs play pretty rough with each other as seen here.
K'eyush and his friend who recently passed away, Sherpa, in their compilation, have their teeth on each other in fairly vicious looking expressions in nearly every photo.
If one of the dogs starts a yap or whine or goes to their bed or crate, it's evident they've had enough as is a growl or snarl.
Dear Joel: Thank you for this excellent play-by-play analysis! With the slow-mo, your phone no. is visible on Princey’s collar: 5:29, 5:55, etc. You may want to blur it.
Call it and see if Prince answers. 🙂
@@JoeR203 😂 I just tried. I got Voicemail: Hi, this is Prince I can't come to the phone right now I'm too busy peeing on everything in the yard and pushing dogs into the pool! Leave a message!
This is what I hate about Golden Retrievers right now. They used to be such a great breed but, in the last 5 years, I've seen them go downhill. I had 3 in my pack last year and not one of them had any kind of manners when it came to me or other dogs. I have to admit it was also the owners who babied them but still, Goldens used to be one of the best dogs to be great around children but I have found of late, that they've just gone downhill in intelligence where they just want to jump and play and don't have any common sense in them.
I have to agree here.
I wish I met those more often instead of the aggressive ones ive been seeing a lot lately.
My neighbors 2 doors down have one that's very over zealous too. They fostered a monster sized golden doodle, just got it adopted recently. That thing thought it was a badass. I'd take the golden any day over that doodle.
@rptrick79 I wouldn't take either.
@@rptrick79I've met a lot of doodles, and I only ever liked one. Most of them are nuts, and, I assume, poorly bred.
Thumbnail: I see what you did there. ;)
I like how Prince has more of a prance or trot instead of a run or walk. He moves like a thoroughbred horse, pretty impressive to watch
That could very well be true if it’s a very dominant dog, but it also is the sign of stress
Hey Joel, do you have a listing of Beckman approved trainers? Specifically looking in Minnesota.
Coming soon 👍🏼
I'd see this a lot when I use to frequent the DP years ago, the way this Golden is. A lot of Goldens seem very similar.
Its almost like the kid that wants friends sooo bad they interact to the point its obnoxious. No fault on owner or dog. That dog seems good natured unfortunately other dogs may not like this level. just needs to get more comfortable in his fur and an outlet for his excited energy maybe.
GRs are so besotted with the entire human race, I think they kind of skip dealing with doggy etiquette and miss out on puopyhood rough and tumbles.
100. My golden is very “difficult”. Comes across as “reactive” to people and other dogs but it’s really frustration from over excitement ! He’s 1year5 months. I work on exposure training. He goes to doggy daycare twice a week. It helps tremendously
Prince is a great dog, reminds me of my boy Achilles…miss him so much 😢
They look like best friends
Pain is the touchstone of growth.
I feel like Prince needs a raise as in extra T-bone steaks 👍
You mentioned your training program for people wanting to train as well as an online aggression course. Two things:
1) I’d love for your to provide a list of trainers who have been through your program so that those of us who live in different states can connect with trainers near us
2) could not find this “aggression” course. Am I misunderstanding?
Lots of good trainers on UA-cam. But noone teaches the detail like you.
My dog is Like the Golden retriever with larger dogs, but like prince with smaller dogs lol He's medium size 50lbs
My dog (Labrador retriever intact) is so territorial that he poop marks. He's playful at the dog park, but if he finds a neutered male that he likes, he'll consistently try to hump that dog. Any videos/suggestions? He's been corrected once at a dog park by an older dog but we left due to feeling embarrassed by the other dog owners.
Every time he starts humping, leave the dog park. That's the end of that play session.
Don't even let him get that far, correct him if he even thinks of doing it. He knows, he will learn. Be consistent, though. Watch him closely and be proactive.
This is somewhat like what happens with people. The government allows industries to chemically castrate the subjects and then humps them
Golden Jedi!
It might be because on the second meeting the dog was neutered. Had his testicles removed, yeah maybe.😂
Yup have a lab/border collie mix in training that is like this. Athletic is an understatement at this point. I let a much older, bigger male correct the heck out of him one time, he went sprinting tail between his legs. And this was a podenco, so the sprinting did not help that much either😂 Anyway he is MUCH more careful now with personal space and random macho behavior. Just takes the right dog and has to be safe.
