|
Stop Dog Barking: Teach the 'Quiet' Command
By:
Dennis Fetko,
Ph.D., “Dr. Dog”
Chronic barking can get a dog
into a spiral of stressful behavior that he can’t get out of without your
help. Excessive barking is bad for your dog as it can cause systemic damage
like ulcers and other medical problems.
What can we do about the problem? Well, first realize that barking isn’t
bad. Excess barking is bad. Barking to warn you that someone’s trying to
break into your home is great! Barking about a gas leak, the baby crying, or
smoke or a fire is also a plus. Barking because a butterfly landed in a bush
a block away is nonsense. If the dog is still barking ten minutes after the
mailman left, or if he won’t stop barking when you tell him to, you’ve got a
problem.
Teaching the “Quiet” Command
Behavioral therapy to control barking is not only gentle, but fun; it’s
usually very successful; and it’s very long-lasting. Teach the dog that the
word “quiet” means to stop barking. The simplest way to do that is to have
the dog with you, get him to bark by excited play or whatever--bark at him,
he’ll mimic you. Then after a few barks, gently hold his mouth shut as you
say “quiet”.
He has to be quiet because you’re holding his mouth shut, and you then
praise him lavishly for being quiet with something like “Good quiet, that’s
it, good quiet!!” Repeat that a few times and soon the word “quiet” will be
learned.
This may also be the first time the dog was praised a lot for shutting up.
Once the dog knows what “quiet” means and that it’s lavishly rewarded, you
begin to communicate effectively in an actual situation. When the dog begins
to bark at something, the first thing you say is, “Good dog, that’s it!”
“Good speak!” That ought to confuse the little whipper!. It may be the first
time you praised him for barking.
Your voice is excited and full of praise. You immediately follow that with a
neutral, “okay” and then a firm “quiet”. Then, of course, you reward the
silence by sincerely praising the dog for shutting up. The entire routine
sounds like this: “Good dog, good speak!” “Okay.” “Quiet.” “Good quiet!!!”
Goooood quiet!” There! You’ve just successfully communicated exactly what
you mean to the dog--that it’s okay to bark at the stranger, but after the
initial alert, stop.
If you begin this precise routine when the dog is young and just beginning
to bark at things, you can avoid a barking problem by conditioning the dog
to let out one burst and then shut up automatically. That initial burst told
the intruder that there’s a dog inside and it told you there’s someone
outside. That’s all--it’s over! Anything more than that and you risk losing
control of the vocal process.
The same procedure works with the adult dogs, too. Naturally it takes longer
to break a bad habit and train in a new one, but it’s done successfully all
the time. Age is no barrier to controlling a problem as long as the problem
isn’t physical or medical.
Finally, your efforts to control your dog’s barking will be most successful
if you determine why your dog is barking excessively so you can ameliorate
those circumstances. Is he barking to protect his territory, because his
environment is excessively stimulating, from confinement or isolation,
boredom, or even because his barking is being inadvertently rewarded.
Additionally, an overly dominant dog is a prime candidate for excessive
barking. If the household lacks authority, the dog will assert his pack
superiority and literally yell his way to success.
There are many okay barking circumstances, so you want to control the act,
not eliminate it. Don’t teach the dog that all barking is bad, because
that’s not true. Control is the key here, and this may be the first and only
time that that’s so. With most problems, your goal is to eliminate them.
With barking your goal should be to teach discrimination. You’ll never be
glad your dog bit you, but there sure are times you’ll be glad he barked.
The author, Dr. Dennis Fetko, “Dr. Dog” is a world-renowned animal
behaviorist who has appeared on the 20/20 television show, managed the
reintroduction of captive-bred Arabian Oryx into the Saudi Arabian National
Wildlife Research Center, and made a presentation at the South American
Veterinary Congress. His ebook, Dr. Dog’s FAST, EASY FUN Behavior Solutions,
reveals his proven methods for eliminating barking, jumping, chewing,
digging, pulling and his puppy housetraining methods.
Click Here for
more information.
|