Using Labrador Training to Know More About Puzzling Aggressiveness in A Dog
Labradors, packing a large size and big love for the water, make excellent dog athletes are the best playmates for growing children. But then comes along a rare young labrador with high energy that is too much to handle. Moreover, the dog gets overwhelmingly excited within seconds, and is essentially out of control. Owners all too familiar with these hyper-whirlwinds identify triggers such as noisy children or other dogs and people.
Sometimes this Labrador training problem is even more complex since the dog is not really aggressive but simply capable of hurting out of sheer excitement. So what is an owner to do, given that she or he seeks to go beyond just putting the dog on leash every time somebody drops by at home?
Outside neutering or spaying the hyperactive or out of control dog, the immediate step is to train it alone on a leash (assuming what has been done so far is to train it with the other house dogs). Control the running room, and give corrections whenever the dog gets out of hand.
In case you have not tried ‘Nothing In Life Is Free’, then this must be the scheme that will persuade your dog to be more just and fair in its actuations, thus helping it overcome its flamboyant streaks. The main point behind the scheme is that the dog needs to do something in exchange for being able to enjoy what it needs or wants. So, imagine a dog that wants the walk to start, or wants to start eating. In the case of the former, it will only get that if it is sitting calmly by the door, and in the latter, it is sitting calmly waiting for you to set down its bowl. Whatever happens, do not make the careless step of giving a command that cannot be enforced anyway, should the dog balk. In the long run, the dog will think of your failures as its victories!
With the help of correctly implemented Labrador training, it is possible to achieve the following as a long term goal. Soon, you can take your lab to highly populated areas, with a lot of people and dogs, and yet the dog is able to behave and focus on you as if there is no big deal going on. The dog can actually be commanded to sit and focus on its handler, and is not welcoming the distraction of noisy pedestrians.
To conclude, the keys for lab owners who wish to form well the personality of their active dogs is consistency and firmness, to regularly give the dog their share of exercise, and to have ways of enforcing commands whenever there are distractions (unless there is a good way to get rid of distractions). Dog owners must also never forget how to be calm and level-headed in training the dog, knowing that dogs will not think twice about ignoring angry humans!




