Understanding Dog Body Language - Learn how to read dogs behavior better

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2014
  • Part 2 Understanding Dog Body Language HERE • Understanding Dog Body...
    Thank-you to all the people who donated video clips so this video can have a wide range of body language!
    www.moderncaninetraining.com For categorized FREE video's and information on Online Obedience with Kris.
    This video goes over very BASIC dog body language. This video is meant to give a brief overview of what it means when your dog does a certain behaviour.
    Dog communication is one of the most misunderstood part of dogs and humans and causes tremendous amounts of problem for both species. If you can take a few parts of this video and apply it to your life and better understanding your dog you will have a more fulfilled relationship with your four legged pal.

Komentáře • 949

  • @JodyRaines
    @JodyRaines Před 9 lety +339

    I like the fact that you combined the text on the screen with the videos depicting the behavior. I am recommending this video to others because often the signs are misinterpreted - such as a wagging tail - and they do not always mean that the dog is friendly!

    • @sirtimatbob
      @sirtimatbob Před 4 lety +1

      Great video Kristen! I would recommend reviewing the subtitle text color as sometimes it was impossible to read as black dog on black text, or certain other shades. Also, you're right Jody, ppl misinterpret very often

  • @user-jh6yi1bc7u
    @user-jh6yi1bc7u Před 9 lety +685

    I am a canine behaviorist. I just wanted to say this is the best video on canine body language I've seen so far! Great job! ^_^

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 9 lety +17

      Ashley Gloom Thank you!

    • @onlyandalwaysfooty4425
      @onlyandalwaysfooty4425 Před 9 lety +1

      Kristin Crestejo I have a 2 year lab and he is not neutered. I want to know if when he licks another dogs behind or if another dog has pied he will lick the pee (not if its wet but dried up) is that behaviour normal

    • @Rinluyen420
      @Rinluyen420 Před 8 lety +7

      +Ashley Gloom i was just scrolling down to see if this lady was credible or not, thanks for letting me know. I'll go watch the video now.

    • @user-jh6yi1bc7u
      @user-jh6yi1bc7u Před 7 lety +2

      mmk.

    • @subday5811
      @subday5811 Před 7 lety +4

      so emo is a job now?

  • @user-pq1ni4wz6h
    @user-pq1ni4wz6h Před 9 lety +215

    She forgot to include this:
    When a dog's butt is up and the front body is down just like when they are stretching... it means that they want to play... if a dog does the play signal to another dog and the other dog gives the same signal, it means that they both want to play...

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 9 lety +45

      Roman Soldier Josh The video clips I had were extremely limited. I intend to make video's on Canine Body Language (number 2 is being edited right now). This 1st one is to show VERY basics, as an introduction.

    • @TheLammy82
      @TheLammy82 Před 9 lety +2

      Great. I'm looking forward to seeing it too. I love your videos. :-)

    • @user-pq1ni4wz6h
      @user-pq1ni4wz6h Před 9 lety +1

      Kristin Crestejo no wonder:) love your videos by the way!

    • @nchlgrn
      @nchlgrn Před 6 lety +7

      +Josh The movement you described is most commonly called “play bow.”

    • @pammy5260
      @pammy5260 Před 5 lety

      UR BeingPlayed what a coinicidenc, people with this attitude are not funny and most people probably avoid you.

  • @ThatsSoGiorgio
    @ThatsSoGiorgio Před 5 lety +10

    So I've been working at a dog kennel for 2 years now and I learned how to read dog behavior/body language over time. I think it's very important to understand not only your dog but other people's dogs. I see people who come pet a dog they just met from not only over their heads but also towering over them and that's a great way to intimidate a new dog and possibly get bit too. You should always get down to their level (Kneel down) and hold our a flat palm just barely under their chin. This gives them the chance to see you at eye level and they can monitor your movement. If they sniff your hand and approve then you may pet under their chin or their cheeks and make your way to the back/neck area and THEN pet the top of their heads. If they sniff your hand and turn away like this video mentions, don't make any more moves until the dog shows interest in you. It's really crazy how much a dog's behavior can tell you about the dog. Some dogs take a few times to warm up to you and some dogs simply don't wish to be bothered and there's nothing you can do there. Let the dog be, it doesn't plan on making any new friends.

  • @Andy1RN
    @Andy1RN Před 6 lety +55

    This was really helpful. I'm volunteering at an animal shelter, so recognizing stress behaviors & calming signals are great - but knowing when to act and what to do is critical. This is the piece I'm working on. Thank you so much!

  • @JodyRaines
    @JodyRaines Před 9 lety +29

    You can always learn new things about dog body language and Kristin does a great job with video clips sharing stress behavior in dogs. I am constantly reminded that there are many people who try to humanize dog behavior and who do not understand how close they are to their dog blowing a fuse. Direct eye contact, smiling, high pitched voice, leaning over the dog, it's a recipe for disaster. Highly recomment watching to learn the stress signals. Lip licking, staring into space, ground sniffing, avoidance, the 'statue', panting, sweaty paws... all signals that humans need to recognize.

    • @deborahnebo6179
      @deborahnebo6179 Před 9 lety +2

      awww nice one

    • @pachecoking100
      @pachecoking100 Před 9 lety +3

      Yes this is dog language but you make it bigger than it is. Recipe for disaster. . In some cases yes.. plus dog language is not complicated . People just need to realize that to own or be around a dog, you better know how to talk to them.

    • @kerryb9674
      @kerryb9674 Před 8 lety +1

      +pachecoking100 Exactly!

    • @JodyRaines
      @JodyRaines Před 8 lety +1

      pachecoking100 Agreed!

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      @@JodyRaines This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?

  • @jesse6327
    @jesse6327 Před 4 lety +9

    I see a lot of this behavior in my schnauzer/poodle mix. She was bit pretty badly a couple years back and still has anxiety issues around other dogs (she tends to distrust and fear all other dogs now sadly). Great video to help me understand some of what she's going through.

    • @haleighgordonn3965
      @haleighgordonn3965 Před 2 lety +1

      Aww how sad poor girl 😢

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      @@haleighgordonn3965 This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?

