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Small Dog Syndrome
www.dogbreedinfo.com ^ | Unknown | Dog Breed Info

Posted on 10/15/2012 1:08:02 PM PDT by ThinkingBuddha

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To: Colonel_Flagg

can you ever train a dog to stop submissive peeing? my female jack russell does this! we have her greet everyone outside!


21 posted on 10/15/2012 2:42:20 PM PDT by midnightcat
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To: ThinkingBuddha

Good article.

My best friend, who always had large dogs, recently bought a pair of “Hava-Malts” — a cross between a Havanese and a Maltese — adorable little balls of fluff no bigger than a slipper. She is taking them to dog training, just as she did with her German Shepherds, Labs, and Standard Poodles in years past. She is tough on those little guys, and I watch her working with them just as she did with the big dogs to respect human space, etc. They love every minute of it.

OTOH, her sister in law has a Bichon that has become truly obnoxious — no training and now nips its owner. Nobody will “dog sit” that pooch.

We were discussing this the other night — how people with small dogs let them get by with all kinds of infractions, whereas large dogs cannot get by with that garbage because they would be too distructive and/or dangerous.


22 posted on 10/15/2012 2:44:34 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: ThinkingBuddha

Don’t I know about this. I live in a home with the 4 lb. Chi dog, which my daughter and wife conspired to get.

Everything in this article pretty much hits home, and I’m saving it for my wife. (My daughter thinks she knows everything, so it is pointless trying to change her mind, at this time.)


23 posted on 10/15/2012 2:50:22 PM PDT by truth_seeker
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To: ThinkingBuddha
My 5 lb., one year old, female Yorkie is not, nor has she ever been, yappy or let out a high scream. The only time she barks, or growls, is if she hears or sees something at night outside my back door. Once I acknowledge that bark or growl, she stops. During the day, if she sees something outside, she will bark and come to my chair to tell me, then the barking stops.

She will jump in my recliner when I lower it so she can jump on it. I am still higher than she is, as I am sitting up and she is on the lower seat.

There is no barking or growing when I tell her, “No.”

However, what she does to express her displeasure, is, DANCE. The first time I saw that, I had to try really hard not to laugh. That is the cutest dance I ever saw. But, it means, “Screw you, I don't want to mind you.”

She doesn't like to be combed and I do that and when I put her down, she dances.

I don't think dogs belong on a bed and she has never been there. She has her own bedroom, the downstairs bathroom, with her bed and doll in it.

She doesn't jump on people but loves everyone.

I am a calm person who likes peace and calm and I think our dogs pick up on how we are and emulate that.

When she is let out of her bedroom in the morning or when I leave and come back, she comes out and checks her food bowl (I guess to see if it is still there) and is calm.

She uses doggy pads in the kitchen corner for her private business and doesn't do that anywhere else.

She is a good, sweet, calm, dog who only barks when there is something to communicate.

I think she is the way she is because that is what I expect and she has figured that out.

24 posted on 10/15/2012 3:10:06 PM PDT by Marcella (Republican Conservatism is dead. PREPARE.)
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To: Obama_Is_Sabotaging_America

“However, a 5 pound ‘alpha dog’ Chihuahua can intimidate a 75 pound dog whether it barks or not. I’ve seen it with my own eyes.”

No kidding. This past weekend I had my GF’s little rat dog on the lead when the neighbor’s full size lab came over to graze around the food bowl. The rat dog leaped into the air to snap the lab’s face when the lead caught flipping it’s body upside down with jaws wide open a fraction of an inch from the lab’s nose.

Looked like a great white coming out of the water after a seal.


25 posted on 10/15/2012 5:36:32 PM PDT by Rebelbase (The most transparent administration ever is clear as mud.)
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To: jocon307

My chihuahua is super protective of me, but is trained. At halloween he loves the kids in costume. He doesn’t like other dogs, unless they understand he’s the dominant puppers.
The other night, I was laying in bed with him and a car pulled into our driveway and he immediately moved so he was in between me and the door. It was like “if its bad, it may get past me but its going to bleed trying”.


26 posted on 10/15/2012 6:27:59 PM PDT by chae (I was anti-Obama before it was cool)
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To: gaijin

“When a Shepard snarls, that’s a SNARL....”

My Shepherd was afraid and snarled at me in the pool a couple weeks ago. My life passed before my eyes! Next dog will be a Chihuahua because I know I can snap it’s neck. (Not really, just and evil thought. God forgive me!)


27 posted on 10/15/2012 6:39:05 PM PDT by pops88 (Geek chick standing with Breitbart for truth)
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To: afraidfortherepublic

Years ago brought my brand new Yorkie puppy to my vet. Vet said: Chickensoup, do you want a barky nippy little dog or do you want a well behaved little dog.

If you want a well behaved little dog do not leave it alone at home, take it with you everywhere. Let it see and be with people in all settings. So for a year Yorkie went everywhere. After that he went to obedience school. then he went to the office every day with me. He was a good dog.


28 posted on 10/15/2012 6:41:55 PM PDT by Chickensoup (STOP The Great O-ppression)
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To: Obama_Is_Sabotaging_America

We have two really bad chihuahuas, both adoptions. One was about 6 when we got him and, according to the family surrendering him, he had been crated about 99% of his life. He is an “alpha.” It is horrifying; I dread the day he meets the wrong dog. I have seen him terrify goldens, blood hounds. But, he loves his family dogs, and will melt in any person’s arms.

The other one won’t attack, not an alpha bone in his body, although he does mimic the other one at times. But, no one, and I mean no one, can touch him except us. He turns into the tasmanian devil.


