A
Solution - Muzzle Them All & Keep Them On a Lead
Ryan O'Meara
Over the past
years we’ve heard a number of alternative ‘dangerous dog’ solutions
proposed. Ways and means by which we can prevent dog attacks from
occurring. Ideas and suggestions which can help us rid ourselves of the
menace of dog attacks. One of the most common ideas put forward seems,
on the face of it, to be entirely sensible: to muzzle all dogs and keep
them confined to a lead at all times in public. Well, whilst it may
seem sensible - unfortunately, it is not. In fact I speculate that if
we want to literally DOUBLE the number of dog attacks, especially the
most serious ones, the way to do it would be to muzzle and confine all
dogs to leads in public. I shall hereby try and explain the flaws in
this ideology.
Dogs operate in and have personalities which can be linked to something
known as ‘drives’. Whilst it is not my intent to make this a
‘technical’ dog behaviour article I shall list the recognised drives
below:
The Prey drive: these dogs stalk,
‘kill’ their toys, shake objects and are highly stimulated by visual
movements. They like to chase.
The Pack drive: these dogs are
sociable animals who enjoy being touched by people, prone to separation
anxiety.
The Fight drive: self confident or
‘dominant’ dogs who will guard themselves, their property, their
family. Tends to hold strong eye contact even with ‘dominant’ people.
The Flight drive: unsure in strange
situations, always needs to be aware of a potential route of escape,
tends to be submissive and is most prone to ‘fear biting’.
Dogs may
show a tendency to ‘be a high prey drive’ dog or dogs may exhibit high
drive behaviour in certain circumstances - for example, a dog which may
- by normal personality - operate for most of its life in ‘pack drive’,
a friendly dog that loves people for instance, upon encountering its
first ever squirrel the dog may instantly switch on to a very high prey
drive response. So it’s not a simple case of being able to label one
dog or breed as a particular candidate to fit one of the drive
descriptions. Yes, we can generalise (Bull breed dogs tend to score
highly on pack drive, they love people, love being touched, enjoy
companionship) but these generalisations are what have gotten us in to
trouble in the first place!
We simply cannot
and should not attempt to define a dog’s personality by its breed type
or EVEN its past history. For instance, a dog which has - for its
entire life - never been nervous or aggressive about ANYTHING, when
faced with a certain new situation or circumstance may exhibit high
levels of ‘unplanned for’ behaviour. I often ask people to imagine in
their mind how they feel about elephants. How do they feel when they
see elephants on TV on a nature documentary. Most people have neutral
views about elephants. We don’t live our lives in fear of them and they
are not an animal that invades our daily thoughts. We have no ‘planned
for’ elephant response behaviour. I then ask people to try and imagine
how they’d feel if they walked into a room - a room they recognise and
have used before, let’s say their boardroom at their place of work -
and rather than being confronted by their work colleagues, much to
their surprise a fully grown elephant is standing in the room. Now
imagine how you might feel about elephants in THAT circumstance! Heart
rate rised, shock, surprise, nervous tension, wonderment, planning for
an escape route, sweaty palms - we have no idea how we’d respond to
surprising circumstances, especially ones we’ve never planned for - yet
we somehow expect our dogs to react consistently to all circumstances
based on how they’ve behaved in the past. This is an error.
But what’s this
got to do with muzzling and lead confinement you ask?
Well it’s all
about the need for owners to be able to do two very, very (very)
important things:
1) Allow their dog to exhibit
normal behaviour whilst under proper control
2) Understand the risks associated
with ‘unplanned’ behaviour
So let’s tackle
these two issues.
Allowing a dog
to exhibit normal behaviour means allowing a dog to exercise freely.