  • @justawingnut71
    @justawingnut71 Před 9 lety +2

    Thanks for this video! We have 2 boxers we are introducing to each other right now. One is a 3yo female (she's been an only dog for 6 months...had do put 13yo boxer down in Feb) and the other is an 18 month old male. Both are spayed/neutered, however, the male was just neutered the week before we brought him home. It's been a challenge, but it looks like we are going the right direction in our correction of behavior, etc. I wanted to look this morning for something that showed just what you have in the video, as we are giving it a month to make sure he is a good fit for us. We've had him 2 days now and we already see a large improvement. Thanks again!

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Lynn

  • @kerryb9674
    @kerryb9674 Před 8 lety +8

    I have studied body language in humans and dogs.
    I did like this video - however... there are some things I would like to point out about bl.
    Say for instance the folding arms across chest can mean a person is closed off or guarded or uncomfortable with what is being said to them or even maybe folding arms across chest is an individuals resting stance etc...(goes for other b.l in humans)
    Same with a yawn (or other b.l) in dogs... can mean self comforting before going for a walk or stay out of my space - even a prelude to a bite - etc -
    Reading body language in any species is to be read along with circumstances/personality/surroundings.
    One can't just say this body language means this - without looking at the entire situation of the individual (dog, cat, horse, bearded dragon, human etc).
    But you did paint a great general picture of body language in dogs - I only wish you would have pointed out that the same body language can mean a variety of things. Maybe you did - but did not catch it. Correct me if I am wrong. I love constructive criticism - it is how we learn new things and keeps us humble. Right?
    I was training a dog (really teaching the owners) to learn how to calmly wait before going outside for walk. This will help keep dog submissive and calm during walks.
    This particular dog is a very high strung anxious dog - I was showing the the owners how to calm the dog before going outside. I have done this a billion times with a variety of dog breeds. This dog was a pit mix and very strong. This technique is vital with strong dogs because someone - or dog - can get hurt if not calm before walk. Obviously.
    As we waited at the door - the dog was doing marvelous - sit position - mouth open - lolling tongue - great! But couple high pitched barks demanding to go- I knew he was not fully relaxed (we had only waited two minutes- this dog would have been completely relaxed a learn patience after maybe one more minute- this dog is alert and eager to please everyone) - However, after the owner of dog saw your video where a yawn means anxiety she stopped the training session as soon as her dog yawned at the door and pretty much fired me on the spot. Because she didn't want her poor baby anxious.
    Needless to say - the dog was simply self comforting...which was great he was learning to do this on his own and not demanding by pulling. He never pulled once on his leash. I held it with two finger - as I showed the owner.
    This type of b.l in canines in this situation is much like a person with anxiety disorder that shakes there leg while sitting - to comfort themselves... but they are learning to be in a place they need to be and taking strides to self comfort... that is awesome! After being in that situation several times - and self comforting - both a human and a dog will learn how to comfort self without becoming overly anxious and the yawning and leg shaking will lessen and maybe even stop.
    Like a person with anxiety disorder that does not force self into uncomfortable situation - taught comforting behaviors - they may become agoraphobic. A dog also will become neurotic if not trained to overcome uncomfortable situations. Don't just automatically take a dog out of an uncomfortable situation - if it is not dangerous to the dog or others. It is a recipe for disaster and a very sad life for a dog.
    Sadly - these owners still have not mastered the walk with this poor dog. The man cracked his patella after the dog pulled him over on a walk - now the dog is locked up all day (a lonely b.y.d = backyard dog). If only they knew a yawn was not always a bad thing. It would have taken me five minutes to show them how to properly calm and walk their dog buddy.

    • @MedXOR
      @MedXOR Před 5 lety

      Kerry B I am 100% in agreement - a yawn seems to mean different things to different dogs. For my Border Collie a yawn is a smile - for instance if I announce we’re going shopping, immediate, big yawn.
      If he’s anxious I see that in his ears and his eyes. If he feels I’m invading his space he growls. He is very calm but he comes from a cattle-working family so he’s got this Pennsylvania James Bond thing.

  • @thejbo777
    @thejbo777 Před 7 lety +470

    I feel like humans put so much personification onto dogs that we don't understand what a dog is really saying or how it really thinks.

    • @HUMC4L
      @HUMC4L Před 7 lety +32

      thedebo777 Your point really doesn't make any sense. Every living thing has feelings. These feelings are usually pretty similar from species to species, they do different things to show it, but it's the same concept. For your presumed logic to make sense, you'd also have to say someone speaking to one of us in Russian is saying something different because the actual words are different even though the meanings of the words are the same. You can usually tell what anyone or anything is feeling based on the situation. If that fails, we've observed enough in these animals to determine what they're most likely experiencing. There's no personification at all, just words to describe experiences (aka feelings)

    • @user-jh6yi1bc7u
      @user-jh6yi1bc7u Před 7 lety +25

      *Jose Angel Rodriguez* How did you come to that "truth"? We have been studying canines a long time and have in fact bred them to be what they are today. Dogs absolutely can communicate with us and tell us what they want. Do you not have a dog that lets you know when he/she needs to go out? Or wants to be fed? Can you not tell when a dog is sitting at your feet, staring up at you while you are eating, that he wants your food? The _truth_ is that dogs actually study us as much as we study them. They watch and observe us because it benefits them to do so. They can communicate with us in ways that even primates can't. There is actual research behind this. We can tell what they are saying to other dogs by simply learning their behavior patterns in different situations. So please tell me how "we don't know what dogs want" is truth.

    • @briankocheraabcdt4628
      @briankocheraabcdt4628 Před 6 lety +17

      Ashley Gloom I can't agree with you more on this one. I train dogs and most of my sessions with my clients dogs are silent. But we chat a lot in dog language. I've read both of Turrid Rugaas' books on dog communication. Since I started speaking Dog, with some dogs I am able to accelerate lessons.
      Although, sometimes it upsets me. I read barks as well. Often I hear my neighbor's lab alone in his back yard saying 'he's lonely and please come out and play with me'. Sometimes if nobody is around, I howl to him. That way he knows that he is not alone and someone hears him. We howl together and trade a few barks. He probably knows my barks are human. But at least he has been heard.

