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  • What is my dog trying to say?

    What is my dog trying to say?

    There are at least five types of barking that are worth separating out  because they each require different behaviour modification strategies if they are the cause of excessive barking. The five types of barking are:

    • Alert barking
    • Fear barking
    • Demand barking
    • Frustration barking
    • Excitement barking and whining

    Alert barking

    Dogs are hard wired to announce when someone comes into their territory and most people want their dogs to bark at intruders. This often manifests as barking at the doorbell or a knock at the door but it could easily be a squeak of the gate, sound of delivery trucks, or stairs creaking

    Barking at doorbells is an example of classical conditioning. The doorbell has a one-to-one relationship to visitors and your dog uses the sound to predict the arrival of a intruder.

    Alert barking becomes excessive when it becomes overly frequent, prolonged, and disruptive to daily life. You can reduce your dog’s hair trigger or the length of the barking by breaking the association between door bell, knock or squeak and visitors coming to the house and teaching your dog to ignore the sound of the door bell, knock or squeak.

    Fear barking

    Dogs who are scared of something will typically choose to get away from that thing or scare it away by barking at it. Fear barking is a dog who is upset that a person or dog has come too close and they are telling them to go away.

    It is different from alert barkers who are often happy to see strangers.  Fear barking is not just announcing there is an intruder they find scary. Barking is a threat they want to keep at distance.

    An easy way to tell the difference between alert barking and fear barking is to ask yourself, ‘once a visitor is in the house can they pat the dog?  If the answer is ‘yes’ then the likelihood is it is alert barking.

     If the answer is ‘no’ or if the reply is ‘it takes a little while for them to warm up’ then you most likely have fear barking.

    The solution is to get at the root of that problem not just to treat the symptom of barking. If your dog is uncomfortable with people get professional help.

    Attention barking

    Dogs bark for attention because it works. Barking gets them attention, some food, a ball, or the door opened. Because it is such a successful strategy it gets learned like any other behaviour.

    The problem with attention barking is it escalates. If your dog learns that barking for attention works they are going to do it more and more. You can accidentally reinforce this pattern when you try to get your dog to be quiet. Your reinforcement might come in the form of you turning and looking at your dog and saying ‘stop!’. You have just taught your dog to get you to come over and give your attention they have to bark.

    The solution is to evaluate what reinforcement your dog is getting and break that pattern so that barking for that thing never gets rewarded.

     Frustration barking

     A dog looking out the window and seeing a dog across the street might desperately want to go over and say ‘hello’. Because he’s inside he can’t and instead he barks.

    This is the opposite of fear barking. Instead of wanting the stimulus to go away, a frustrated dog has a clear goal but he is prevented from going over and getting the thing he wants.

    Frustration is usually caused by external barriers – like a leash, a window, or a lounge that is covering a treat. Frustration barking is a sign that your dog needs more mental stimulation so they can channel their energy into something more productive.

    Excitement barking

    When your dog is excited about going to the park they may bark or whine. It also happens during play or when your dog is anticipating something really fun. While we all want our dogs to enjoy their favourite activities, when anticipation barking becomes excessive it can be a sign that your dog does not know how to have fun without you. Help your dog learn to have fun on their own with some bones or long lasting chews.

  • Why dog’s bark

    Why dog’s bark

    All dogs bark. Barking is normal dog behaviour. Your dog is barking because it is trying to communicate with you. Dogs do not have the same level of verbal communication as humans but they do use barking, growling and howling to communicate to each other and with humans. They are just communicating in the language they know how to use.

    In much the same way that humans have different ways to vocalise, dogs are doing the same thing. Because barking is a form of communication it is something we as dog guardians need to understand. We need to know what your dog is trying to communicate with you.

    Although barking is one of the ways your dog communicates with you but a dog that barks excessively can be frustrating. In recent interviews with 78 pet dog guardians seeking advice on improving their dog’s behaviour two-thirds nominated nuisance barking as their number one training challenge.

    This barking was often categorised as “reactivity” by which the interviewees mentioned the barking was either in response to other dogs, noises or people. The majority (n=28) of the reactivity challenges were either a concern in themselves or was matched with various anxiety behaviours. For example, barking at noises and barking when left on its own. A third of these interviewees mentioned that this reactivity occurred while walking their dogs on the lead.

     Whether your dog is barking at things that it can see out the window, barking at visitors, other dogs, or the doorbell, excessive barking can damage your relationship with your dog, create arguments in your family, and even cause rifts with your neighbours. Remember that excessive noise is the number one complain made to local councils and this includes dogs barking

    It can be easy to think that a barking dog is being disobedient or stubborn but that is not true. Your dog is experiencing an emotion and it is trying to communicate that emotion. Identifying why your dog is barking will help you to know what to do about it. Your immediate response should not be to stop that your dog barking. Your immediate response should be ‘I wonder why the dog feels the need to vocalise?’ The answer to that question will help anybody who has a barking dog to know what to do next.