take4roll10
Moderator
Can you clip on his leash and take him inside when he does this? Or what about using a clicker and clicking for that one second before he reacts to the noise?
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Can you clip on his leash and take him inside when he does this? Or what about using a clicker and clicking for that one second before he reacts to the noise?
I would recommend to take this on as a ''building a new behavior'' challenge where you will break it down and create a new behavior before the normal reaction occurs.

OntarioSheltie, I'm not sure if I'm reading the situation right, but I would probably do some LAT games with the clothes line/lanterns, just to control that excitement (if it is excitement) a little.
When my neighbour was away, their domestic help brought home her friend and her friend's dog for about 2 weeks. Juliet can't see the dog through the fence but she went mental. Since then (and it's been months and months since!), Juliet will rush out to the backyard when I open the door and bark like a crazy thing, then eventually settle and like Toby, might bark one or two more times for the heck of it.
I try to control that craziness by not releasing her into the yard - I'll take her by the collar, sit her down in the yard next to me, do a few LAT exercises (look at the fence then look at me), then with as little fanfare as possible, release her so that my movement or voice does not in any way encourage her to rev up and go nuts again.


My suggestionsThat's what I do when he's anxious, but this is different. This is more of a learned behavior with Toby, I think.
Usually when Toby is anxious, he'll whine, scan his environment, grind his teeth, he's tense, etc. But in the situation I mentioned he seems fairly relaxed before he reacts, and there isn't really a typical trigger. Usually he's triggered by noise. The behaviorist saw similar behavior from him on our front porch and said she thought it was more excitement than anxiety. That at times he LIKES that excited state so he's learned to work himself into it.
But what do I do to discourage this learned behavior, if that's truly what it is?
Thoughts? Suggestions?![]()
My suggestions
your dog's distraction is your dog's biggest reinforcement. Can you create fun game" Do this.../insert some kind of control behavior/ then... ready steady go- run towards lantern give a good bark... good... now lets run home for a cookie" type
As long as trigger/ stimuli/ distraction is harmless in essence, i.e. there is not harm releasing dog towards desired object it could be made a nice game.