    • @rafaelguimaraes9055
      @rafaelguimaraes9055 Před 6 lety +8

      HUMC4L - That's not what thedebo777 meant to say, i guess. It wasn't a critic to the video, but to people who have dogs and don't understand how they express feelings or whatever. People tend to humanize dogs, therefore they don't apply concepts like the ones in the video. Nevertheless, you got a point.

    • @hindugoat2302
      @hindugoat2302 Před 5 lety +1

      dogs are not little people, its not thinking like we do
      you just think it is

  • @candacedillon97
    @candacedillon97 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I'm a trainer but I typically only train obedience. I want to go further into the behavior aspect so your videos are really great. They confirm what I'm seeing communicated. I have trained a successful protection dog and a successful PTSD dog. I am now involved in rescue and I want to do everything I can to help the dogs. So much of that required reading the body language and then determining the best resolution. Thank you so much for your videos!

  • @dogfullife
    @dogfullife Před 2 lety +10

    Love both the part 1 and part 2 of these videos. Being able to watch actual video clips of real dogs displaying the body language signals is so valuable. I'm a dog trainer too and I require all my clients to watch them.

  • @elasolezito
    @elasolezito Před 8 lety +69

    Smart dog at the end, feels in danger so what does it do ? Makes the big one happy !

  • @vyvyan1960
    @vyvyan1960 Před 9 lety +3

    Thank you Kristin for putting together this video. Actually seeing the body language displayed between dogs is so much better than reading about it. No disrespect to books. I'm looking forward to your next edition on this subject.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@vyvyan1960

  • @JELLYFlSHJAM777
    @JELLYFlSHJAM777 Před rokem +2

    i know this is old but i just wanted to say thank you! i recently got a job at a doggy daycare/boarding facility, and while i have dogs of my own and i know key body language, the smaller nuances can give me a bit of trouble. i am receiving training but i've been doing research and taking notes; this is the best video i've seen! you explain everything extremely well and note all the little cues that add up to how a dog is feeling. i can't thank you enough-i'll be able to keep the dogs safe because of people as awesome as you!

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@loveaglow

  • @TheDirtyyoungman1
    @TheDirtyyoungman1 Před 8 lety +191

    Lip licking is not always saying "I'm uncomfortable" , sometimes they do it to say "everything is OK, I'm fine, I want you to feel OK with me"

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 8 lety +62

      +TheDirtyyoungman1 Yes, called a calming signal. To either calm you down, or themselves. :)

    • @dillionhamilton8065
      @dillionhamilton8065 Před 8 lety

      +Kristin Crestejo (Modern Canine Training) I have a 8 year old pug/beagle and one 1 year old american bulldog and one 8 year old golden retriever shepherd who has grown up with the puggle basically all its life and hasn't had any problems, but recently the puggle has been attacking the bulldog even though it was fine with it since we got it which was when it was only a few weeks old, but now any time it sees it it barks and and growls and goes after her, (they're both female). If you could help that would be amazing because we can't even let them around each other we have to leave one in a room with someone or in a cage and obviously we can't let them fight it out which I've seen on a few websites because the last time they've into a fight the american bulldog grabbed the pug by the scruff of the neck and shook it.

    • @lexalina132
      @lexalina132 Před 8 lety +1

      +Dillion Hamilton I think part of the problem is that they're both female, I read recently that this can lead to issues in a pack

    • @lolo8641
      @lolo8641 Před 8 lety +6

      It is a signal used to try to diffuse a situation. Either on their end or yours. Most times it is a signal that no one pays attention to, and should. Many dogs do this to their owners when they are hugging them, or getting close to their face. The DOG is uncomfortable in that situation, not saying everything is ok!

    • @lolo8641
      @lolo8641 Před 8 lety +1

      I wouldn't use that system for a dog that is aggressive and trying to bite and or attack other dogs. Maybe for a first time dog owner. By why not get someone in person that can see any mistakes you make and fix them right away. Most owners veer off of what they have been taught at some point

  • @crappyzombie
    @crappyzombie Před 10 lety +8

    I love this video! I have worked with dogs in a veterinary setting for over 5 years and I admit I have only fully learned this "secret language" in the past two years....I don't know how I ever worked with dogs before I had this knowledge!!

    • @shadrach6299
      @shadrach6299 Před 4 lety

      My vet is leery of the “whale eye”.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Kimberly

  • @atonito1721
    @atonito1721 Před 4 lety +6

    Very clear and easy to understand video. As one viewer already mentioned, by adding text/audio to the image, one can easily adopt the concept/idea. Plus the videos are great too! Many thanks for this!

  • @iron60bitch62
    @iron60bitch62 Před 5 lety +2

    In the language of dogs, the yawn is often used as a calming signal. ... Your dog may yawn repeatedly when he's waiting in the vet's office as a way of dealing with nervousness. Sometimes dogs yawn in anticipation of something enjoyable, such as a walk-this is a way of controlling his enthusiasm.

  • @theductductgoose
    @theductductgoose Před 4 lety +2

    I very happy to have been shown all the subtleties of dog body language, everyone knows the big, obvious ones. As someone who has never had a dog, and will soon have to socialize a puppy, this is all very important to know and watch out for, thank you very much!

  • @MizukiUkitake
    @MizukiUkitake Před 4 lety +4

    This video, I've found, is also helpful with reading cat-on-cat interactions. Sure, they have different kinds of body language, but the clip with the two pitbulls, for example, helped me to recognize when one of my cats is trying to tell the other cat he's crossed a line during playtime, and I was able to separate them before anyone got too upset.
    It can be really hard for a lot of people to tell when an animal has crossed a line during play, so thank you so much for including those parts!

  • @HowToTrainADreamDog
    @HowToTrainADreamDog Před 4 lety +4

    Trainer and Behaviorist here, excellent video. great examples and clearly explained!!

