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Akita Behavior &
Temperament
by Sherry E. Wallis
While everyone who breeds or
buys dogs probably agrees they want dogs with "good"
temperaments, exactly what that means is left to the imagination
more often than not. Each party assumes that he is talking about
the same thing. Unfortunately, huge discrepancies may lie between
their concepts of what constitutes good temperament.
For instance, many years ago,
a group of us attended a party given by the owner of a champion
male. He was outside when we arrived and remained there despite
inquiries about him. Finally, a few of the guests prevailed on
our host and were taken out to see the dog.
Several told me that later that
they wished they hadn't been so insistent, Initially, the dog
growled and snarled at them, quieting down after a few minutes,
but remaining very alert and wary. One visitor said, "One
wrong move, and you'd have been fair game!"
The owners later told me that
they felt the dog's temperament was very correct for the breed
and were quite proud of what they considered a properly protective
nature. If he growled at a few judges in the ring and couldn't
be petted by spectators, that was okay with them. They hadn't
bought a poodle.
Is this good temperament? I
don't think so, but it is certainly an "eye-of-the-beholder"
question. This disussion of temperament was originally published
in Akita Dog, the newsletter of the Akita Club of America, and
later in Akita World magazine. It contains what I consider essential
components of good temperament for an Akita, why I think they
are important, how to tell if you have problems and how to strengthen
weaknesses.
This material is garnered from
my own experience, education, and opinion, and I welcome input
from you. Your suggestions, comments, or (perish the thought!)
criticisms should be directed to me by e-mail.
The priority of this list is
rather loose. Some components are equally important; others depend
on an individual's preferences. For instance, many people would
rank protectiveness much higher than I have, but almost everyone
would agree on the first few. However, I know from experiences
like the one I just related that even they are open to challenge.
RECIPE
FOR GOOD TEMPERAMENT
First and foremost, every
dog, not just an Akita, should be bite inhibited. He should be
so reluctant to bite, that he does so only under the direst of
circumstances. Even then, he should bite only once, and damage
from the bite should be very minimal.
Second, an Akita should be
accepting of authority, that is he should be submissive. Between
and within breeds, the degree of submissiveness varies. The Akita's
independent nature may well modify its willingness to cooperate.
Third, an Akita should like
children. Just as retrievers like sticks and balls, this breed
should have an affinity for children.
Fourth, an Akita should be
accepting of non-threatening strangers, regardless of whether
the stranger is friendly or neutral.
Fifth, an Akita should have
enough confidence to be at ease an unfamiliar setting.
Sixth, an Akita should be
trainable. He should be willing and able to learn behaviors that
he repeats reliably.
Seventh, an Akita should
stable around strange noises.
Eighth, to some degree, an
Akita should have an independent nature.
Ninth, an Akita should have
an inhibited nature. He should not respond to stressful situations
by becoming increasingly excited or agitated.
Tenth, faced with a threat,
an Akita should be protective of their family.
Eleventh, an Akita should
be accepting of other dogs.
BITE
INHIBITION
Bite inhibition is a concept
that, as a dog owner, you know about, but you probably pay it
little attention unless and until your dog bites. Most dogs are
inhibited from biting. That's what makes them desireable companions.
A few people seem not to mind
living with an animal that might inflict serious injury on them.
They buy lions, tigers, wolves, and dogs that are likely to bite,
often and hard, They probably also like bungee jumping and parachuting.
While these all have a large element of risk to the individual
who likes living on the edge, only the first presents a hazard
to others.
Inherited Component
Bite inhibition begins before
birth, since it is partly inherited. Unless you are a telepath,
you have really no way of knowing how quickly a dog might reach
its flash point. It may have a good reason for biting, but, again,
unless you're telepathic, youll also never know.
When a dog bites, the family's
first impulse is to find a good reason for their dog's behavior.
Most people love their dogs deeply and feel hurt, guilty, defensive,
and protective when it transgresses. "He was protecting
his owner, was abused by the former owner, was startled"
The list of reasons is only limited by the owners'imaginations.
You will seldom be in a position
to judge the accuracy of their reasoning, and if you like the
dog, your regard may shade your opinion, too. Because the willingness
of the dog to bite a person has a genetic component, the safest
option in breeding is to select dogs that have never done so.
