Friday, September 7, 2007
Group Class Syllabus
Communication in Training
Content – Three one hour handling sessions that will be followed by half hour to full hour discussion and Q and A. Clients will be handling own dog as well as others. Will cover basic low level aggression (growling, barking, etc.) and social anxiety issues.
Important - The classes are not structured with the clients dog understanding set commands, but is focused on the owner/handler understanding how to work with and handle different social and behavioral issues.
Class Schedule – Begins Sept. 20th (Thursday) at 7 p.m.
Second Class Sept. 27th (Thursday) at 7 p.m.
Third Class is flexible
Cost - $75.00 for three class session
$150.00 for full access to all flexible classes
Location - Tailwaggers Country Inn, Van Alstyne, TX
We, here at Tailwaggers Country Inn, truly believe that a socially active and relaxed dog is a happy dog. We all want our dogs to be confident and relaxed, regardless of the environment that surrounds us. These classes are structured to give owners and handlers experience that related directly to the behavioral issues they are tackling currently, as well as learn and understand how to effectively deal with future issues. Dogs will not be learning command such as “down”, or “stay”…..instead we will focus heavily on very few commands and provide the dog a healthy un-intimidating learning experience, as well as yourself.
Thanks,
Jason Godwin
Friday, August 31, 2007
Growl Classes Will Be Added!!

Friday, August 24, 2007
New Information

Monday, August 20, 2007
Sleeping En Masse
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Thanks

Tuesday, August 14, 2007
No Bad Dogs...(Case study)

Case 1- For this case I will use one of my own dogs as an example. He is a male, 3 year old American Bulldog mix, rescued directly from the streets of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina hit. He lived on the streets for approximately 2 weeks, before being rescued and housed in a shelter. I was part of the rescue effort so I can assure you his past is a mystery. He had a fair amount of existing scarring under the neck and on the back legs. He is missing several teeth, including one of his canines. To this point I knew he had shown aggression over food, and for the most part his body language was very timid - almost sad. Now lets get to the aggression. Within days of bringing the newly named “Saemus” home, I realized his body language had become much more evident - he kept his head below his shoulders at all times, never made eye contact, and avoided close communication with other canines or humans. He would aggress at either if they became too inquisitive. I could enter his bed, but could not touch him. As long as no contact was made I could circle him, raise my arms, and if I moved too fast he would close his eyes and lower his head. At this point, I dismissed the food aggression as a “primal issue” - an issue that is relative to circumstance. In other words he hadn’t been fed a proper meal he didn’t have to fight for in quite some time. Once he was given a pattern of provided food without consequence his aggression was alleviated. Within two weeks I could put my face in his bowl while he ate, and reach my hands in as well. There were many other particular issues to address with Saemus, but the food aggression gives us a clear example of testing the dog and coming up with a diagnosis. In this particular case what we are actually doing is ruling out the behavior as a true aggressive behavior. Had he truly been food aggressive, it would not have been motivated by the level of hunger as much as it would be motivated by his general demeanor.
It is absolutely critical to understand the difference between aggressive actions that are in response to fear and physical circumstance and understanding a truly aggressive dog. In a case like this, aggressive action is taken as a final resort, or at least a secondary action. In a truly aggressive dog, we would have seen what would seem like unprovoked attacks, lunging, biting, and very confident posturing (at least during the aggression). Again, it is absolutely critical to understand the difference between aggressive responses, and a dog with a true aggression problem.
Saturday, August 11, 2007
The Sad Truth About The Electronic Collar

Thursday, August 9, 2007
Moving In!!!

We officially began the move to the new facility yesterday. The dogs are excited and so are we!!! The new building is amazing, the in ground pool is already a guest favorite. I am also very excited about being asked to appear on Good Morning Texas August 16th to discuss my behavioral work with aggressive dogs and dogs with social anxieties. I look forward to seeing everyone at our openings, and discussing dogs. I will post some new pics of the facility and the pool in the next day or two, and get a Tailwaggers group play update in over the weekend.
Tuesday, August 7, 2007
The Growl