  • @cambridgeratmom
    @cambridgeratmom Před rokem +1

    Visual clips of actual interactions are SO important. Just writing about it is often so useless. I feel so sorry for dogs whose owner are clueless and let anything happen to their dog.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@RatMom

  • @blueyalt
    @blueyalt Před 3 lety

    Im glad 1M ppl saw this, this is probably one of the most important things you need to learn in life

  • @butterflyfam2522
    @butterflyfam2522 Před 7 lety +14

    THANK YOU for making this video! It's very helpful. I just recently started work at a doggy daycare where dogs interact with each other all the time. I knew the basics of signs of dogs not wanting to play and being stressed out, like the stiff bodies, growling, showing teeth, yawning, and so on.. but there have been times where I got confused as to whether one of the dogs wanted to play with the other or not. Your video has helped it make more sense to me. :)

  • @kindfires
    @kindfires Před 8 lety +3

    Thank you!! I always get worried when I'm walking my dog and I have an encounter with another dog, since my dog is quite big and really playful he can be a bit much for other dogs sometimes, but what worried me the most was when to intervene and knowing what was okay for him to be doing and what wasn't. This will definitely help a lot :)

  • @slug182
    @slug182 Před 6 lety

    Makes a lot of sense, at the ending you can see the dog shake off, like shaking of the stress he had just like you said before. Great stuff!

  • @tinjavier4876
    @tinjavier4876 Před rokem +3

    Thank you! This video is so informative. We adopted two puppies for the first time and we were nervous with the way they play, the high pitched barks, so seeing many samples and warning signs helped alot

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Tin

  • @brutal-noodle
    @brutal-noodle Před 9 lety +174

    according to this, my dog is nervous, anxious, scared, or angry 100% of the time.

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 9 lety +46

      jegan1337 No uncommong. However lip licks do not ALWAYS indicate stress, it's situational. They can lick their lips when food is around as well :)

    • @MrBarbjhix
      @MrBarbjhix Před 9 lety +12

      Kristin Crestejo and licking lips and or air could indicate there is something medically wrong too - check out the dogs teeth and mouth. There might be a surprise vet visit in your future.

    • @DougHinVA
      @DougHinVA Před 6 lety +9

      BN .... then if it is 70-80 correct, go get your dog into an obedience class or better, to a rehabilitator. YOU have the problem of you do not know what to do to help the dog.

    • @drummerdummy
      @drummerdummy Před 5 lety +2

      Quit beating it then

  • @relaxmydog
    @relaxmydog Před 2 lety +14

    This is such a helpful and insightful video, thanks so much for sharing!

  • @LauraHopkinsCDL
    @LauraHopkinsCDL Před 8 lety +2

    Hi Kristin I just found your channel . I have border collies and like you have studied canine behaviour in depth Won training awards etc So good to find somene who knows their stuff . Well done. I recently lost my eldest to cancer and as you know this can ,if allowed,really disrupt the pack. Zelly had to be put to sleep with severe cancer.I've trained all my dogs in service/assistance work.My Blue Merles do the day shift and though Zelly has passed they still respect where she use to sleep on my bed. I really believe we as humans need to take time to understand out dogs and not humanise them. I've subscribed and look forward to watching more. I found when the girls were growing up and sorting out pack places that simply saying "enough" would stop "play" that was getting a bit enthusiastic.Obviously I train my dogs from day one so that makes it all much easier. Keep up the great work :)

  • @beatricepeter995
    @beatricepeter995 Před 5 lety +1

    Training humans is the hardest!
    These wonderful creatures are sharing their world with us and we know so little about Them!

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem +1

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Beatrice

    • @beatricepeter995
      @beatricepeter995 Před rokem +1

      @@richiegraham8599 yes feel free to ask any questions

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem +1

      @@beatricepeter995 thanks 😊 do you prefer dogs or cats?

    • @beatricepeter995
      @beatricepeter995 Před rokem +1

      @@richiegraham8599 Am generally a dog person
      My mom had 15 cats
      Familiarised with cat persons
      I 💞 had 3 GSD of my own and saved more than 13 strays

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem +1

      @@beatricepeter995 Oh wow 😯 that’s beautiful though. So do you own any currently?

  • @heronho
    @heronho Před 10 lety +3

    Fan -freaking -tastic video!! I'm a regular foster and I am going to send this to ALL new adopters from now on!! Thank you so much for making this video. It is much much appreciated

  • @Christian_Girl120
    @Christian_Girl120 Před 8 lety +4

    Great video. It helps me to understand dogs better. Obviously they can't "talk" to us, so we have to learn THEIR language so we can understand what they are telling us.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Amy

  • @tokage6248
    @tokage6248 Před 4 lety

    This video is so helpful! I just got a rescue greyhound and i was trying to do some research to understand how he’s feeling. This is really great thank you so much ☺️

  • @pro-activefitness7539
    @pro-activefitness7539 Před rokem +1

    As a visual learner, this was very helpful.

  • @leahbartgen2333
    @leahbartgen2333 Před 7 lety +13

    This helped me a lot especially the one with if you put your face in the dogs face

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Leah

  • @guyfromostrava
    @guyfromostrava Před 7 lety +16

    Best vid on dog body language I've seen so far... well done!

  • @user-yy1et4kq8g
    @user-yy1et4kq8g Před 4 lety +58

    *I fought my dog once, He beat me. Now I sleep in a cage.*

  • @pudelfreude
    @pudelfreude Před 4 lety +1

    This is so good! I wish more people would watch videos like this instead of ignoring their dogs' body language.

  • @earthrooster1969
    @earthrooster1969 Před 8 lety +7

    Thanks! For putting together many of the behaviors and tagging them..

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Suhita

  • @rissadummils1929
    @rissadummils1929 Před 8 lety +65

    When I was a kid I never feared dogs, in fact I played with them. Now I am really afraid of dogs. And I'm 25.
    I'm watching these videos to gains some confidence.

    • @allgoodnamestaken6002
      @allgoodnamestaken6002 Před 6 lety +2

      I'm 14 and I'm only scared of dogs I don't know since I don't know how they will react to me.

