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My 15 month old chocolate labrador has taken to running away whenever he sees another dog. What can i do to stop this i've tried everything i can think of. Please help!!!

2006-11-29 03:25:49 · 14 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

14 answers

Put him on a leash.

2006-11-29 03:45:12 · answer #1 · answered by DaBasset - BYBs kill dogs 7 · 1 0

Labs are great dogs to train because they will work for food all day (at least, all of the Labs that I've met will do so!) I can't tell if your dog is running away because he is fearful, or because he wants to play chase with the other dog. In either case, you want to have a treat bag (clipped on to your belt; these are available at Petco, Petsmart, etc) so that you have treats easily available. Take your dog for a walk where you are sure to see other dogs, and treat him whenever you see another dog. Don't overstress your pup by coming to close to the other dogs, if that's at all possible. Keep a distance so that your dog can see the other dog, bt will still turn to look at you when you call his name. Treat him whenever he looks at you. The way this should work is : your dog sees the other dog. You say your dog's name. Your dog's head whips around to look at you, and you say "Yes!" and give a treat. Repeat this exercise a lot until your dog can tolerate other dogs being closer to him.
And yes, be careful - as the other people here have written, if you know that your dog is going to run away when he sees another dog, it's really up to you to protect him from running into traffic and so on.
I've put a link below to an article about being able to recall your dog to you in many different types of situations. Hope it helps!

2006-11-29 03:52:00 · answer #2 · answered by Misa M 6 · 0 0

Labs are very social dogs...they want to be where dogs or people are. Its hard to believe you've tried "everything". Tried a leash? Tried securing your yard? He'll run after other dogs if you do nothing to stop him. Labs are smart dogs and train easily. If you teach him to "come" to you with reward and praise, he will "come" whenever you command it. That needs to be what he wants to do more than go and visit other dogs. Also keep in mind that 15 months is still adolescence time for dogs. He could be attracted to other dogs in a sexual sense, and if this is the case consider having him neutered. Tried that?

2006-11-29 03:36:06 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Make him more interested in you, you need to find a toy that he really loves and stops caring about other dogs. My dog did the same. I only let him off the lead once he knew the command "come" and "here".
Unfortunately he now had some bad experiences with other dogs who bit him and he is agressive towards others no, so needs to stay on the lead.
It is very important to socialise him, but he needs to know that you are more interesting than the dogs.

Good Luck!

2006-11-29 03:37:20 · answer #4 · answered by Wednesday 3 · 1 0

Firstly you must start from the beginning, when you call your dog indoors you will notice that 9 times out of 10 he will come to you, because you are either feeding him, getting ready for a walk, or asking him to pick up something you have spill ed on the floor, when you call him on a walk he knows you are taking him home "boring to him" so you need to make yourself worth while coming to, buy some frankfurters and chop them up for
your recalls, and start practising at home, Labradors love to retrieve start teaching this game at home, buy a good book to show you how to do this. also nutrition is very important, are you feeding him on a good food, Eukanuba, royal canine or hill diet are the best, will make him much calmer, worth trying for a month. labs are very bright you can make him a good mannered dog you can take anywhere with a little effort and fun

2006-11-29 05:21:10 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

is he neutered? If not, have him done, then walk him where he can play with other dogs. Dogs need other dogs and if he is never allowed to socialise with other dogs, he will always try to run off and play with them. You need to keep him on an extending lead until you have done more training with him. Taking him to training classes where you will both learn and where he will get to meet other dogs one evening a week, would be beneficial.
I would never have a single dog because an only dog is a lonely dog.
Perhaps you could consider getting another dog as a companion to him?

2006-11-29 03:59:38 · answer #6 · answered by fenlandfowl 5 · 1 0

i know exactly wher your coming from my 10month old lab x is doing the same thing,i've tried beeing really nice,offerin food treats beeing firm with my voice at him but nothing the other day i was down the feilds for over an hour trying to get him back its really frustrating.tomorrow im buying him a long training lead which means he has his chance to meet other dogs still but he has to return to me also i can start training him from scratch again while hes on the lead i'll call him to me when he does he gets rewarded.eventually with constant training he should get the picture that coming back to me equals really tasty food.i'd advise the same for your dog,good luck

2006-11-29 12:41:15 · answer #7 · answered by Heavenly20 4 · 0 0

has your dog been socialised? - take him to dog school!!

you may benefit from the recall technique, this is where you call your dog back every time he gets a set distance away from you,
on his return you give lots of fuss and his best treat.

you can also try the stay command- With my dogs I can say "stay", my dog will sit, and I can walk a whole football pitch without them moving.
start of with short distances, and call back by saying come and pointing to your feet. lots of fuss and favourite treat.

both these techniques are great and will help you control your dog.
Best of luck xx

2006-11-29 04:28:31 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It fairly relies upon. If he's an extremely youthful domestic dog and additionally you purely merely have been given him, do no longer complication. it is the terrific time to have him off the lead. in fact, once you first get a clean canine you may desire to no longer have him on the lead in any respect till he's approximately 3 to 4 months previous except you're compelled to accomplish that via interior sight site visitors. a youthful domestic dog won't run remote from you and could bond lots speedier in case you enable him unfastened. in fact, preserving your youthful canine on a lead teaches him which you will persist with him everywhere he is going and he does not discover ways to pay interest on your whereabouts and shop up with you. If we are conversing approximately an older canine, the placement is extra complicated. What you may desire to ask your self is How reliable is the bond between you and your canine? whilst leash strolling does your canine pull or walk quietly beside you? Does he/she pay interest to you once you pass out mutually or do you experience like a ineffective wait on the top of the lead? in case you purely have administration over your canine behaviour via employing the deliver approximately ideal, a protracted monitoring lead is probable the safer decision till you experience that your canine will reliably pay attention to verbal instructions with out you having to tug the deliver approximately get his/her interest. that's significant which you do no longer walk after your canine. whilst he/she runs remote from you, walk into the alternative path giving a command mutually with "this way!" and don't turn back. with your canine on a protracted lead you be attentive to you're secure. Your canine desires to income to orientate himself around you and stay close to you, or you're long previous. enjoying cover and look for could additionally assist you with preserving his interest focussed on you.

2016-12-29 16:06:03 · answer #9 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

I've had several dogs that got into this habbit and honestly im still not sure if it can be stopped its a disciplinary prob and i know its sucks. lucky my current 2 young dogs have nt bothered with this practice. ps The main culprit was a black lab that i had.

2006-11-29 03:48:59 · answer #10 · answered by westoz 2 · 0 1

Have you nuetered it? Maybe try an underground electric fence. It keeps the dog in, but doesn't make it feel threatened. Good luck!

2006-11-29 03:30:16 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous 2 · 0 1

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