I have a lab / pitt mix dog who is about 6 or 7 years old. We got her from a chicken farm and she was a very good puppy. Very easily house trained, did
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Little tummys dog commands etc.
Long story short, my dog has two differnet moods. She can be a lovable dog. But I dont trust her at all. She has bittne me and my husband several times but not to the point where we needed to go to the doctors. You can be petting her and when she has enough, she will raise her
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Cleft lip and palate
Cleft lip repair - series
Clubfoot
Coronary risk profile
Hdl test
Herniated nucleus pulposus
High blood cholesterol and triglycerides
Ldl test
Lipase test
Lipocytes (fat cells). She does not like feet at all. She is petrafied of the wind and thunderstorms. We don't let her around anyone but us, and have not taken her to a vet in a long time b/c we can no longer get a muzzle on her. When she is lvoable she has the lab in her but you can tell when she is in her bad mood because the jaws of the pitt come out and the end of her snout gets very white - that's when we know not to bother with her/.
I know deep down she needs to be put down, but I can't in my heart do it because she can be a lovable dog.
Is there anything, any suggestions to get her to be more of the lab?
I don't have kids so she is the only thing I have to be responsbile for. WE don't allow anyone in the house with her; we are very cautious about that because of her moodiness.
We did take her to a trainer but she was just a joke.
I would love to challenge the DOG WHISPER with her. Because I am only 50% agreed that she needs to be put the sleep.
WHAT to do??
As I stated above/below (not sure how the comments post) but when she wants to play she will run around my husband and grab his hand like she is walk him into her bed (it's our old bed) so they can play. When they play, my husband can grab her face, paws and all and she doesn't become vicious.
I hope my post is in time to save her life!
However, depending on the owners willingness to work with this dog, it may be possible to train them and solve or control aggression towards people.
I've asked our PhD Behaviorist, Dr. Suzanne Hetts, to enter the discussion here and offer her extensive knowledge and experience in dealing with some very difficult behavior cases.
This is NOT a training problem, but a serious behavior problem that IMO is best dealt with by a certified applied or veterinary behaviorist. If you were to try the types of confrontational techniques with this dog used by Cesar Millan you would be placing yourselves in an extremely dangerous situation and could be severely injured. He even cautions people about using his techniques on their own!!
If you already in your heart are considering euthanasia then in my experience that's a sign you know that is the right choice. For your peace of mind you might consider an evalution by one of the professionals I mentioned. You can locate a CAAB or a veterinary behaviorist at CertfiedAnimalBehaviorist.com OR VeterinaryBehaviorists.org respectively. If one is not near you, a CAAB can do a telephone consultation (would be helpful if you could share video) OR a veterinary behaviorist can consult with your veterinarian.
Choosing euthanasia is never, ever an easy decision even when it is in the pet's best interests. You are to be commended for safely managing your dog so that he hasn't hurt anyone but the two of you. However, management in my experience always breaks down, and someone ends up hurt. I know you would feel awful if one of you or an innocent visitor - especially a child - were severely injured. Trust yourselves - if you are afraid of your own dog, that is no way to live. Pets are supposed to bring us happiness and joy, not worry and harm.
My best to you.