29 posted on 10/15/2012 6:46:48 PM PDT by ican'tbelieveit (School is prison for children who have commited the crime of being born. (attr: St_Thomas_Aquinas))
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To: ThinkingBuddha
They are all known as yip yips for a reason.

On the other hand, most big dogs I either have or dogsit for think they are lapdogs for some reason.

"Down..."
(dog keeps trying to lick me in the face)

30 posted on 10/15/2012 6:52:09 PM PDT by Darren McCarty (Holding my nose one more time to get rid of Eric Holder)
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To: Chickensoup

“If you want a well behaved little dog do not leave it alone at home, take it with you everywhere.”

That doesn’t work so well with a German Shepherd from East German blood lines. I spent two semesters taking him to a major university so he’d be socialized and not chase skate boarders or golf carts. “You are an evil spy trying to kill mom and I must kill you!” I worked so hard, but the dog is too darn smart- cute, tiny Asian girl is no threat (sigh, yawn)...goth guy, “I kill you now!” I decided he’s a barometer for evil intentions. My professional trainer gave up on him because he couldn’t train “save mom” out of him. The trainer could walk him on the Las Vegas Strip. Mom can’t walk him in the cul de sack. I love him and have signage.


31 posted on 10/15/2012 6:58:44 PM PDT by pops88 (Geek chick standing with Breitbart for truth)
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To: pops88

My dog fit in a small Bean bag.


32 posted on 10/15/2012 7:02:53 PM PDT by Chickensoup (STOP The Great O-ppression)
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To: ThinkingBuddha

Show'in off my new baby boy! His water bowl which he allows me to fill from time to time. :-)
33 posted on 10/15/2012 7:03:12 PM PDT by TsonicTsunami08
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To: ican'tbelieveit
I have a 2 3/4 yr old, 4 lb teacup/apple-head chihuahua that yapped constantly at everything that moved, and most things that didn't for the first few months after I got him as a rescue.

He had bad habits that my older (12 1/2 yrs) dog was starting to emulate, including messing in the house. The older guy actually yapped himself hoarse once.

One day shortly after that episode I had had enough of this nonsense, and rubbed both their noses in not only their own, but the other’s business, and tossed them outside into the front yard.

The INSTANT the little yaphound started his noise, I ran out the front door and soaked them both to the skin, for about 2 minutes, chasing them around the yard with the hose.

The yapping has stopped altogether, and the messes in the house are down to about one accident a week total.

It may not work for everyone, but it worked for my little guys.

Now if only my neighbour would shut his infernal Jack Russel Terrorists up! One of them literally SCREAMS when he gets excited. It's so loud it'll raise the hairs on the back of your neck, since it sounds like he's being murdered.

34 posted on 10/15/2012 7:03:47 PM PDT by Don W (You can forget what you do for a living when your knees are in the breeze.)
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To: Chickensoup

Very wise! I have a big, rescue Golden Retriever who was already close to full grown and totally untrained when we got him. I treated him just like you did your Yorkie, and he has turned out to be a wonderful dog.

He pulled me down in the grass behind the plant the first week I had him (in my white wool plants and yellow Pendleton blazer) and later dragged me across the street and right up to a stranger’s door going after a Schnauzer. I had NO control over that juvenile delinquent. I went right into the office and phoned the nearest dog trainer, and we started dog school that very week. LOL.

After a year’s work, he and I came to an agreement about walking on a leash. He’s 11 or 12 now and just a lamb. He still comes to work with me every day, and we have the golden fur on the carpet to prove it! Sometimes I leave him home, and everybody wants to know where he is. He never barks, whines, whimpers, or misbehaves in any way.

What you report about your Yorkie is really interesting. I had a friend who was given a Yorkie puppy when her 1st husband left her. She doted on that dog. She later remarried, and that little dog did not like the new husband at all — nearly broke up the marriage. The dog had to be confined to a different room when her 2nd husband was in the house. He’d growl and nip and pee on the floor.


35 posted on 10/15/2012 7:09:06 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Don W

“Now if only my neighbour would shut his infernal Jack Russel Terrorists up!”

I don’t think I’d knowingly move into a neighborhood that had a JRT. I love dogs, but I see a JRT and think, “back away slowly and hide.” I’m cursed (or not) with being someone every dog loves. I’ll never own a Terrier. Neighbor’s terrier used to come to my house with his ball and expect me to throw it till my arm fell off. With a Shepherd, I just say, “Go patrol.” I think it’s encoded in their DNA.


36 posted on 10/15/2012 7:20:25 PM PDT by pops88 (Geek chick standing with Breitbart for truth)
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To: Don W

I tried the water hose early on out of sheer fear for his life. I have a shock collar. I just have to commit to using it.


37 posted on 10/15/2012 7:20:45 PM PDT by ican'tbelieveit (School is prison for children who have commited the crime of being born. (attr: St_Thomas_Aquinas))
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To: TsonicTsunami08

Gorgeous puppy! And look at those ears...you have your work cut out for you.


38 posted on 10/15/2012 7:28:27 PM PDT by pops88 (Geek chick standing with Breitbart for truth)
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To: chae

He sounds like a very sweet tough guy!


39 posted on 10/15/2012 8:07:19 PM PDT by jocon307
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To: pops88

Thanks pops, He has all the traits you would imagine for the breed. At 12 weeks he has demonstrated fearlessness that I couldn’t comprehend for a dog so young. Bulldog stubbornness and boundless energy. He’s a fast learner and we are both working very hard to come to an understanding of what we expect from each other. If I don’t hold up my end I know about it immediately. A great challenge with great rewards, he’s a good dog! :-)


40 posted on 10/15/2012 8:43:27 PM PDT by TsonicTsunami08
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