Simply stated: Don't use
any dog for breeding if it has bitten a human.
Training Not to Bite
While the height of the threshold
at which a dog will bite may be initially determined by inheritance,
it can certainly be raised or lowered by training. Puppies begin
learning it from each other and from their mother.
Learning the Limits
When puppies play with each
other, they engage in biting behavior. The strength with which
they bite is tempered by the response of their playmates. The
hurt puppy protests with a loud, high-pitched scream, and the
offending puppy lets go.
Likewise, nursing puppies can
bite their mother once their teeth come in. Moms react by moving
away from the puppy, pushing it away, or, in extreme cases, by
growling at the biter. She may also intervene in the puppies'
play should one puppy prove too aggressive to his siblings. In
these ways, puppies learn to set limits on the force they exert
when biting.
Time To Grow Up
Social interactions are very
important for the developing puppy not just for bite inhibition
but for learning proper doggy manners. The lessons they learn
here will remain with them all their lives which is why leaving
the litter together past the traditional six weeks is vital.
At six weeks, puppies are just
beginning to play with each other, with toys, and with their
mother and other dogs. Taking them away too early can deprive
them of valuable lessons in life.
What Does This Mean To You As
the Breeder?
You and the rest of your household
should jump right in with the rest of the puppies, teaching them
that humans are very delicate beings. You will be bitten because
that's how puppies test their world. As soon as a puppy mouths
you, even if he does not bite hard, you should mimic his littermates
and give a high-pitched yell. The puppy should immediately let
go and will probably lick a couple of times. Give him a warm
"thank you," and wait for the next time.
Very young puppies will continue
to bite but the bites should get progressively softer until they
disappear altogether. Extend your indications of discomfort to
bites on your clothing as well. If you walk among the puppies
in a long night-gown, scream when they bite the edges.
This technique is highly effective
and will work with young dogs even more quickly than it does
with puppies. All children should be taught to deal with nipping
puppies and young dogs this way since they rarely have the social
standing to correct the dog by indicating their disapproval.
Soft Mouths
Many Akitas have soft mouths,
probably from crosses to native dogs that were retrievers. Their
bites may be more like nuzzles and may never cause you pain.
As adults, soft-mouthed dogs
may have the same toys for years. They may never cause problems
to your furniture or shoes. Don't be fooled, though. They can
still inflict serious damage on people or other dogs, because
when they want to bite hard, they can.
Hard-mouthed dogs have a slightly
different jaw structure, so few Akitas have the same bite strength
as a German Shepherd or Rottweiler. If your face is being bitten,
however, this distinction will be of little concern to you. All
bites hurt.
Is Bite Inhibition Important?
The impact of a dog bite extends
far beyond its effect on the people involved, which can be devastating
by itself. Very few people actually die as a result of dog bites,
but the physical damage can be horribly disfiguring. Medical
treatment can range from simple cleaning to multiple surgeries.
The owner of the dog may be
faced with huge legal fees and damage awards to the victim. Most
of these suits are covered by homeowners insurance. However,
the unfortunate owner may find himself out of a policy and unable
to secure a new insurer so long as the dog is present.
Even worse, the bond between
dogs and humans is based in part on trust, and part of that is
eroded once you are bitten. If the victim is a bystander and
not a dog owner, he is likely to be lost forever to any relationship
with dogs and may become hostile to them. Hostility coupled with
activism can sound the death knell of a breed.
Does this sound extreme to you?
If so, you should investigate the plight of "pit bulls."
That breed designation is used by the UKC to refer to dogs identical
or similar to our American Staffordshire Terrier. The further
distinction between Staffordshire Terriers and Bull Terriers
may be too fine for most laymen to make, so all these breeds
have borne the brunt of the assault from animal rights activists.
Led by organizations such as
PETA and the ASPCA, this lunatic fringe is actively working against
the interests of pure-bred dog breeders (or all dog breeders
for that matter, we're just the most easily identified). If this
is news to you, you need to pay more attention to the world around
you Their anti-dog stance has found its way into newspapers or
magazines and television.
Their manifestos clearly express
their desire to release dogs from the tyranny of humans. No matter
how laughable you think their opinions are, the fact remains
that they have gained quite a foothold with the media. According
to recent reports in popular publications and television shows,
purebred dogs are riddled with disease and deformed by our breeding
practices.
