Franklin has always been a talker, he's a corgi its not surprise. The problem is that when he plays, EVERY TIME he plays he has this high pitched bark and its driving me insane! I can't take him to play with other dogs because he just herds them and barks and barks and barks, when I throw a toy for fetch he barks and barks and barks until he gets to the toy, any and every play activity makes him bark. HELP! What can I do to stop this or at least cut it down a bit? I've told him quiet, tried to calm the play, re-direct his attention, etc and it continues. Need advice! I don't want him to be "that dog" when he is in play groups and I don't even want to begin to think of what my neighbors are thinking when we are playing!
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Here's a good article about tubal ligation/ vasectomy in dogs. I think you'll soon start seeing more people who compete in dog sports looking at vasectomy instead of neutering. Most vets won't do it, though.
http://www.petmd.com/blogs/fullyvetted/2010/april/ligations_vasecto...
Hi Melissa,
I decided to teach him one day, hoping it would give his barking some boundaries. I started with speak would say speak and bark, when he let out a loud bark I would say good boy and give him a treat. At first Quincy would look at me stunned as to why I wasn't telling him ENOUGH! When he seemed to understand speak I moved to inside bark, which he tends to do anyway, I just gave the buh buh a name. I would say inside bark and do the buh buh, when he did it say good boy and give him a treat. Last I introduced quiet, I would say good quiet when he was quiet and give him a treat. As I say quiet I put my finger index finger up in front of my mouth so he also gets a visual sign. It is still a work in progress, but I know if we just keep practicing and are consistent it will come together. My family (including my 3 year old niece) will tell him inside bark when he's too loud. Most people know he is barking loud because is excited.
Also when he is outside playing with his basket ball I let him bark. He will bark and herd the ball a bit and look at me, I tell him "get your ball" or "herd it" and he goes back to barking and herding his ball a bit to look at me again. I encourage him to play with his basket ball how he wants (barking) because that's him. I am hoping the end result will be he knows there is a time and place to bark loud... As far as my neighbors I really don't care if they are annoyed by him barking when is playing with his ball. To me barking while playing is different then nuisance barking. If Quincy is barking and not playing I will call him in or tell him enough, so no one gets annoyed. If your neighbors are annoyed by Franklin barking while he is playing, it is an unrealistic expectation, kind of like asking their children to play silently. Hope this helps : )
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