There are some dogs - in fact most dogs - who absolutely thrive on the
freedom to run and shake loose the constraints of a leash or the
confinement of the four walls of their home and garden. To many dogs,
this is their ‘reason to live’. This is their most treasured treat. It
also keeps them healthy. If we are to constrain dogs and deny them the
ability to exercise freely, a number of things will start to happen and
start to happen quickly:
The dogs will
start to become very, very wound up at home. Too much energy, no outlet
for it. Anyone who has ever had to spend time in a confined space will
realise how tedious that becomes. Think of a longhaul flight for an
example. Sitting there, waiting for someone else to provide you with
‘release’, waiting for someone else to feed you, relying on others for
your stimulation. Now imagine that your entire life was spent on a
longhaul flight. I project you’ll do one of two things: You’ll either
go quietly mad and spend your days asleep in a permanent bout of
depression or you’ll go VERY mad and start threating to to do ‘crazy’
things in order to get your freedom back. To confine dogs to a
permanent life on a longhaul flight will cause a lot of problems.
Dogs will begin
to attack more people in their homes. No doubt about it. A dog who is
‘wound up’ a dog who has more energy than they are ever permitted to
expend will be a problem dog. If we estimate that 2, maybe 3% of all
the dogs in the UK are responsible for attacks and injuries caused by
dogs as things stand today - by having a blanket ‘no dogs off lead in
public’ law, you can comfortably project that we’ll have maybe as high
as 20% of dogs who will pose a far greater risk to people. Yes, we may
reduce dog attacks in public but my word, we will massively increase
the number of attacks in the home. The net result will be more attacks.
Dogs need off
lead exercise and they need the ability to socialise with other dogs.
Dogs owners should understand that they have an obligation to keep
their dogs under control (and do it! Not just understand it) and they
should also recognise that dogs can have very, very different reactions
to situations which are ‘unplanned for’. Again, think about how you’d
react if you met a real life elephant face to face in a place where you
were not expecting it. Don’t assume that dogs can’t have equally
extreme reactions to new things.
Muzzling Similar to the
freedom to run argument. If you take away a dog’s defence mechanisms:
either the ability to run away or the ability to ‘fight’ you will
instantly place the dog into a state of heightened tension.
I want you to
think about that elephant again folks. Let us say that you have met the
elephant in the boardroom and you’ve just managed to calm your nerves,
your blood pressure is lower and your starting to feel a bit more
comforable. No doubt you’ll still be very aware of the fact that there
is an elephant in the room but you’ve just about managed to compose
yourself. Firstly, you have the door behind you so if things take a
turn for the unexpected you can always leg it! Only, now you can’t.
Because what’s going to happen now is you are going to be tethered to
the radiator and your hands are going to be tied behind your back. How
you feeling now? A little less composed? A little vulnerable? Nervous?
Tense?
See this is
exactly what we do when we impose on our dogs a mandatory constraint.
We can - in one fell swoop - make a non aggressive, non defensive dog
INSTANTLY more aggressive and more defensive. We can increase the risk
of altering the dog’s nature and outlook on life. And again, whilst it
is certainly the case that we may (in fact probably would) see a
reduction in dog attacks in public, the net result of such a law would
be a massive, massive increase in the number of dog attacks occuring in
the home. Why? Because we will be artifically increasing the drive
senses in our dogs. We can’t muzzle a dog all day, we can’t tether a
dog all day so for those periods of time when they are unmuzzled we
will see a dog with an altered personality. Heightened defensiveness,
heightened nervousness - we would make some non aggressive dogs
aggressive and some aggressive dogs even more aggressive. Times where
the dog is feeding would be exceptionally dangerous. The net result
would be more dog attacks.
The solution,
whilst simple, is not easy. Dog owners need to better informed on how
to manage their animals. They need to be better prepared for the
reality that their dogs can and will behave differently in different
situations, never assume. They must have better control of their dogs.
If they can not recall their dog then they simply should not have the
dog off a lead until such a time as that training objective has been
achieved. Dog owners need to be aware of the fact that their dogs
should not invade other people’s space. Dog owners need to take control
of their dogs and to improve their ownership standards. If we could
make this happen, society, dogs and their owners would be a lot, lot
happier.
Author Details
Ryan O'Meara is editor-in-chief of K9 Magazine, the lifestyle magazine
for dog lovers. He lives in the East Midlands with his own two dogs,
Mia and Chloe.
reprinted with kind permission from Ryan O'Meara K9 Magazine