I'm sorry to hear of the incident! Thank goodness the little girl is ok and her 
parents are understanding people! I agree you need to do follow ups and offer 
to pay any medical bills. Often times it is the simple act of showing you care 
that makes the difference in people suing or dropping something. All most 
people really want is to know you are truly concerned.

I would make sure that any time you have him out for a walk or anything that 
that is the only thing you are doing. You need to keep your full attention on 
him. I hope everything works out well. He IS trainable, but sounds like it is 
going to take a lot of work and re-enforcement.

Marsha

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Sheila 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2007 11:33 PM
  Subject: [Chihuahuas] Re: Bad Chihuahua...


  Marsha,

  Thanks for commenting. I am actually the third home Max has had, and 
  he's lived with me the majority of his life. He was born to a Chi 
  who belonged to a coworker of my sister-in-law's. My brother thought 
  it would be great to get my (then) 2 year-old nephew a puppy! (Yet 
  another brilliant idea of my brother's... but don't get me started 
  on him.) Not only was my nephew too young for a dog, but the 
  apartment complex where they lived did not allow pets. Max lasted 
  maybe three months before they found out my brother had him and he 
  was told to move or get rid of the dog. In that time, I had seen Max 
  (usually being toted unmercifully by my nephew while my brother and 
  sis-in-law laughed about it) and I thought he was a cute little dog 
  in need of a nice home. I would certainly treat him better! So I 
  told my brother I'd take the dog.

  Well, Max has been one incredibly destructive dog, but I will chalk 
  most of that up to teething and normal puppy behaviors. I quickly 
  learned that if I liked a pair of shoes I'd better put it out of his 
  reach! LOL He has been a relatively good dog since the chewing has 
  calmed down (although I do make sure that he has plenty of rawhide 
  strips to chew on). He loves to play ball and will chase it until 
  one of us wears out (usually me). So he's not all bad, it's just the 
  aggression. BTW, while I am at work, he is snug in a nice roomy 
  rattan crate so I have no fear of him biting anyone who enters. When 
  I have guests over, I either put him in the crate or I put him in 
  the laundry room (he seems not to bark as bad in there).

  I did have him on a Flexi leash this afternoon, as he never goes 
  outside off-leash, and I had a simple collar on him as opposed to a 
  harness. (I had a harness on him at one time but felt it was too 
  snug under his ribcage and was rubbing him raw so I switched to a 
  regular collar.) I had let him run outside to potty, and walked over 
  to my car across the parking lot. While I was getting groceries from 
  my car, a truck pulled up and let a girl out. I saw her disappear 
  into the breezeway of the building, and when the truck looked as if 
  it was leaving, I felt it was safe to start forward with Max. 
  Unexpectedly, the girl made a second trip outside and with my hands 
  full of grocery bags and Max already at the full length of the 
  leash, I couldn't react fast enough to stop him. I called and pulled 
  him back and thought that had solved the problem, but he lunged 
  forward unexpectedly and the next thing I knew he was hanging by his 
  teeth from the back of the girl's pants! I set the bags down, yanked 
  him back to me, and told the girl (who was now hysterical) that I'd 
  be right back...

  I rushed Max inside, yelling at him. (I know, I know, I was upset 
  and scared, but I probably made it worse.) I dumped my groceries and 
  went back out to check on the girl. I didn't realize who she was 
  when Max attacked her but when her father came over later, it 
  clicked. (I had thought she was just visiting my neighbors and 
  didn't realize she was their daughter.) I have spoken with both of 
  her parents before this and we get along well, so I am somewhat 
  relieved that I at least had the basis of knowing them beforehand. 

  The father's main concern was that Max had had his shots, and I 
  assured him he was up-to-date as he goes to a kennel twice a month 
  for boarding. The bite did break the skin and I was concerned about 
  that, but the girl said she was okay and I apologized to both 
  repeatedly. (The father and mother have both "met" Max before; the 
  mother has worked with dogs so she is aware that Max has people 
  issues. Max approached her once, growling, and once she showed she 
  was not afraid of him he quickly backed down and lost interest.)

  I am hopeful that things will not escalate. The parents seem level-
  headed and the father felt like the girl would be fine. From where I 
  was at, it looked like the bite was the type that scared her more 
  than anything but I will check in on them tomorrow, just to make 
  sure...

  For those who asked, I have seen the Dog Whisperer show before just 
  not on a regular basis. I, too, am in awe of Cesar; I would love to 
  ship Max to him! I am pretty sure socialization would be the key, 
  but I don't know anybody who would let Max get close to them or 
  their dogs. He's gotten a reputation and it's not a good one. 

  In the meantime, I am considering a special trip to Columbia 
  tomorrow to try to find a bigger harness for him; the local pet 
  store only had very tiny or very large ones. I am also going to 
  attempt to get him back into a walking routine, and maybe that will 
  wear off some of the excess energy. The muzzle is a good suggestion, 
  and I did look at those tonight also (but again, they had nothing in 
  his size). 

  Other than restraining him with muzzle and harness and keeping him 
  by my side, I'm not sure what else to do. I feel like if I'm picking 
  him up every time I take him out that I'm reinforcing that 
  insecurity and fear of his. And yes, I definitely agree that he is 
  scared and it manifests itself in "I'm gonna get you first before 
  you can get me" behavior. I'm just not sure where that fear can be 
  coming from. I've had him the majority of his life and he should 
  feel relatively secure by now. 

  Anyway, I'm sorry to have gone on so long but maybe I said something 
  here that will help someone to understand Max's behavior and give me 
  a clue about how to resolve it. I really do appreciate all the 
  comments!

  Thanks so much!
  Sheila

  --- In [email protected], "marsha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  >
  > May I ask how long you have had him? Did you get him as a pup or 
  as an older dog? How to treat the situation would depend on the WHY 
  behind the behavior. If he has ever been abused, then you can 
  understand why he acts this way....and the thing to do is to show 
  him that people can be loving...show unconditional love, no raised 
  voices no physical punishment, ect. Punishment of any kind takes on 
  a new meaning if the person/dog has suffered abuse.
  > 
  > Maybe he is an alpha dog, in which case the treatment is to show 
  that YOU are the leader of the pack. Make him submit to your 
  authority. If he becomes aggressive, put him on his back and hold 
  him gently but firmly until he submits. Wear gloves if you have to, 
  but don't give in. He will have to learn he is NOT the boss.
  > 
  > Maybe he simply was never properly trained. Maybe he has always 
  gotten by with this behavior and sees no reason to change it. Give 
  him a reason. If it is a lack of proper training, start all over 
  from the beginning just as if he is a new pup. Show your alpha 
  status, ignore attention getting behaviors, reward proper behaviors, 
  ect.
  > 
  > Bottom line, you gotta first determine WHY he acts the way he does 
  before you can change it. Sometimes though, it is a case in which it 
  has gone to far for too long, and the average person will not be 
  able to change the behavior. I hope this isn't the case, but 
  sometimes it is. If it is the case and you do find yourself having 
  to re-home him, give yourself enough time to find the right home. It 
  isn't about who is willing or who has had a chi before or something. 
  The proper person has to be someone who has a "sixth sense" so to 
  speak into a dogs mind. Some people simply can connect with dogs in 
  a way most people can not. It comes more from the heart than the 
  head...and just really loving your dog doesn't cut it. Don't get 
  into a hurry and place him with just anyone. After all, if the 
  family he loves can not connect with him, then a strange family will 
  not be able to either, unless they have that "gift"
  > 
  > I hope, for your sake and his, that it is something that can be re-
  trained. 
  > 
  > Marsha
  > 



   

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