Please can you do a video for Rescue dogs taht are afraid of everything, cars, people in street, noises from everywhere... In my case I have a rescue Malinois that are extremaly fearfull, nothing like a normal Malinois. Your videos are helping me to train her but still feel like I don't know how to help with this.
He has a few. There's one with an Aussie that's mostly a genetic fear. Praise when they go out of their comfort zone - like when they are brave or curious and stop the praise when they retreat. Keep a journal - you might ID some triggers. Watch what you're petting. In our brain we try to console the dog by saying it's ok, no biggie, but to the dog, you're telling them yeah, keep acting anxious - that's what I want you to do. Chirag Patel has a great video of a fearful with people dog. Treat and retreet. Scary stimulus throws a treat then walks away from the dog - so no spatial pressure on the dog. That starts making the dog more interested usually. Kind of like Steve Young with scared horses. Pressure on with one eye, then when the horse looks at Steve with both eyes, Steve backs off - so the horse realizes that peace is with Steve. When I teach group classes, if any of the dogs are scared, no pressure, just get the dog to take treats. Good things happen here. Each class they come a little bit more out of their shells. Doggy U has a puppy video where you go to a new place (at a distance from all the commotion), place their mat down, bring out the stuffed Kong with their meal inside and do nothing. Now it's a good thing to observe the environment without having to interact with people or things - just chillin'. Hope that helps.
Suzanne Clothier's automatic check in is the first thing we teach in any of our classes. So without bribing them or begging for their attention, you're simply waiting for them to look at you. As soon as they do, Yes, pause, treat. If you have a breed that tends to get chunky, use their meal. If you Yes it, you have to treat it. If you don't have treats, at least acknowledge that look - thanks for checking in, good job. The challenge then is acknowledging every single time they look at you. The power of permission and building your dog's confidence - Susan Garrett. Kikopup has a few scared dog videos too.
My male unneutered lab used to be cringingly submissive to a golden retriever at rhe beach - rolling on his back tail between his legs.
The other day we bumped into his old nemesis and they got on like a house on fire - lots of play bowing and reciprocal chasies.
The golden retriever had recieved puberty blockers, his testicles had shrunk and he was far more relaxed.
Not sure if this is a permanent change, but I think it could be a useful way to check on the effects of castration on your dog.
Some dogcs find the loss of testosterone alters them so they lose all confidence and become reclusive.
Bahaha. You probably would give a child Ritalin.
🙏
So if Prince came to our house and my my dog wants to play Prince won't be dominant?
Another one ? Thx
Joel, did you recommend to the owners of the Golden to get him neutered?
No, Joel does not recommend neutering dogs. He's talked about that in a couple of podcasts
Did I hear Joel say "my two dogs"? Did you get another dog Joel? This merits another podcast if so!
I heard him say "Both my Doberman's do this thing" and "both my dogs", and assumed he was referring to Bosco and Prince :) sometimes I still refer to my deceased dog as "my dog" as if he is still around :)
I think we do animals a great disservice by not allowing them to be raised til adulthood by their actual parents. This goes for both dogs and horses etc. Animal parents teach their babies how to act and interact with others, but when humans take puppies and horse foals away from the family of their own species they don't learn how to correctly act. Dogs don't learn good socialization and horses don't understand the concepts of pressure and release when they are taken away as babies and raised by humans.
Just glance at that poor dog harnes scream those people don't know how to dog with dog, terrible choice for joints.
I don't know why harnesses in general have become so popular, but the only dogs that I think should wear any kind of harness would be working dogs like sled dogs or tracking dogs.
@@underduress5761 sled dogs, tracking dogs, service dogs, dogs with poor motor control, dogs with collapsed tracheas, dogs with neck injuries... Plenty of reasons for a harness.
Also dogs in general should have multiple types of gear. A well trained dog will have minimum standards of behavior regardless of gear. Mine knows harness = her time, collar = my time.
Hey dog people!
👋
@@rptrick79 Howdy 👋
🖐🏽
@@underduress5761 👋😁
When dogs do a lot of lifting their legs are urinating all over the place that’s a sign of stress
I’m not a trainer, or professional at all..
But isn’t it common for
Intact males/dominant females to scent mark a lot?
Not always a sign of stress, or so I thought…
Intact males are usually “marking” or claiming territory when they do that.
