Dog ATTACKS Owner?!

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  • Опубликовано: 18 май 2024
  • This owner was ATTACKED by her dog 😮 A few of you wanted more information on Odin, the dog shown in our previous reel, so here is an INCREDIBLE STORY from his owner. Have any of you had similar experiences? Let us know in the comments down below ⬇
    Choosing the right trainer for your animal matters. So if you in Lancaster, Palmdale, Quartz Hill, Valencia, Santa Clarita, or surrounding areas and looking to improve your relationship with your dog, text (626) 945-5875 the phrase "TRAIN MY DOG" to set up an evaulation 📲🦮
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Комментарии • 19

  • @virtuouslysetapart
    @virtuouslysetapart 2 месяца назад +16

    The fact that she’s bringing him for help says she loves him and wants to keep him despite the attack.

  • @malapoyo
    @malapoyo 2 месяца назад +12

    I could never trust him again.🤷

    • @chrismitrik1919
      @chrismitrik1919 Месяц назад

      What if the dog sensed something was wrong with her. Didn't like it?

    • @andiamador7156
      @andiamador7156 Месяц назад

      @@chrismitrik1919 Then she can't trust him. She can trust the other dog who saved her from him, though. What is wrong with her is that the dog has no respect at all for her, no trust in her, no 'love' or concern for her, or that never would have happened under any circumstances.
      But other than that, she obviously can command, instill, and inspire respect, trust, and love and concern for her from a dog... so, maybe it isn't so much what is wrong with her in the final analysis.
      The dog may have functioned better in a different environment with a different owner, someone he can accept as the lead --- or he may be deficient/defunct, too prone to dangerously dominate even the human, any human, who must be the lead.
      I'm confident in saying that if your dog tries to kill you because you have decided that it's time to go home, or he suddenly gets it in his head for any reason, it's not you but the dog.

  • @dottie7297
    @dottie7297 2 месяца назад +11

    Good for her for asking for the right help for her and Odin. That says more of her character than most the jumental jerks pretending to be dog experts on the Internet. Hopefully this is one of the happy reunions for Odin and his mom. She's a bad a@# dog owner doing right by him and not just giving up or being scared of him. I also hope the canecorso got a steak dinner.

  • @jessm2560
    @jessm2560 2 месяца назад +5

    Is there a long form video of this interview? Can't seem to find one

  • @catwoman2596
    @catwoman2596 2 месяца назад +2

    Possible he was resource guarding the Cane Corso and/or the space they were in. I've seen it before. A dog is nice on their way into a kennel but as you're shutting the door, while the dog is turning around, they go off and it's exactly as she described.

  • @teresaclark7291
    @teresaclark7291 2 месяца назад +6

    Wow that would of been so scary for her, shes got balls to still be able to work and be with him after he attacked her

  • @MerkabaMillionare
    @MerkabaMillionare 2 месяца назад +4

    Insanity! This is what you call a pet?

    • @chrismitrik1919
      @chrismitrik1919 Месяц назад

      Insanity. The dog sensed something about her. Watch the whole story before you say dumb stuff

  • @MaximillianandRubyGrace
    @MaximillianandRubyGrace 2 месяца назад +4

    Wow I can’t imagine
    Good for her trying to get help

  • @taraboyle5615
    @taraboyle5615 Месяц назад

    Is there another video with more details of the Oden story? I have a 90lb 5year old male boxer that I have been bitten by. I do not want to go into all details here but I have had 4 1/2 years of experience with resource aggression that my baby is putting me through. I actually just started him on meds today.

