Dominance Biting
I've noticed that Tengu is being very dominant with me. Whenever he wants me to do something, like give him the treat/toy/food I'm holding, or if I pull him pack on the leash away from a dog, he puts his mouth on my hand, arm or leg, and tries to pull me down. he then starts applying a slight pressure, then growling and increasing the pressure.
one time I brought him to our play meeting, and one of the owners had a little kid with them. I warned them to keep her far away from Tengu. but when the owners' back was turned, she walked up to him despite my warnings. he suddenly lunged at her, knocking her down and grabbing her shoulder in her mouth. so the kid starts crying, and this freaks out Tengu. so I'm thinking that this might turn out bad if I don't do something, so I grab his jaws and growl. he lets go of her and growls at me. after that I never brought him to the play meetings again.
Do you think this is something I can handle myself, or does he need more professional rehabilitation? It seems pretty serious, since he just keeps on adding more pressure I relent.
one time I brought him to our play meeting, and one of the owners had a little kid with them. I warned them to keep her far away from Tengu. but when the owners' back was turned, she walked up to him despite my warnings. he suddenly lunged at her, knocking her down and grabbing her shoulder in her mouth. so the kid starts crying, and this freaks out Tengu. so I'm thinking that this might turn out bad if I don't do something, so I grab his jaws and growl. he lets go of her and growls at me. after that I never brought him to the play meetings again.
Do you think this is something I can handle myself, or does he need more professional rehabilitation? It seems pretty serious, since he just keeps on adding more pressure I relent.
Comments
A lot of dogs can be mouthy when they are trying to get someone to stop doing something, but knocking the kid down and grabbing her shoulder is a pretty scary situation.
As for whether or not you can handle it yourself, I can't really say. Its always a good idea, if you can, to work with a professional though. It is a LOT harder to deal with behavioral problems in your own dogs. Since you live with them, you can become complacent with their actions and miss subtle signs that would be very obvious and important to someone who knows what to look for.
What do you know about this dog? Was he a surrender or was he found wandering? If you are fostering from a shelter, call your nearest Akita Rescue see if they will take him into an experienced foster home.
Usually trainers will reduce the cost for verifiable rescues.
Good luck
Snf
I will say that this is actually a common enough thing with Akita that there are little stories about why they do this. So an experienced behaviorist should know about this type of thing in this specific breed.
With Akita its all about respect and positive reinforcement. I'm not saying you would do this, but I highly recommend you don't try to dominate that dog with force or you will be bit. He is already telling you he is ok with biting you.
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Brad- I'd never use force to dominate any dog. with a small dog it generates fear, with a large dog it generates danger.
And I just found out what Tengu's name means- a kind of japanese demon. how ironic.