My dog will mark everything on the planet if I let him. He was intact for 2 years give or take. It may be a stress sign but it may just be normal.
Neutered dogs - male and female also do this.
Can we talk about 4:13 ?
And 4:27 ?
YES
How do you interpret the behavior?
I've read it could be a dog trying to assert it's place in the hierarchy, a sign of affection amongst a few other things but it depends on the angle/lense. For example on a Viktoria still Unwell forum I read that it is a sign of aggression basically. It clearly isn't in this case. I think it depends on the entire situation and interaction not just a snippet in time of one.
It's not a crime in the dog world to posture one way or another. It's how they figure things out a lot of.the time.
I assume you're leaning towards the "D" word that we can't use.
30s!! first!!!
Weird editing on this one....confusion at parts towards the end which dog he is referring to, and when they are having fun together he heaps on negativity. Maybe to keep the customer mentality in the viewership.
Dude, why aren't there any videos with your Red Doberaman on your channel .
I saw one where he cooly dismisses as aggressor and became a fan .
That's some dog man
Bosco is at the rainbow bridge. Some of Joel's older videos still show him though. He was so young when he passed. Awesome Dobe too!
C'mon Beckman . The walk from your front gate to where Prince engages the dog takes longer than 5 seconds. That alone means the dog was on your property longer than 5 seconds.
Why neuter a presumably perfectly healthy dog? What a shame! Horrible health consequences later on from removing crucial parts of the endocrine system.
When I checked last, I recall some peer reviewed papers indicated that neutering has fairly minimal if any negative health effects when it occurs after ~ 1 year, depending on breed. Please someone correct me if I am wrong, I am too lazy to look this up again for a UA-cam comment.
As someone who is not too lazy to do extensive research ( enough to penetrate the propaganda of “The Pet Industrial Complex “ who has obvious conflicts of interest since vets make so much $ from these unnecessary surgeries) I can assure you there is very much harm and if you had common sense you would realize nature gave them testicles and ovaries for a good reason.
Both my brother got females from the same litter as puppies, one was spayed at the earliest, and the other was given 2 heat cycles. Both dogs look completely different, the one that was nspayed early looks "puppyish" still, the other one is filled out and looks more mature. All the hormones you need to grow, should be there or stunted growth is a problem.
Because people cannot be responsible and keep them from breeding. Which is a huge problem. I'd rather people spay and neuter and guarantee the dog isn't gonna have pups then to have a dog that constantly gets out and either comes home pregnant or goes out and makes more puppies that ppl dump on my property.
you sweet summer child, someone in the replies said this but i also think it's mainly for preventing more strays on the streets.
Need fet prince square stop peeing things train him
Prince only pees on things he's allowed to. This is a board and train facility where dogs live. Dogs leave their mark as a form of communication. If Prince was pissing on people's legs and personal property and things he isn't supposed to then that would require correction.
That dog wants to play. That dog doesn't want to fight. My dog is dominant and if he goes neck to neck with a dominant dog the fight will be on. I think you're doing a disservice to people by using Prince to train dogs that dog wants to fight. I understand you use a muzzle with a dog who wants to fight, most people don't understand that and somebody gonna get hurt. My dog might whoop Prince and that means serious injuries to one dog or the other.
My dog doesn't want to fight, he will though.
I don't think he's doing a disservice to anyone. If anything he's showing them the real temperament of what their dog may truly be but in a more controlled environment. Let's be honest here, people with vicious dogs aren't bringing them in for training. Those dogs are getting let go or being totally isolated from everything. I don't know what kind of dog you have but I've seen you in here before, I'd assume you'd correct your dog if he wanted to go balls to.the wall just because another dog was somewhat dominant in nature but not actually provoking a fight? That's where the human steps in as a good owner to show the dog what it's doing isn't necessary all the time. Creates some inhibition and lets the dog know this isn't necessary all the time. There's a lot to this and different breeds are more hell bent on what they wanna do but guidance is what they need and want in the end right?
@rptrick79 I don't give a shit if Prince was at his house. The dog that was being trained wanted to play and needed to learn some manners. Granted. Oh that dog's behavior might have changed after his testicles were cut off. 😁 Maybe.
best buddies 🍖🍗🥩🥓🍔🌭🥪