    • @itsafrikah2594
      @itsafrikah2594 Před 5 lety +8

      @@allgoodnamestaken6002 I'm only afraid of small aggressive dog lol. I feel like big dogs are more chill. I'm also afraid of stranger people's dogs. Because they are coming up to me while the stranger is pulling back idk if that dog wants to be my friend or kill me.

    • @alexpalmer7018
      @alexpalmer7018 Před 5 lety +2

      I've lived with dogs for my entire life and understand their body language pretty well. Dogs are complicated, but when you form a true connection with one, and you understand their personality, you can feel super strong emotions for them

    • @itsafrikah2594
      @itsafrikah2594 Před 5 lety

      @@alexpalmer7018 I dont have any dogs but my parents said we might get a Rottweiler when we live into our own house. Can you like tell me how difficult dogs are or something?

    • @Sk1nSz
      @Sk1nSz Před 5 lety

      It's a good start to loose your fear!
      You shouldn't be afraid, most dogs will not hurt you unless they have to. I mean you dont go round punchin people too. Dog's the same.
      You should easily spot an agressive dog. It will not bite you randomly, given the dog does not have mental problems or a bad past. Instead it will warn you with growling or gestures

  • @shakeonitpetbehaviorconsul6226

    Please keep these body language videos up forever! I share them with clients allllll the time.

  • @jeffreytong5581
    @jeffreytong5581 Před 9 lety +1

    I like this video, and agree three mode (text + video + vocal) demonstration helps. Especially appreciated are the intro of what we are about to see. Rather than read, I'm listening and watching the dog. But later, I can play back and read. Lip lick, tail wag, and even yawning are often mis-communicated.

  • @DowntownTasty
    @DowntownTasty Před 5 lety +37

    My dog doesn’t mind the face thing he always ATTACKS my face with kisses 😂😂😂
    I think that just depends on the dog

    • @EryNightingale
      @EryNightingale Před 4 lety +8

      I was thinking the same. I find that the dogs feel more comfortable when I come down to their level.

    • @chrisbrooks7469
      @chrisbrooks7469 Před 4 lety +6

      That could be attempt to show submission even though really uncomfortable, like "you're my best friend, please don't be gressive with me, I'll do anything for you, you're awesome-you'd never bite me right?". You live with him and obviously know him better than me though and there are often exceptions to general rules.

    • @iamcruzing
      @iamcruzing Před 4 lety +3

      And depends on familiarity. Your dog may not mind you doing it, but may mind a stranger doing it. And in particular most dogs do NOT appreciate a stranger put them face to face. I see people making this mistake all the time and have seen a few bitten...

    • @tylerhealy7358
      @tylerhealy7358 Před 4 lety

      Dogs lick to show affection...

    • @atonito1721
      @atonito1721 Před 4 lety +1

      That might be so, with YOU and YOUR dog, but the CORRECT and KEY point that Kristin is trying to make is: Don't shove your face into a dog. MOST DOGS DON'T LIKE IT, and one thing is getting bitten by a Yorkie and another quite different thing is getting bitten by a German Shepherd, Dob, Rot or Pit. Or any medium sized dog. Let's avoid encouraging this habit. Many people have undergone serious/expensive surgery, and scared for life, and many dogs have been put down due to this.

  • @nimrodausfahrtgeiser6404
    @nimrodausfahrtgeiser6404 Před 8 lety +148

    The part where the lady is talking in a frantic voice in Greek to a tied up puppy is quite disturbing!

    • @hughjardon6797
      @hughjardon6797 Před 5 lety +13

      I had the impression she was just winding the poor puppy up!

    • @morganseppy5180
      @morganseppy5180 Před 5 lety +14

      Agreed. That made me feel very uncomfortable. :-(

    • @Gunzee
      @Gunzee Před 5 lety +30

      These idiots, which I personally know a few off are 'hardening/toughening' the dog. It has the opposite effect, in later years the dog is left fearful and very prone to fear/anxiety biting.
      It's abuse, it's not ignorance and stupidity at it's fullest. Sad thing is some parents use this tactic on their kids. Shout and hit to stop certain behaviour.

    • @Kiwi_Tea
      @Kiwi_Tea Před 5 lety +9

      I hated it and wanted to take the puppy off her immediately.

    • @alovitos4239
      @alovitos4239 Před 4 lety +12

      She is saying:"I'm gonna take it from you Kirki!(meaning the plastic bottle the puppy is playing wth)What is it you're doing there Kirki?You won't let anyone come near it?"
      I don't see any abusing intention of the owner.She is probably teasing the puppy who protects it's toy.

  • @iamalpharius9483
    @iamalpharius9483 Před 4 lety

    I've been working with dogs for 30 years and I chose to take on Catahoulas for personal companionship 4 years ago.
    Your stuff is good. But my Catahoulas seem to yawn with no rhyme or reason.
    But mostly self soothing when the get excited.
    Great videos.

  • @Ut00bRdann0
    @Ut00bRdann0 Před 9 lety

    Hi Kristin,
    Thank you! I will do so shortly.

  • @Kiwi_Tea
    @Kiwi_Tea Před 5 lety +7

    "We'll be talking about fear and stress in dogs"
    Dog in background **SNORE**

  • @reneecoffeen4351
    @reneecoffeen4351 Před 8 lety +3

    This was very helpful. I am dealing with a 1 yr old GSD that is extremely hyper (my Riddlin pup) and my 5 month old GSD who is calm. Then there is a a 2 1/2 yr old GSD female that I just rescued from a puppy mill and she has been caged her whole life. She is not too interested in play but will join in on chasing and trapping my 5 month old. It was pointed out to me from a FB post that my pup was terrified and trying to hide. Once I watched it with this new information and no sound I was horrified that what I thought was play was doing major damage to my pup. So thank you for this information.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Renee

  • @anjanowackadeklopp761

    This video is the best video I have found until today to “read” dog language. Thank you!

  • @celiajordan7724
    @celiajordan7724 Před 16 dny +1

    Super video! Thanks

  • @LindaDogsbylinda
    @LindaDogsbylinda Před 9 lety +12

    Thank you for making this!

