At least that meant I had the day off! Since I was now awake and ready to go at 8am, I decided to go for the Monday dogwalking session.
The first dog I walked was an adorable puppy named Seko. Yes, a puppy! He was only about four months old, and so cute. He had that kind of face that made me want to kiss his nose. Due to the fact that he was still a baby, he hadn't learned certain behaviors yet, which I took upon myself to try to start introducing him to. That meant every time he tried jumping up on me, he was met with a stern "Off!" Every time he was distracted by something, whether it was stopping to look at the grass, to roll around in the grass, to eat the grass, or to look at another dog, I would say "Let's go!" in my firm teacher voice and gently pull on the leash while walking forward so he would realize to follow me, and not let his attention get diverted by other things. Of course, as with almost all the dogs at the SPCA, Seko had the issue of pulling on his leash when walking. Because he's still a baby, it seems like it's not a big deal now, but he will grow into a larger, stronger dog, and then it's a big problem to avoid being pulled off your feet. Therefore I wanted to try to squash that right out of him and teach him not to pull. I tried my two researched methods: the changing direction so he has to follow you and praise method, and the become a statue everytime he pulls until he comes back to you and praise method. The first method, even though he was forced to follow behind me when I changed direction, I have a feeling it didn't really click what the whole point was. The second method seemed to have a success rating of zero; when he pulled, I would stop and pretend to ignore him by looking up at the sky. When I still felt him pulling on the leash a minute later, I glanced at him and found him pretty much entertaining himself, alternating with trying to leap forward while still leashed and exploring all the plants around him. Since that also equals loss of control, I reverted back to going forward with him. I'll have to fine tune that somehow.
What I really enjoyed was our time in the pens together. I like trying to teach the dogs new commands; it's so much fun when you see them do it! Whether or not I actually taught them or they knew it before and just needed the right motivation is questionable, but I don't care. Seko seemed to kind of know the idea of 'sit,' after a few repetitions and rewarding with the revered squeaky hamburger toy he responded quicker to it. I worked on getting him to drop his toy into my hand on command; when I tried to take the toy from his mouth I kept saying "drop it," until he let go, and when he did I immediately gave him a cookie, acting like he just won the Nobel prize so he would associate the two things together positively. I found if I ran around the pen, he would get excited and happy and would run around with me. He took a break at one point and lay down, and when I started petting him he rolled over onto his back, which I took as sign of success in my activities with him!
After being out with Seko for about a hour and a half, I switched dogs as th
ey were short walkers. I took out Nikki, the sweet Pomeranian cross from last week. She was still as well behaved as ever and even cuter since she went to the groomers. During our time in the pens together, I practiced some basic commands with her, which she knew right off the bat. I also started teaching her to jump over the hurdles they have there for agility exercises; I would run around and she would follow me, and after I jumped over one hurdle she would follow, her tiny legs flying over the wood. She still chose cuddles over treats, and every time I placed my hand near her head, she would nuzzle under it, just like a cat does! When it came time for her to go back into her kennel, I took her in myself. There were quite a few kennels with large dogs already in them before hers, so I had to walk her past them. As soon as we started all the dogs started barking loudly and making a huge fuss. When I reached her kennel, I saw that she was rooming with an ANNOYING yappy small dog. He kept barking and growling at me in his high pitched voice, and I didn't want to go in there and deal with him so I had to go around to the back, let down the baricade so that he would be stuck on one side, and then I could go in and put Nikki back.
On the back side of the kennels, there's one side for the dogs that are currently not adoptable, as they are classified as "dangerous dogs." When I walked Niki back there, the commotion started again, this time with the other aggressive dogs barking and snarling. As I walked her down the walkway I could literally feel little Nikki's fear; she was terrified! Even though she didn't react in any way, I saw that her little body was shaking all over. I got the baricade down in her kennel with that other dog in it, and went back the way we came.
At first, she didn't want to go into the kennel, but when I went in first she followed me. Nikki was a good girl right up until I had to leave her; when I got ready to open the door I had her sit and stay, which she did without even hesitating. As soon as I closed the door, she started whimpering and trying to poke her nose through the wire, and trying to follow me as I walked away. It broke my heart to leave her in there; I actually burst into tears when I got in my car because I was so sad. Here is this adorable, small, well trained dog who loves to cuddle and be near you, but she's languishing away without a home, and since she's already close to being ten years old and most dogs live about thirteen to sixteen years, she'll probably be overlooked as too old. :(
By the way, that annoying yappy dog that was sharing her kennel had some aggression issues, in my opinion: after the baricade was down and I was spending some last minutes with Nikki, he kept barking from the other side and was actually banging on the baricade so hard it was shaking! He was a small, Maltese-Poodle mix that didn't even come up to my knee! This is what happens when you don't train your dog properly!