We understand roads, but do our dogs?
A roaring, smelly monster either approaches him head-on or bears down on him from behind. At night it may have two bright eyes. How can the dog know that the vehicle won’t plough into him and his human?
With each car that passes Harry becomes more highly aroused. Each vehicle could annihilate him and so he has to chase it off.
He is successful this time, but the next one that comes along – will he manage to get rid of that one also?
A vehicle approaches and the dog lunges and barks, so what happens next? The vehicle goes away.
I’m sure Harry feels the vehicle’s departure is the direct consequence of his barking and lunging. To make matters worse, the person on the other end of the lead, who he should be able to trust, doesn’t help him. He traps him and may even join in the ‘car rage’.
No wonder Harry dreads walks
The German Shepherd is now nine months old and he lives an otherwise wonderful life in a rural area. Down the lane cars are sudden happenings.
I was called because he chases traffic but that isn’t the actual problem. Anyone using enough force could physically prevent a dog from chasing a vehicle. The real problem, the cause of the behaviour, is fear, and this is what Harry’s humans need to deal with.
Harry is now so worried about leaving the safety of his house and garden that they only have to call him in from outside and he becomes suspicious that they may want to put his harness on – and that would mean having to confront cars.
One photo shows happy Harry as he usually is. The other photo he has his harness on and is suspicious we may want to put his lead on also, so he’s not coming in.
Tiny steps and patience
Getting Harry to be chilled around traffic will need to be taken in tiny steps using hard work, patience and persistence which I know his owners have. They have had several German Shepherds over the years but none of the things they have tried have cracked the problem of a dog that chases traffic, so they need a different approach.
Step one, before they can do anything else, is for Harry to come happily to have his harness and lead put on. The only way to do that will be for the equipment to not be a precursor of going out and to be associated with food and fun at home.
As soon as they step out through the door Harry is pulling and barking should any car dare pass by the end of their long drive. Going out through the door itself must be conquered for starters until they achieve a happy and relaxed dog within just a few feet of the house.
There should be no more close encounters at all with cars for now while they work on him.
Fortunately Harry is fine when inside a car so he will be taken to traffic-free places for his outings whilst the intensive desensitisation work is done near home and in places where moving vehicles are at a ‘safe’ distance.
I have shown them an emergency procedure should an unexpected vehicle appear, whereby Harry’s humans will take decisive and logical (to Harry) action and he will see the monster disappear into the distance without his having chased it away.