Monday, August 6, 2007
Tailwaggers Playtime 8/6

Sunday, August 5, 2007
Diagnosing Fear Aggression
First of all, I believe that dogs aggress due to fearful motivation. This is a fairly simple conclusion based on the observation that confident dogs with a well structured background tend to exhibit aloofness, almost a sense of entitlement in most social settings. So, as we begin our preliminary diagnosis of aggressive actions in a dog, we must first determine what type of fear motivation we are dealing with. I break it into two categories, one that is common and tends to follow a more consistent pattern - and one that is less common and is also more difficult to solve.
Fearful Anxiety is the type of fear motivation that resembles a recipe, and is also the most common. There will be certain “ingredients” (environmental stimulus), that will remain constant in bringing the aggressive behavior about. Yet, other ingredients are like chocolate chips, walnuts, or frosting - all can be present without changing the fact that the item is a cookie……In other words there will always be environmental stimulus that is present that doesn’t actually impact the aggressive action, although it could impact the aggressive action taken. In this type of case we want to address the issues that elicit the aggressive behavior, the other issues will be inconsequential once we have solved the actual stimulus that creates the anxiety.
Focused Fear is much more direct in manor. The environment will hold little weight in the dog determining to aggress or not. It wont be impacted by owner presence, other dog presence, or presence of most other environmental stimulus. These actions are usually directed at specific individuals, objects, people, or dogs and appear to be irrational actions much more than they seem to be protective or dominance issues. Unfortunately, these dogs are less predictable in their aggression - thus making it imperative that we understand the dog and have a good working knowledge of his behavior pattern.
Once you can place a dog in one of the two categories you can then begin to seek resolution on the aggression. The truth about aggression in canine behavior is that, up to this point and time, we have solved it by pushing our dogs to suppress the actions instead of relieving the pressure of the aggressive tendencies. When a dog attacks the door when company knocks, most commonly we treat that by training a dog to hold a good sit stay while we answer the door. Possibly treating the dog for not offering aggressive behavior, or worse punishing the dog if it breaks into a tirade. Yet, in either circumstance we didn’t deal with the issue at hand. The fact is that we need to take this subject and start with a clean slate. No predisposed notion of training paths, or curriculum - just a blank slate. If I were working on this case - I would have to start with what I know……When the combination of having myself in the house, being in the house itself, and having a guest knock are all present when aggressive tendencies appear. So we have to test what we know. I would first remove myself and videotape the dogs behavior at a guests arrival while it inhibits the home alone. If the behavior is the same, we can begin to rule out certain aspects of our relationship with the canine as the reason at fault. You would be amazed at how many dogs aggress at a front door in hopes that they are bringing some sense of comfort to their owners, regardless of our response once the aggression is engaged. It is also quite possible that they may take these opportunities to indirectly show us that they are socially unprepared to handle common greetings with new people - in other words, they don’t want them to come in the door because they aren’t adequately versed in human/canine greeting rituals. I use this example because most people would immediately lump this dog into the category of “focused fear” - where his fear is focused at the door in the home. In fact, there are obvious indicators to tell us that it is not. The fact that the person knocking has no identity to the dog until the door opens, tells us it isn’t focused on one person. The fact that the dog doesn’t bark at the door when there is no one there tells us the door isn’t the stimulus. Once we eliminate ourselves as the cause for the actions, we can start to look toward the anxiety that the dog is trying to avoid or alleviate. They obviously don’t want the door opened, and now we have excluded the door, ourselves and the guest as potential causes of the anxiety………so how can we determine how to alleviate this anxiety without forcing the dog to bury it (where it will just resurface somewhere else anyway). By knowing the dogs personality a little better we can begin to slowly piece together the puzzle. I assure you that knowing the dog that you will be dealing with on a personal level is the first step to gaining the insight in dealing with any aggressive actions.
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Tailwaggers Update 8/4

Friday, August 3, 2007
"Francis" Update

Assessing Aggression (an excerpt)

The real breakdowns in aggressive behavior always involve communication breakdowns. Again, the problem here is commonly addressed by the feeling that we have not taught our dog well enough, we didn’t teach them right from wrong, etc.. This is another ignorant assessment of the situation. The real problem is that humans communicate, for the most part, audibly - with minimal body language, and an extensively large vocabulary ( in multiple languages no less ). Our canine counterparts communicate as a whole unit - a dogs entire body speaks…..they will use tone, movements, gestures, and they will demonstrate strength in unity as well as alone.
In other words, the aggressive act is usually not as unwarranted as we may think. It is usually the result of a given environmental stimulus that the dog will not, or cannot deal with or control. It is also almost always the final attempt to alleviate the problem, not the first. When trying to figure out what exactly the given cause of an aggressive tendency may be, we have to first understand the tendencies of the dog. Once you have a successful working knowledge of the dogs tendencies you can then begin to test the patterns in multiple scenarios - looking for breaks in the patterns you have built, then investigating differences and testing individual stimuli.
Thursday, August 2, 2007
Tailwaggers Update 8/2

Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Tailwaggers Update 7/31

Simple Statistics

Monday, July 30, 2007
Group Social Activity

There simply is no replacement for group social activities while boarding a dog. When a dog is able to view his/her boarding experience as an opportunity to experience (consistently) something he doesn't have the ability to in his day to day life, then the boarding experience becomes easier for pet and owner alike. Group socialized play allows that. Now, I'm not talking about 2 or 3 dogs of like breed together for 5 minutes at a time to use the restroom......real group interaction needs to cross breeds, ages, sex, and temperament. Groups also have to be supervised properly by experienced handlers who can be vocal and lead without issue. This is a desired task that most dogs are eager to accept in a boarding environment. We love it. They do too.

Saturday, July 28, 2007
Saving "Francis"

Friday, July 27, 2007
There Are No Bad Dogs (an excerpt)

Before we can begin to address how to solve a given aggression issue in a particular canine we must first understand why……..why does the dog aggress? As I stated before, I keep this part as simple as possible for my own sanity. There are literally thousands of individual reasons a dog may hold aggressive tendencies. There are the more commonly used reasons - foster homes, history of abuse, “dominant” behavior…….but there are many more plausible reasons that contribute to aggressive action - removal from the mother too early, physical inadequacies, particular phobias (both rational and irrational). That is why I use two simple categories that we can group all of these issues into, “Focused Fear” and “Fearful Anxiety”. Most aggressive tendencies fall under Fearful Anxiety, because most aggressive action is taken in order to alleviate what is being viewed as a stressful or threatening situation. In fact, if the dog viewed fleeing as an option it would most likely much rather do so. Canines are much more intelligent than they are typically given credit for. It is my observation that most dogs express fear through aggression, toward humans in particular, in order to avoid any confusion on the canines stance on the given issue. Under classic canine communication, fear may be exhibited by tucking the tail, raising hackles, etc. Unfortunately, most humans don’t notice or take the time to learn their canine counterparts language - so we misinterpret most of what a dog will tell us in the first greeting. In most cases where aggression surfaces, the dog has communicated to the handler or other parties involved that it is uncomfortable and will soon change behavior patterns. The dog will, in fact, give you at least one (if not several) opportunities to address the issue before it feels that you are either ignoring the communication or do not care. This is when the aggression occurs. Again, in my history, I have noticed that it is much more common that the dog feels this is the last possible way to communicate its fear in a way that will result in it having the pressure alleviated. A dog who has limited social history with humans may growl or show teeth at a first greeting, this is NOT an aggressive action. It is common canine communication, in fact you and I do the same thing with regularity. I walked into a supermarket last week and asked a young lady if they carried a certain kind of light bulb. She said she didn’t know what I was talking about. I then, like you have a hundred times, used my hands to show her the shape of the bulb and the size…..which elicited the response “Oh!, you mean that kind of bulb……sure”. When we approach a dog we are the supermarket attendant. The dog asks for something that we don’t recognize immediately, therefore it is forced to demonstrate it physically………by growling, or showing teeth. The problem here isn’t that the dog growls, that is its natural behavior. What is wrong is that we have labeled the growl a precursor to an attack, and become fearful upon hearing it. When you learn to understand what it means, it actually becomes a great insight into what your dog is saying. If your first indication to a problem is when your dog growls, you should take a deep breath and say “Wow, I must have missed something…..let’s go back and see if we can find where this begins.” - I say this because, the growl is not the beginning, there was communication before that we overlooked and ignored. That communication is what we must notice, understand, and evaluate because it is the most accurate indicator to the root of our problem. By the time we arrive at the growl or attack, we have traveled too far to identify the cause of the aggression and must backtrack.
Thursday, July 26, 2007
The Pack Dynamic
