Dear Cesar:
I have a nine-month-old female Yorkshire Terrier with several issues, most importantly one that may get her killed. She is only five pounds and wants to chase cars. A very dangerous combination. Correcting her, having her sit and look at me, walking in the opposite direction and even distracting her with toys is not working. What should I do? I try to walk her for an hour every day and play games with her and other dogs in my apartment complex.
What is the next step? Please help!!!
There are other issues I am working on, but this issue is a matter of life or death.
Sincerely,
Jennifer Lynn Fiore
Long Island, New York.
Dear Jennifer,
Your issue is indeed one of life or death, but I am at a disadvantage not being able to see your dog or work with her directly. My instinct, however, is that the correction that you describe may not be strong enough to redirect your dog, because it doesn’t match the level of intensity of her instinct and desire to chase the cars. Whenever you want to correct a dog’s unwanted behavior, you have to match the intensity of that behavior.
While positive reinforcement like food and toys are excellent ways to redirect many behavior issues, if a dog is fixated on something, those tools often won’t match the intensity of the fixation. Sometimes it takes a more physical-psychological approach. That’s why I suggest you hire a professional trained in blocking or redirecting serious behavior issues, who won’t use force or hurt your dog, just block and redirect. Right now, the important thing is to condition your dog to stop her dangerous behavior before she seriously injures herself.
Stay calm and assertive,
Cesar Millan
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obsession wheels...
Hello cesar im stella from paraguay i wanto to ask you...I have a boxer of 5 years and it takes an obsession as the wheels of the cars, in an occasion I attack the wheel of a car in movement I damage and perdio the vision of an eye, at the time I cannot lead it to walking because it gets out of control on having seen something with wheels for the street .. also it wanted help me like to do in order that on having been walking along the street and it sees other dogs do not stretch to be going to attack them .. thank you!!
Cars
My 9 month old Border Collie is exactly the same. If you have any suggestions I would be very grateful
Best wishes
Tyke
England
my dog hates cars!!!
hi cesar, my name is stephanie.
I have a 9month old border collie named kai
my problem is that everytime my dog sees a moving car he begins to stalk it then as it passes he lunges at it.
It scares me alot as he is a very strong dog and i fear one day that he may pull me out onto the road and into the path of a moving car or that he may be knocked over a seriously hurt.
what can i do to stop this behaviour
PLEASE HELP!!!!!!
YOURS SINCERLEY
stephanie
Border Collies and Cars
I have 3 BC’s and my newest addition, a rescue from a local shelter, had the same problem. BC’s are very sight stimulated (they don’t call it the BC stare for nothing!) and can become obsessive quite easily. I tried several different exercises with mine and they have worked wonders. We stood on the corner of our yard, leash on, and I made her sit and anytime a car came I redirected by touch and made her sit and look at me until the car passed. We were far enough away that if she did lunge she wouldn’t get hurt, and I did it during high traffic times in my suburban neighborhood (before and after school/work hours) so she would have car after car. I then had a friend drive past my house as many times as it took until she was “desensitized” and now she only looks up at cars if they have a loud exhaust.
If your BC is attempting to herd cars, then you’ll have to give him/her some type of job to do in that regard other than cars. BC’s NEED A JOB, they need not only need a lot of physical exercise but loads of mental stimulation also. My dogs love a good game of soccer or baseball; they field the tennis balls and tag the bases. My oldest BC knows how to do the laundry and tells me when a load is finished in the washer or dryer so he can get at it.
Whatever path you choose, your dog needs to first see you as the leader and look to you for direction otherwise nothing is going to work.