    • @k9intuition152
      @k9intuition152  Месяц назад

      Watch our follow up videos

    • @andiamador7156
      @andiamador7156 29 дней назад

      I am not a dog trainer, but I have an eight year old boxer australian shepherd/shar pei mix, at that weight, very muscular and strong, male not neutered, guard dog who has never offered to bite me. He looks like a black and white thicker boxer with a better snout and thicker legs. He has personality traits from all three breeds, but the boxer comes through in the best ways. He is fantastic.
      He has brought me so much joy, and so much service and reliability, and sense of security. He does things like asking to be let out in the evening sometimes only to stand in the middle of the yard on his hind legs and bark a warning to the world that he is still there even though he plans to stay inside for the night. lol Sometimes he does the rounds and I can hear him making small statements at the fence line on all four sides. He's telling something to stay out.
      He has not bitten two strangers who others let into the yard, either --- because I am able to call him off. If I let people in he is like flipping a switch, and he minds me without question. He's so happy they are there at that very point. He respects me, protects me, and trusts my judgement. He snarls and darts back and forth at someone I have not let in the gate until I call him off. He scared them and the known friends who brought them. He didn't go after the known people, just the strangers. My gate and fence is posted to warn, and I tell people.
      I am a disabled older woman and trained him myself from nine weeks old. I had the time to devote to him after such a confinement at home, and so I got him and raised him and trained him. I have severe vertigo, and riding in a car is not good for me. So, I don't do it but when I must.
      The first approach at his training was to train against food aggression. I did this by standing over him while he ate, petting and praising him for eating. I also hand fed him treats during training and he does get bites from my food, but only at the appropriate times. He will not touch my plate even if I leave the room. ( I am food and resource aggressive.... I only had to show him that once when he was about nine months old. He never forgot.)
      I trained him against food aggression because I didn't want him to ever go at me if he got in the zone over his bowl and I hobbled by. I did the exercise every time he ate, and I would also make him back up and let me see into his bowl. Sometimes I would 'put some good taste' on it, and so he became interested in backing away from the bowl. I talked to him and praised him and did this consistently for a few months from the very beginning.
      When I stopped doing that particular training at his food bowl, he began leaving the food bowl during his meal and coming over to me to be praised. I had paired the two together so solidly (food and praise) with performance. I praised him for coming over for praise and he would run back and take some more bites of his meal and do this several times during a meal. He got so good at understanding my wishes, that when the cat started putting her head in his bowl, he would tell her, but I would tell him to save her some, and he would leave four or five pieces and she would eat them. She had her own bowl near his, but he left hers alone. It sounds unfair, but cats are a different animal and the point is no food aggression and to care for my cat as well...
      I still did a lot of training with food treats as a reward and as praise as a reward, since then and now, and regarding food and regarding his chew toys, consistently. I would tell him to bring me his chew bone and let me see it. He would do so and watch me inspect it and give it back or not. Most of the time he got it back or got something better. He was being trained that chances were great that he would get rewards. He is very interested in interactions with me. The focus on food aggression training and food and praise based training is what made all of his training work so well, in my opinion.
      Basically, everything here is mine. I use those words and he knows that means it is mine. Everything he gets comes from me, and he doesn't do without. He doesn't feel like he is doing without. Calling something mine and pointing it out to him might apply to a toy or a neighbor's puppies who got into my yard, or a person.
      I am not telling you that this will work on the dog you have. I am just saying that it is likely to work on a boxer puppy you may wind up getting in the future. I only have one dog at a time. He has friends, people and their dogs, and they visit regularly, but he is an only dog. I give most of his commands in a sing song baby words manner and just talk to him in that manner, even when he got after a couple of strangers, and he just minds me. When I get aggravated and speak in a firm tone, (only happened a few times) he minds but ducks and tries to make himself look small. Breaks my heart a little. I am always quick to go back to praise and happy tones, since dogs mainly live in the moment. Immediate reprimand. Immediate reward as soon as the behavior changes.
      He's a very happy dog. He has an acre. He's indoor/outdoor. He enjoys being my dog and me running our show here. I am good enough with my own dog that the neighbor's guard dogs defer to me and show me respect, even though I am feeble on my feet and they see it. I believe they do that because they observe how much control I have over my dog whom they have tangled with a little. They figure I must have some power. I have been bitten by a relative's dog who was fine before I became disabled, but who attacked my legs the first time I visited after onset of my disability. So dogs with a high prey drive and no training will attack a feeble person.
      I am just sharing my experience and some insight into my relationship with and training of my dog. He is a fear-based personality dog. He showed to be afraid of planes way up in the sky, his own shadow, anything or anyone new. I was afraid he wasn't going to make much of a guard. But I just talked to him and showed him there is nothing to worry about. He still gets startled easily, but he learned to trust my judgement and he does so to the point that he is the only dog in the neighborhood who isn't afraid of thunder, fireworks, or gun shots (I live out in a rural subdivision in Texas people target practice around here). He asks to go outside to watch the fireworks. "So you wanna go outsigh n see dem f'er boom booms agin? Otay den, lil baby Rowdy. Bye Bye outsigh. See who is it doos dem f'er boom booms."
      When it comes to the dog you have now, do what the vet, the trainers, and your own gut tell you to do. I will only say to not allow yourself to continue to be bitten by your dog.
      In the future, pick a puppy that is not too macho and is not too wimpy with his litter mates -- middle of the road easy going, with an observable ability to focus their interested attention on you when you speak is the choice. Take the time to observe and read him. Then, establish a strong foundation of the dog looking to you for everything that is good, with trust and respect. I suggest one dog at a time and socialization with other people and other dogs appropriate to you own lifestyle. (In mine, everyone else comes here).
      The foundation starts with the food training. Don't be in a hurry and put a bowl down and back off. Pair food with praise praise praise. Spend a lot of time with the dog. Next comes rules that fit with you being the lead in all things. I never played tug-of-war with an item in play or practice. I keep my dog off of all furniture, too. He sleeps on the floor near me when he doesn't want to stay outside. He goes in the door before me or after me, depending on what I tell him at the time. "Rowdy first." or "Mama first". He can't be bumping into me. I am a big fall risk.

  • @GreenClassified
    @GreenClassified 2 месяца назад +11

    Boerbulls are such loyal dogs, so im just going to say, this woman owns not only a boerbull but a cane corso as well, sometimes you need some self awareness. Just because you like the idea of big scary dogs, doesnt mean you are able to provide them with the best care. For your sake & others, consider your limitations.

    • @loudloveen
      @loudloveen 2 месяца назад +4

      I agree. When I had my Akita I was in my 20s. It was fine. I could even lift him and carry him for a short distance. He weighed 32kg. Now I'm 48. My heaviest dog weighs 22kg and is a sheepdog, not a guard dog. I'm cracking my head trying to pick a guard dog I could handle. I'm considering either an Airdale Terrier or a Giant Schnauzer, but am not sure because of their size. Neither of them is as powerful as the dogs this lady has and she has two. It's a humongous task.

  • @Dognerdca
    @Dognerdca 2 месяца назад +3

    100% that dog was trained using a punishment based method. This happens way more than is reported and she’s looking for help with another punishment based trainer good plan, lady!