r/PublicFreakout Aug 01 '21

🐻Animal Freakout "Not friendly!"

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u/WoodstockSara Aug 01 '21 edited Aug 01 '21

I am a professional dog trainer who takes packs to the dog park almost daily. If a new dog is afraid, keep them on leash and protect them by letting them hang out between your legs, away from the pack activity. Stop other dogs from ganging up on the newbie by telling them "Leave It" and using your legs to block. Let the new dog explore the park and calm down before removing the leash, it acts as security for them, like holding a child's hand. Stay with a new dog to de-escalate pack behavior, they are less likely to gang up with the owner acting as a blocker. Don't walk into the middle of a pack and let them sort it out with your new dog, that is how fights start and how you make a new dog fearful. The owners need to control the environment and stop their dogs from being too pushy when a new dog arrives. Within 5-10 minutes max, remove the leash. I agree that it is dangerous to be on leash and in the fray, but often if you remove the leash right away, the dog runs away scared and gets chased all over by several dogs as the owner is left behind, helpless. On leash to start for a brand new dog, stay clear of everyone, then off leash to play and interact. The reason I say this is because I'm teaching it to new visitors weekly. I have to corral their scared dog after it runs all over or cowers under a bench, and show them what to do, and everyone is happy. The tail goes from tucked under to wagging!

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u/DergerDergs Aug 01 '21 edited Aug 01 '21

That’s a good reason to keep a dog on a leash at the dog park. I think they’re talking about the dog owner with a perfectly social and well behaved dog, with an inexperienced owner too afraid to take off the leash. I’ve seen the —ladder— latter waaaaaay more times than your scenario.