I'm between washing off the sweat and dirt from worming our lambs and finishing my talk on Play in Toronto (got some great new video!), but I couldn't get on the plane without adding a few more words about Hope, Willie and the comments that have come in. I know that many readers don't read the comments, so I thought I'd address some of the questions that came up after my last post about Hope and Willie. If you haven't read yesterdays post, I wrote to alert readers that it is not yet clear to me that Hope is the right dog for Redstart Farm. He's only 5 months old, and I won't decide what is best for me, him or Willie until he gets older, but I wanted to let readers know that there are some red flags rising, so that you wouldn't be blindsided if I decide he's not a good fit. I didn't Read More
Archives for August 2010
Hoping for Hope
This is a tough one to write. As regular readers know, I primarily got Hope as a playmate for Willie, my turned-around crazy dog who took three years of intense work to deal with his pathological fear-based aggression to other dogs, his episodes of all-out rage, his extreme sound sensitivity, his dysfunctional gut, etc etc etc. And inside all that was one of the sweetest dogs I'd ever met, and that is the dog you'd meet if you came to the farm today--a sweet, people-loving healthy dog who loves his dog buddies and goes all happy-faced and loose bodied when he sees an unfamiliar dog approaching him. I'd never take him to a dog park, and he becomes a nervous wreck if a large dog he's never met comes into the house, but with a little easy management he is a wonderful dog, and I love him now Read More
BFF in Pennsylvania, Power of Pets in Madison WI
A quick post today, trying to catch up before I leave for Toronto on Friday. Sunday at the BFF conference was great, I'll write a post soon about Pam Reid's talks on cognition, her talk about stress, and Emily Levine's talk on compulsive disorders in dogs. All of them were great, very valuable. I thought this conference had the highest level of talks I've seen, and many others seemed to agree. Although it's hard to pack up and go before you have your paws on the ground, I'm very much looking forward to meeting folks in Toronto, and to traveling to Seattle to speak in mid-September. It is hard to turn around this fast when you've been traveling, leaving the farm and the dogs, sheep and Sushi, I won't pretend it's not, but I do meet such interesting people and always learn so much. I Read More
“Dominance” Mythologies, Suzanne Hetts
I'm at the Best Friends Forever Conference in Pennsylvania, taking a quick break from the talks. I have to say that this is one of the best seminars I've attended: the quality of the talks is outstanding. Suzanne Hetts gave one today that was fantastic: absolutely the best organized and most informative talk on what dominance is and isn't that I've heard. I couldn't begin to summarize it all, but here is some especially useful information from it, based on common mythologies that people have about dominance. Common Underlying Assumptions about Dominance, from Suzanne Hetts: I. Most (all?) interactions between dogs are competitive (going out the door first, who gets the toy, etc.). Is this true? No, it's not. The fact is, many interactions between dogs are not competitive. A great Read More
Do Dogs Recognize our Facial Expressions?
This is a great question, one that none of us really know the answer to. Of course, it actually includes several questions: Do dogs learn to associate a smile with good things? Or a frown? And/or are dogs inherently able to "read" our faces because their expressions are so like our own? Or, do none of our expressions have any effect on our dogs? Do they take cues about our internal states and future behavior from other clues, our voices, our posture? A friend and colleague sent me information from the just concluded Canine Science Forum in Vienna (thank you Julie!!!) about a study done on that very topic. Anais Racca, from the University of Lincoln in the UK, showed 21 dogs 6 images, two each of a person and a dog looking "negative" (we'd call the human's face angry), "neutral" and Read More