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 9 lety +1

      You're welcome! I have another body language video in the making right now! So stay tuned..... :)

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Linda

  • @sigurdhendsethyan5641
    @sigurdhendsethyan5641 Před 10 lety +4

    Great video! I would've loved to donate some clips myself, but i guess i didn't notice when you asked for them. I might just have been inattentive when you asked for them though :)
    Reading your own dog comes naturally i would guess, at least it did to mee :) My challenge is reading the other dogs my dog is interacting with. Especially when there are more then one. Luckily its easy to look at my own dog and see how she reacts to the others, so if she is scared or uneasy i would step in, but if she's glad and playful the opposite dog won't be aggressive so if thats the case theres never a problem :P

  • @JillianNoelle
    @JillianNoelle Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you explain these dog cues. This really helped me to understand.

  • @allthingsblue6990
    @allthingsblue6990 Před 3 lety

    This was incredibly informative and wonderful behaviorists approach to dogs. THANK YOU!

  • @theresafromthemiramichi4582

    Thank you so much for this video.....I have a pitbull/vallybulldog mix, and she`s vary anxious ....this video has REALLY Helped, i enjoy your explanations and it is vary helpful

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Theresa

  • @lachlandoyle5564
    @lachlandoyle5564 Před 8 lety +8

    I am thinking of raising a dog, this is very helpful!

    • @deadmemes4857
      @deadmemes4857 Před 8 lety +3

      If you don't know how to raise a dog, get him expensive pet food. Why? Cheap ones makes your dog fat and thats not good. Get him good chew toys, make sure its rubber and strong. If its ripping, take it away immediately then buy him a new ball. He might rip the ball in pieces and swallow it. If you wanna train your dog, give him a treat if does the trick right. (Don't give him a lot of treats because that can be bad for him if you keep giving him a treat). 1-2 treats a day is fine. Don't go overboard though. Buy a good pet bed or search up a DIY Pet Bed. To keep your dog clean don't give him a bath everyday. Just groom him everyday, and he'll stay clean. Some dogs never liked baths anyway. Only give him a bath if he has something bad on his fur coat and use good dog shampoo. Clean him until he's clean. If you haven't fed him a treat yet, tell him you will give him a treat if you let him do something for you like such as bathing stuff like that. Thats a common way to get a dog to listen

  • @WizardTom2
    @WizardTom2 Před 8 lety +1

    I have found describing this to humans infuriatingly frustrating. It is so lost on people that if you listen and see the whole picture dogs are communicating. So many people stressing and not listening to their animals and most frustrating not listening to owners who want you to respect their dog. I don't want people petting because they don't know enough to know weather my dog is consenting to pet or telling you to back off they just assume it feels good for the dog to get man handled by a totally strange unfamiliar mammal. Thank you for explaining this so well and I hope this goes viral. (though it's even far more complex so I hope you keep making videos)

    • @DougHinVA
      @DougHinVA Před 6 lety

      WMC .... good points. Top rehabbers like Sean O'Shea or Jeff Gellman remind us that strangers are NOT entitled to pet our dog. When people ask or just reach, stop them. Tell them NOT to handle YOUR dog. Do not be shy.... you are all the dog has to protect it.

  • @Jammil2477
    @Jammil2477 Před 10 lety +1

    I really enjoy your videos and the way you explain everything in a easy to listen too manner. Keep up the good work, I have also utilised some of your methods with my 7 month old Rhodesian ridgeback and they work really well.

  • @JulieMoran1832
    @JulieMoran1832 Před 8 lety +9

    I'm having a hard time reading my Lab's signals. We moved in with my parents to help take care of them as they age but my lab, Murphy, who has never hurt anyone (he's 7 years old and has been fixed) has lunged at my parents, snapped at them thought thankfully, never drawn blood. Since then, I've been careful to keep their interactions very limited. It doesn't help establish any kind of connection and only increases the disconnect but they are elderly and I can't have my dog hurting them. I'm at a loss as to what to do.

    • @JulieMoran1832
      @JulieMoran1832 Před 8 lety +4

      +The Whippets I take him to the dog park all the time, since he was young. He's fine in those situations. Fine with most everyone. I get a sense it is more about dominence in the house, though he's fine with my siblings when they come over. It's strange.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      @@JulieMoran1832 This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?

    • @JulieMoran1832
      @JulieMoran1832 Před rokem +1

      @@richiegraham8599 of course.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      @@JulieMoran1832 thanks 😊 do you prefer dogs or cats?

    • @JulieMoran1832
      @JulieMoran1832 Před rokem +1

      @@richiegraham8599 I like both but dogs are my preference

  • @gamingsal3207
    @gamingsal3207 Před 9 lety +6

    2:30 woah Tibetan mastiff

  • @ezziee.2729
    @ezziee.2729 Před 9 lety

    Awesome video. I've had dogs all my life, but I totally learned something here. Thanks for the upload.

  • @AGM-ts5bb
    @AGM-ts5bb Před 7 lety

    Thank you! Seeing the behaviours and listening to you is very helpful.👍👍

  • @TheMcsqueal
    @TheMcsqueal Před 6 lety +4

    My fur baby and I were recently attacked by another dog. My Daisy is a pit bull rescue used for breeding and as a bait dog. She’s now very timid about even going on walks. How do I integrate her back into being social?

    • @madisonmclendon7191
      @madisonmclendon7191 Před 5 lety

      Ally McSqueal i’m so sorry about that. prayers for Daisy!

    • @MedXOR
      @MedXOR Před 5 lety

      There are “puppy parties” for dogs 3 months to 6 months old, normally. Most puppies start out afraid of the group but at the end of a session get into the swing. Usually once or twice a week. Great fun. Doubtless could make an exception and include your dog despite age.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Ally

  • @amunoz1485
    @amunoz1485 Před 4 lety +13

    My dog rolls on her back, but for belly rubs 😂

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@A MUNOZ

  • @AmericanCoinHunting
    @AmericanCoinHunting Před 9 lety +1

    Great tools in dog communication . I watched part 2 and had to find this part 1 . After watching this . I had to favorite it .

