I'm curious about your experience with dogs who are dog-dog aggressive and what I'll call "intensive sniffers." Ever since I heard Sue Sternberg say that dogs who sniff obsessively in her office are often/usually/always?) dog-dog aggressive, I have paid more attention to "intensive sniffing behavior" (I don't know what else to call it--but hey, I just made that term up, so don't go looking in the literature!). I'm talking about the dog who enters a room in which other dogs have been previously, puts his nose down and doesn't lift it up for minutes at a time. I did indeed find a correlation (just observations, no research) that dogs who can't seem to stop sniffing an area where other dogs have been, are often dogs who have problems with other dogs, especially unfamiliar ones. I remembered Read More
Archives for November 2009
Sheep Sex
Well, I guess I could've picked a more subtle title, but it does sum up my topic and attached video pretty nicely. If you are interested in behavior, and doing good ethological style observations, here's a video for you. I had just introduced Redford the Ram (so called because he is handsome and talented but shorter than expected, like Robert Redford) to the ewe flock. Before I go any further, don't worry about his bright red chest, he's not bleeding. It may look like a slasher movie, but the red stuff on his chest is "breeding paint." You mix a powder with vegetable oil (I passed on my expensive Olive Oil and used the more moderate Canola oil, but don't tell him) and smear it on the ram's chest so that you'll know who gets bred and when. Any ewe with a red butt has been bred. It's sort Read More
Who Are We to Dogs?
This is an authentic question: ie, I don't have the answer. But it's a great question, posed by a seminar attendee, and also by someone who reads the blog. Do dogs think we are mutant dogs? Pathetic replicates who never grow out of our flat, puppy faces (we never grow muzzles) and can't use our mouths but make up for it endearingly with our cute, floppy paws? And surely they believe we can't smell--at all. My guy Jim speculated that just as people often assume that animals can't [fill-in-the-blanks: think in abstractions or strategize or be conscious) because they can't do it with the depth of skill that we do, perhaps dogs assume we can't smell anything at all, because we are so horrifically bad at it. On the one hand, you could argue that dogs behave toward us as they do other dogs: Read More