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In article ,
FurPaw wrote: I don't have much experience with Dachshunds, but I'd bet the same kind of thing happens with them. I kind of hate to say it but I think dachshunds are just naturally difficult little dogs. Hard to housetrain, too darned bossy. That's not to say that it's not the owner's responsibility to civilize the little, uh, "beasts," but that they're somewhat tougher than average. -- Melinda Shore - Software longa, hardware brevis - Prouder than ever to be a member of the reality-based community |
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FurPaw spoke these words of wisdom in
: diddy wrote: I agree about chihuahua's I've met more nasty than nice ones. But I don't fear for my life from chihuahua attacks. If worst came to worst, and i really feared for my life from them, I'd just step on em. problem solved. Some how I don't see you doing that, diddy. I can't either. I can't imagine living in fear of my life from a chihuahua. Nasty viscious animals, but deadly? No. But if I were in fear of my life.. I would have no problems doing just that. My impression w/r/t Chihuahuas is that the problems lie more with the owners than the dogs, when the owners don't train the dogs or set boundaries for acceptable and unacceptable behavior, and tolerate snapping and snarkiness because they are "just so little." yup And just like any other breed, there is a range of dispositions. IME with up close and personal knowledge of 9 Chis, 5 were pretty stable and never snapped or snarked at anyone, as far as I knew, 3 showed the potential in adolescence but it was controlled by training, and one was a snappy, snarky little thing whose owner was clueless about how to control her. I don't have much experience with Dachshunds, but I'd bet the same kind of thing happens with them. probably FurPaw |
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On Jun 29, 10:23*pm, "sionnach" wrote:
"Phyrie" wrote: I don't know about this data but I do know that I've never, ever met a dachshund who didn't bite me. *A friend of mine is currently playing host to an old army buddy, the buddy's wife and kids, AND their three dachshunds. (The buddy has just left the Army & relocated to the area, and they're staying with my friend while house-hunting.) *My friend reports that one of the dachsies is refusing to eliminate out of doors - I'm not clear on whether this is a new or old issue - and that another bites him every time he attempts to play with his own two dogs; hasn't broken skin, apparently, but has left bruises. OTOH, I've known several quite nice dachsies at our local de facto dog park - the one we currently see most often is very sweet, athough he doesn't listen to his owner at all, and is a mild pest to female dogs he finds attractive (he's intact). I'm certain there are nice ones out there, somewhere. I've lived most of my adult life on a tiny island, and simply don't know a lot of dogs. But when I was younger, YIKES, those biteyface wieners scared the crap out of me. Phyrie (posting from GoogleGroups as my stupid NNTP server just won't work anymore...) |
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On Jun 30, 8:27*am, FurPaw wrote:
diddy wrote: I agree about chihuahua's *I've met more nasty than nice ones. But I don't fear for my life from chihuahua attacks. If worst came to worst, and i really feared for my life from them, I'd just step on em. problem solved.. Some how I don't see you doing that, diddy. My impression w/r/t Chihuahuas is that the problems lie more with the owners than the dogs, when the owners don't train the dogs or * set boundaries for acceptable and unacceptable behavior, and tolerate snapping and snarkiness because they are "just so little." And just like any other breed, there is a range of dispositions. * IME with up close and personal knowledge of 9 Chis, 5 were pretty stable and never snapped or snarked at anyone, as far as I knew, 3 showed the potential in adolescence but it was controlled by training, and one was a snappy, snarky little thing whose owner was clueless about how to control her. I don't have much experience with Dachshunds, but I'd bet the same kind of thing happens with them. FurPaw -- The plural of anecdote is not proof. To reply, unleash the dog. When I was a kid I had one friend whose mother raised "teacup" chihauhaus. I didn't know at the time what an awful thing it was to breed these little things for size, with no regard for health, temperament or anything else. And they were SMALL. They only weighed a few ounces. They shook all the time. I thought it was from nerves, but my friend said it was cold. They were so small they couldn't maintain any body heat. I have no idea whether that was true or not, but it was sad. They weren't very nice dogs either, snappy and frightened. I guess so, when a crow could pick you up and carry you away! Those little dogs scared me, but I don't know if was fear OF them or FOR them. On the other hand, I had yet another friend whose family raised Saint Bernards. Big, healthy, bred-to-improve-the breed dogs. They were beautiful, and I had no fear of those gentle giants, ever. You've never lived until you've rolled around a livingroom floor with a about a ton of romping Bernards! Bliss!! A friend of my mom's had a couple of nasty little miniature poodles that were bitey- face dogs too. We got **** when they bit us. My mom's friend actually said to me once that "Casey" gets upset when he has to bite us, so stop making him do that. Hmmm, methinks I see a pattern here. Small dogs=bad. At least when you're exposed to bad ones while young. I wonder why I chose a toy breed at all? Well, the Cav's are the largest of the toys.... Phyrie |
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A fair number of small breeds can be considered aggressive. Usually it's
a combination of being bred for toughness of temperament and being horribly spoiled because, you know, they're little. Most small dogs (including Chihuahuas and even dachshunds) can be incredibly sweet, you just need to help them set parameters of what is and is not acceptable, while not causing them to fear for their lives. They ARE small after all. My breeder (Min Pin) has a known biter. He's a tough little dog and he's learned that biting gets him what he wants, so he bites. This is a dog that I call Tony Soprano. All he needs is some chest hair and a few gold chains. The first time I took care of the kennel, "Tony" tried to bite me. Instead of making a huge hairy deal out of it (which backfires big time with tiny dogs), I just totally ignored it. I think this guy was used to a) making a big impression on people and b) causing an uproar which c) either resulted in getting him hurt by them or d) caused them to leave him alone. So the bite was sort of a preemptive strike, half because he wanted to and half because he was scared. He was totally taken aback when I ignored him. What? No attention? No dramatics? From that moment he decided he adored me and we're now great friends. He's never even thought about biting me again. Go figure. |
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