  • @blueblurrthing
    @blueblurrthing Před 7 lety

    brilliant description of dogs behaviour. thank you.

  • @wolfspirt2745
    @wolfspirt2745 Před 9 lety +4

    Whenever my dog goes up to another dog she stays really still has her ears back and keeps her focus on the dog

  • @americanroger9285
    @americanroger9285 Před 7 lety +12

    so when there are those signals against us what should we do

    • @DanKirchner5150
      @DanKirchner5150 Před 7 lety +4

      exactly , this is what i get a lot of times i think bc i've never owned a dog or really had anything to do with them,basically these damn things are going to attack ,help me

    • @joannklonowski5629
      @joannklonowski5629 Před 7 lety +2

      get a small turtle for a pet

    • @steuerradbert
      @steuerradbert Před 7 lety +3

      FreshAcy if you read in a dog's body language that they don't feel comfortable around you, back off. you can either do that by literally walking away from them turning your back to them, or you use kind of a safe half circle to walk past an anxious dog. just never stare at a stressed dog you don't know and never step or reach over their bodies from the top. these are both telling the dog that you don't care who's uncomfortable because in case of a fight, you see yourself as the stronger, dominant part. most dogs in stressed situations just want to have some space for themselves to feel more safe. hope that helps a little 😊

    • @joannklonowski5629
      @joannklonowski5629 Před 7 lety +1

      Stuerrad- I would not suggest turning your backside away, depends on dog's stress level / position to you/ prey drive....agree on the rest :)

    • @steuerradbert
      @steuerradbert Před 7 lety

      JoAnn Klonowski
      oh, good to know - i only had some experience with agressive dogs on dog runs and street dogs in italy, but for those i can say the backing off did work :) but i'm sure you also have a good point!

  • @staceyg6366
    @staceyg6366 Před 3 lety +1

    The best videos I have seen in dog behavior..They give multiple examples and suggestions.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Stacey

  • @MeatySmirk
    @MeatySmirk Před 8 lety +2

    Thanks! thinking about getting into a career dealing with dogs this was helpful

  • @oa1986
    @oa1986 Před 7 lety +4

    what is we, humans, start doing the lip lick or the yawn to them. will they know we (humans) are trying to talk to them in their ways?

    • @ForceFreeTrainergirl06
      @ForceFreeTrainergirl06 Před 5 lety

      You can try it. You might find that the dog mirrors your actions. Often with an anxious
      nervous dog, lip licking and yawning yourself can show the dog that you are not a threat
      along with looking away. Sometimes that will work :-)

  • @hemlixx3504
    @hemlixx3504 Před 8 lety +6

    I was just wondering what was the breed of the large black dog at 7:11, We have a dog coming into our garden and excreting in the back garden..She knocks over the bins and its troublesome so we called her cheeky 😂

    • @sparklyroadkill
      @sparklyroadkill Před 7 lety +1

      Eyyy, more Hetalians

    • @DougHinVA
      @DougHinVA Před 6 lety

      report the dog to animal control and take photos of the dog to post in CraigsList in 'lost and found' to ask for help from someone who recognizes the dog.

    • @MsJustice35
      @MsJustice35 Před 6 lety +1

      Looks like a great dane to me

    • @goodingwashington6099
      @goodingwashington6099 Před 6 lety

      I would take pictures and videos using phone each time and text to the owners.... That creates a recorded evidence. In case things escalate it comes handy...

  • @davidwright7851
    @davidwright7851 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for your insights into what our dogs are trying to tell us!

  • @Vegas702EsLV
    @Vegas702EsLV Před 4 lety

    Nice informative Vid!
    My dog sighs when he cant figure something out.
    When my dog comes up to and stares at me while I'm sitting, I'll ask him what he wants. If he wants to eat , he will lick his lips. If he is thirsty he will lick his lips and squint. If he wants to go for a walk he moves his head in a "what's up" kind of gesture. I love my dog. I pay very close attention to him and He knows I know what hes telling me. We have a VERY strong bond.

  • @Skyhawk619
    @Skyhawk619 Před 7 lety +4

    When a dog rubs his face against you or presses his face against you, it's a positive sign, right?

    • @Luculencia
      @Luculencia Před 5 lety

      Usually yes :) shows trust and affection.

  • @FlyingHungryPenguin
    @FlyingHungryPenguin Před 8 lety +9

    I love this video, but doesnt it seem like that dogs will lip lick like for everything ?

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 8 lety +5

      yes. one behaviour can have many meanings, depending on the situation. When assessing you need to take the whole situation and apply the behaviour to it.

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 8 lety +1

      yes. one behaviour can have many meanings, depending on the situation. When assessing you need to take the whole situation and apply the behaviour to it.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Holly

  • @NikoleM6776
    @NikoleM6776 Před 9 lety

    Finally a video with dog in motion. It is much easier for humans to see the signals in motion vs. pictures. Thank you so much for sharing! I have tried really hard to create my own for my students, just not so great at editing videos, so you just saved me time and effort! Keep up the great work and the great videos....we love them @ Doggy Haven.

  • @thewackeddoctors
    @thewackeddoctors Před 8 lety +1

    Great video! Thank you, I learned a lot.

  • @PizzaNuggetPie
    @PizzaNuggetPie Před 9 lety +2

    oh god now I feel bad about my dog because I didn't know what stressed looked like and he does the symptons of stress all the time

    • @Luculencia
      @Luculencia Před 5 lety

      Force free, positive reinforcement based training methods will help :)

  • @ellamuma8053
    @ellamuma8053 Před 7 lety +3

    When I put my face close to my dogs he licks it. Is this a bad sign?

    • @lexalina132
      @lexalina132 Před 7 lety +4

      based on the video, she may be trying to break the tension with a "Let's play!" kind of signal

    • @woodsj626
      @woodsj626 Před 7 lety +2

      he is most likely licking you to appease what she thinks you want, meaning "ok here you go I'm calm i love you now please get out of my face."

    • @alanlee67
      @alanlee67 Před 7 lety +2

      Face licking releases endorphins for a dog...a little bit like kissing for humans. They may also like the salty taste.

