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Getting To Know A Dog

 


I am currently enjoying the privilege of getting to know a young German
shepherd who came to the Best Friends Pet Adoption Center in Los Angeles from L.A. Animal Services, and then came home to stay.

Q thats his name is a beautiful young dog. He is also brilliant. It took him all of two minutes to figure out how to open my office door, which opens inward. He noticed that when he pawed the lever-type handle, the door unlatched, but his weight on the door closed it again. He solved that problem by taking his weight off the door so that it wouldnt re-latch and then he worked the crack in the door with his nose until it opened.

However, he apparently noticed that the humans dont get down on all fours and nose the door open after unlatching it. No, they remain standing and pull the door toward them by the handle. A few attempts later and he was wrapping his right paw over the handle, unlatching it and then pulling it toward him while wrapping his left paw around the door itself and leaning back to open the door just enough to stroll through it. Im pretty sure thats the history of scientific innovation a serendipitous discovery followed by proof of concept experiments, followed by … freedom!

Q came from the North Central Los Angeles animal shelter. I was told that the person who turned him in pushed him roughly into the holding cage while complaining, This dog doesnt do what hes told.

The truth, of course, is that Q is a very intelligent animal. When people say that a dog doesnt do what hes told, its usually the case that the individual making that remark doesnt realize that he has unwittingly trained the dog to behave in a manner that annoys him, or that he has been inconsistent and confusing in his communication with the dog, so the dog doesnt know what is expected of him.

I am not a dog trainer by any stretch of the imagination, but I do know the basics and we have a household of dogs who are sufficiently trained to live with people, cats, other dogs and frequent guests.

Usually, I am assisted by our other dogs in educating newcomers to the family about household routines: use of dog doors, appropriate behavior around guests, where the essential business gets done and the established pecking order that makes for a happy house.

On this occasion, however, I spent my first three weeks with Q commuting
between a small apartment and my office at the Best Friends Pet Adoption Center. With no other dogs in the household, I had the unique experience for me, anyway of watching an incredibly intelligent animal figure out the relationship with no other dogs passing him notes about how to succeed.

While there are many variables within breeds as well as between breeds when it comes to personality and temperament, breed characteristics do play a part in how a dog negotiates his or her environment and builds a relationship with a human.

For example, while pit bulls seem to want to begin the conversation with their new person from a place somewhere on the persons lap, shepherds seem to be watching and waiting for cues for the job you expect them to do. They are working dogs.

Being the learning machine that he is, Q stayed close and looked at me expectantly for feedback as we interacted, and he slowly released the stress of the traumatic changes he had been through. He was beginning to identify the role and responsibilities he expected me to pass along to him.

Walking him late at night around my North Hollywood neighborhood, his self-assigned role is that of guardian. Hes not aggressive, but he checks everything out and then looks back for approval of appropriate behavior. He positions himself quietly between me and any stranger who stops to admire him. Again, no aggression, just doing his job.

As we walk, his ears track sounds that I am not aware of and his nose reads the environment in ways I cant begin to imagine.

Walking down those poorly lit streets, something remarkable begins to take shape: A pact between species is acknowledged, and Q and I agree on it. I offer him safe passage through the world of humans and he offers me an intelligent, decision-making, multi-sensory, self-powered, personal defense system with high-speed pursuit capabilities and big teeth. Oh yeah, hes also extremely cute, affectionate and cuddly, and he runs on dog food. I dont normally need a sophisticated personal defense system so Ill settle for the rest of the package (but its nice to know its there if I ever need it).

In truth, dogs dont need a utility quotient to be valued friends. Its their unique ability and willingness to be a friend like no other that merits their place in our world. Most people dont have animals around to do jobs for them; they have them around because they give so much more than they take. They bring out the best in us and allow us to be kind and generous with no greater ulterior motive than seeing a wagging tail and a happy demeanor. We are better humans when we allow a dog to show us what honesty of expression and mutual trust really means.

Q is a remarkable creature, but he is far from unique. Q is a shelter dog, and millions of dogs every bit as personable and sharp as he is never make it out of the shelter alive. That must stop: We have to end the killing of shelter animals.

The Qs of this world may be able to open some doors, but they need our help to get out of the shelter alive. Please join us in bringing an end to this injustice. Take the Best Friends Pledge to Adopt and pass it to everyone you know and ask them to do the same.

 

Francis Battista
Co-Founder, Best Friends Animal Society

 

Source: http://blogs.bestfriends.org/index.php/2012/03/29/getting-to-know-a-dog/


 

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Best Friends Animal Society

Best Friends is a nonprofit organization building no-kill programs and partnerships nationwide, all coordinated from our Kanab, Utah headquarters - the largest no-kill sanctuary for homeless companion animals.

At the core of our work is the dream that one day kindness will replace cruelty, and animals will no longer be destroyed because they are unwanted or imperfect. Spaying and neutering will be the rule for all pets and adoption from local animal shelters and rescues will be the first option for everyone. Those same shelters and rescues will have the knowledge and resources to help rehabilitate special-needs animals and find the right family for every animal.

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