BNBR, wild animals are wild. That’s just common sense.
Unrelated, yet related question: what’s your model for a dog’s being
- wild
- or not-wild?
It’s not insignificant.
If you don’t have a holistic model for how a dog can be, at any time, all through its life, then your lack of a model is causing a problem. Don’t shoot the messenger.
If you *DON’T* have a model for a dog’s good and bad behavior throughout its life, call and let’s talk. Only through talking can this be discussed and resolved, because typing about it is substandard communication and it cannot accommodate the complexity of the discussion that has to follow.
Contact me and let’s talk. You’ll learn a new model, your model will be more in line with Nature’s model, then because your model and Nature’s model will agree you’ll know where things were breaking down with your old model, you’ll know what you need to do to stop the destruction, you’ll know how things were triggering him to be destructive, and he’ll never be destructive again—provided you keep following Nature’s model for the rest of your dog’s life.
Surprise—it’s not dog training: it’s #peopletraining. It’s #peopleeducation. It’s always about the human. It’s never about the dog.
Sure it *involves* the dog, but its source and its cause comes exclusively from the human.
Respectfully submitted.
The DOuGTrainer