  • @canecorso-reapack9877
    @canecorso-reapack9877 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video. So far I have seen the best presented real situations. Thanks for sharing!

  • @crittermamarescue1375
    @crittermamarescue1375 Před 7 lety +1

    Great advice and clips!

  • @victoriamcc4240
    @victoriamcc4240 Před 9 lety +3

    The only issue with the "agressive" white border is that they are rewarding it for the negative communication that is why it did the behaviour again..... not hating but you should re evaluate your dog communication in some ways.

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 9 lety

      Victoria McC This video isn't a rehab video. It's to show body language ONLY.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Victoria

  • @hagensteele4447
    @hagensteele4447 Před 7 lety +49

    If your own dog isn't licking your face when you put your face next to it, you need to work on trust building and leadership skills.

    • @steveeleigh3731
      @steveeleigh3731 Před 6 lety +7

      i trained my dog not to lick. I hate licking it's gross

    • @dogswithjobslondon
      @dogswithjobslondon Před 5 lety +4

      Not all dogs are licky dogs. I have one that never licks. The other, can be a little licky but he's trained not to lick me. That doesn't really have much to do with leadership or trust

    • @JessieR2023
      @JessieR2023 Před 5 lety

      I don’t let dog lick my face as they lick their own genitals and some lick their own buttholes so no thanks. I let small dogs lick my feet’s though as they don’t lick dirty stuffs much as bigger dogs.

  • @BugsBunny16
    @BugsBunny16 Před 8 lety +1

    This is an amazing video! thank you

  • @nicoalnegus9537
    @nicoalnegus9537 Před 6 lety +3

    According to this, my dog approaches me for head rubs to feel uncomfortable lol

  • @rockygurumayum8059
    @rockygurumayum8059 Před 8 lety +5

    i still didn't understand a thing. it's like a dog stick his tongue for everything

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 8 lety +2

      +Rocky Sharma All situational. It's displacement behaviours just like humans have, some people twirl their hair cause they're bored and nervous or uncomfortable. Biting nails.....biting lip, twitching leg etc....

    • @rockygurumayum8059
      @rockygurumayum8059 Před 8 lety +1

      +Kristin Crestejo (Modern Canine Training) yeah i know ;) it's easy to distinguish for you experts but for us say noobs or amateurs it hard for us 😂

    • @Krissykris1468
      @Krissykris1468  Před 8 lety +1

      +Rocky Sharma haha. I was a newbie too. use common sense, if it seems like your dog is fine, chances are, he's ok. 😀

    • @rockygurumayum8059
      @rockygurumayum8059 Před 8 lety

      +Kristin Crestejo (Modern Canine Training) well as far as i know,my puppy doesn't seems to be in any stress or whatsoever.anyway that was helpful of you replying. thanks keep up the for work

  • @BlackPumpking92
    @BlackPumpking92 Před 9 lety

    Thank you so much for uploading this!

  • @VetSupplyau
    @VetSupplyau Před 10 měsíci

    Great Video!!! Love the real world examples on video and the explanation included during the demonstrations.

  • @maitezubieta4569
    @maitezubieta4569 Před 10 lety +8

    If only Cesar Millan would have known this right? haha

    • @neilshepherd1904
      @neilshepherd1904 Před 9 lety +1

      Cesar Millan can read dog behaviour fairly well, but sadly he reacts to it (at least historically) by trying to dominate dogs to show he's the 'boss', or something.

    • @maitezubieta4569
      @maitezubieta4569 Před 9 lety +5

      Well... 5 seconds before the labrador bit him he said the dog was "submissive". I wouldn't call that correct dog behaviour reading.

    • @mariasmith2198
      @mariasmith2198 Před 6 lety +5

      Yeah, he was able to actually do something useful, like change dog behavor rather then tell us about it without doing a damn useful thing.

    • @Luculencia
      @Luculencia Před 5 lety +2

      @@Trailerzif the dog wasn't submissive at all, she was highly uncomfortable and giving him multiple warnings which he completely ignored. Eventually she HAD to bite him because he just wouldn't listen to her and he kept threatening her.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      @@mariasmith2198 This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?

  • @cman710
    @cman710 Před rokem

    This is super helpful as someone who just started working with dogs and was told to start to watch some videos.

  • @Hal-id5xh
    @Hal-id5xh Před 2 lety

    Great video! Clear examples and explanations. Thanks!

  • @JohnJJay
    @JohnJJay Před 7 lety

    To be watched 'till fluent. Thank you so very much Kristin!

  • @FaerieDust
    @FaerieDust Před 5 lety

    I'm looking to get a dog in the next year or so, but I've never had one before - I wish there was a class I could take or something!! I know there are classes in my area for new dog owners, but that's when you've already adopted/bought the dog. I want to know at least the basics BEFORE I take over full responsibility for a living being. So grateful for videos like this, I'm really learning a lot!!

  • @Ut00bRdann0
    @Ut00bRdann0 Před 9 lety

    Thank you for the resources.

  • @TheHouseOfJokes
    @TheHouseOfJokes Před 8 lety

    Very amazing. I loved observing your youtube video. I am looking forward to viewing some extra in the near future.

  • @vandalia722
    @vandalia722 Před 6 lety

    Excellent video! Thanks for sharing your insight.

  • @KylieAllTheTime
    @KylieAllTheTime Před 9 lety +1

    thank you so much for this informative video, I just adopted an american staffy from the shelter, and i need to read her signs to avoid any problems with other dogs or my small niece and nephew. THANK YOU it was very easy to follow and you werent talking too fast, please make more!

    • @josephkilbourne1348
      @josephkilbourne1348 Před 4 lety

      I owns iesadiseasiasesmee.all...me.stphbne u now til i fkn fnd evzydthg. So u eho did.. Or didnt.i decide. Fkngetmemyrid.tho.whruibeat.mothers.fansclubisownsd.inbeminbcjklipedsab.

    • @richiegraham8599
      @richiegraham8599 Před rokem

      This is Very Nice and Helpful 🙏🏻 A lot of Cute babies though 🥰😘Can I ask you a question please?@Kylie