The first thing that needs to be understood is how the true “pack” mentality works. First of all, we are all familiar with it. Substitute the word “family” for “pack”, and substitute yourself for the dog. That is what true pack mentality is. The “pack” is not simply a list of dogs who can physically intimidate or beat you up. Your “pack” as it pertains to the canine world is their “family”……mom, dad, brothers, and sisters, close friends and buddies. Therefore, the notion that a trainer can gain insight into the dog through asserting domination – especially initially - is unfounded at best. The only argument against that would be to show training results – which is not a true barometer. We all know there is no question a dog will perform to avoid being intimidated physically or vocally – but we all also know that the performance drastically decreases once the dog is returned to his “pack”. The response from the trainer will be that you are not enforcing the rules enough. The truth is you never established rules to begin with, and your dog is totally confused right now.
Look at it from this angle, your teenage kiddo is acting up at school a little bit, and her grades have slipped. You hire a tutor who cracks the whip and helps her pass her finals. In the human world we consider that a success. But in the canine world, we don’t need the student to retain the information just long enough to blurb it out on a test…….we need them to really learn it. Learn it and then apply it in the real world – immediately. As long as you employ “pack” fundamentals of this caliber in your training foundation it becomes almost impossible to make positive progress with aggressive behavior.
Another, more realistic, example is the Animal Refuge Foundation (ARF) in Sadler, TX. It is a non profit, care for life facility that is owned and operated by Martha Hovers and a handful of her trusted friends and employees. The acreage holds 300 dogs, give or take, depending on the success of adoptions. The majority of which roam free. Common sense and observation will tell you that they don’t function as one large pack. They actually function as many independent smaller groups that are responsible for one another. Yet, there is no question that they all recognize and know who Martha is. She is there every day from sun up until sun down. She cleans, medicates, and feeds every day. The moral of my story is……..I could be as intimidating as I possibly can be to the dogs at ARF, I will never be Martha. Those dogs respond to her wishes and needs, just as she does to theirs. She provides shelter and food, along with medication and a warm bed. All she asks in return is that you try to get along with everyone else. Almost unbelievably, the dogs at ARF listen to Martha's wishes exceptionally well. Otherwise, she couldn't manage an operation the size of hers – that only runs on donations alone. It is an amazing site of what a true “pack” mentality is – and to tell ourselves….. with a few hours of body posturing and intimidation we can achieve pack leadership…….is just foolish. It is a trust, and a bond that must be built and nurtured.
Again, most of what any trainer or handler will tell you about the pack and its dynamics will be fairly accurate. There are leaders and followers. Anyone can lead if pushed into it or allowed to, and anyone can follow if they so desire. Just remember that’s no different than most people. Dogs do not see themselves as a sub species to the human race. They enjoy being treated fairly. The conditions are different for each dog on what they consider fair and unfair - based on what they've been exposed to and taught (especially in their youth). Your dog may consider boarding at your vets office a nice quiet retreat based on the idea that he gets so much activity and exercise with you that it doesn't bother him to take it easy and sleep most of the day for the weekend. On the other hand, maybe you don’t board very regularly and your dog sleeps in your bed with you…….your friend would find the vets office deplorable, but would be way more apt to enjoy a stay a lush canine retreat. Neither is correct or incorrect for a dog, it just varies depending on their “pack” dynamic. Remember, your dog formed his idea of “family” or “pack” way back in the puppy stages. This isn't new to him. His “pack” awareness doesn't click on and off like a switch. It is always there, just like our idea of “family”. A trainer can not and will not evoke “pack” sensitive behavior, unless he is directing you to take on intimidating roles with your dog….which is a horrible idea. The results that are reaped from that type of training are actually fear motivated responses. The dog will respond to avoid the negative interaction from the trainer - not because he respects him as a leader. Do not fool yourself into believing that your canine friend is so robotic.
In short, the pack dynamic is a wonderfully true statement about the canine world. It covers different species and breeds, and is a loving nurturing bond. We should consider ourselves lucky to be a part of it. It is also a responsibility of understanding your dogs needs and responses. The best trainers I have ever seen tend to train shelter dogs and strays more than anything, due to the fact that most of the work they do with families……is hands off. They instruct the families on how to build that nurturing bond, how to rationally display displeasure – not for your own therapy, but so that the dog truly can understand when and where certain behaviors are allowed and forbidden.