Such press may scare off some
buyers, but obviously, the idea that people should get rid of
their dogs isn't going to fly. This is only one assault, their
overall plan is multi-layered and subtle.
First, people are encouraged
to adopt dogs from shelters. After all, millions of dogs are
euthanized every year because no one wants them. Adopting one
of these saves tax money and keeps a dog from being killed. Since
most are sterilized, the dogs will not reproduce, satisfying
one of the animal rightists' goals.
In countless articles and broadcasts,
they make the blithe assertions that mixedbreeds are healthier
and have better temperaments than pure-breds. Filthy puppy mills
are shown with pitiful dogs in horrible conditions, but no effort
is made to distinguish poor breeders from good ones. Even worse,
the very institutions that are charged with protecting the interests
of pure-bred dogs have rolled-over and played dead throughout
this media campaign.
The only area in which our side
has been effective at all is in defeating some breed-specific
legislation. The legislative battlefield still represents the
most potent threat to us as Akita breeders. If getting rid of
pure-bred dogs is not palatable to most Americans, few can complain
about removing or restricting the right to own or breed one of
the breeds that pose a significant danger to humans, especially
children.
Only the most vigorous action
of the part of area kennel clubs, the American Dog Owners Association,
and the AKC has kept breed-specific bans at bay in cities all
over this country. The first target in the campaign was the nefarious
"pit bull."
The animal rights groups are
so well organized, have so much money, and so many supporters,
that the anti pit-bull legislation was fostered and promoted
in both the US and Great Britain (where the breed is known as
the American Pit Bull) simultaneously.
Fortunately for us, in the US,
they had to work local government by local government. In England,
they succeeded in having several breeds severely restricted or
banned altogether.
The support for their position
comes right from the dog community, where information about dog
bites is published by various organizations. Bite frequency is
organized by breed. Very few surveys have a category for mutts
nor is any effort made to determine whether breed identification
procedures are accurate! No mention is made either of how the
statistics are compiled nor is any correlation given between
the number of bites and the popularity of the breed.
Chosing the Pit Bull for the
first breed, however, has turned out to be a two-edged sword,
since the term is a catch-all for several breeds as well as cross-
and mixed-breeds. One attempt to ban them was defeated when officials
in animal control were shown pictures of various dogs and asked
to identify them. No one actually knew which ones were the Pit
Bulls, so their breed-specific legislation failed to pass.
Identifying the next targeted
breeds is much easier. Included are: Rottweilers, German Shepherd
Dogs, Doberman Pinchers, Akitas, and Alaskan Malamutes. These
breeds have been chosen because they are identifiable and because
terribly mauled bite victims are available to stand witness to
the dogs' ability to cause injury.
Make no mistake, the anti-dog
contingent would like to do away with dogs altogether, but if
they can't succeed at that, they'll settle for just a few. Ours
is one of them.
They want to bury our dogs with
stories of children undergoing their fourth or fifth plastic
surgery, of an actress dragged into the bushes by the neighboring
Akita, of the relative put into the hospital by an unprovoked
attack. Every one of these victims is a nail in our coffin.
The antidote to this poison
are people who own well-adjusted, stable Akitas. They are our
soldiers in this battle. Their good opinion and love for the
breed are our ammunition. To gain their support, we must produce
Akitas with good temperaments, and this begins with bite inhibition.
If you love the breed and want it to continue, you must work
in this direction even if it means some painful choices and difficult
decisions.
Strengthening Bite Inhibition
You can strengthen bite inhibition
throughout the dog's life. Not letting him bite you or your clothing
is the first and most important step in doing this. If you currently
roughhouse by offering your arm as a target, switch to a lambswool
or rawhide toy, a towel, or a ball. Throw it or drag it for him
and then let him play with it. You can pick it up (few Akitas
will actually bring it back, so don't be disappointed when your
dog proves to be a "getter" but not a "returner")
and throw or drag it along the ground. Any time the dog tries
to play-bite at you, switch him over immediately to one of these
toys.
If your dog has a firmly entrenched
habit, yelping may not work. As an alternative, you may firmly
take your dog's muzzle off your arm or clothes if he puts his
mouth on you. Hold his mouth shut, but don't try to hurt him,
and with a very low, growly voice, firmly tell him, "No."
Don't strike the dog or shake
him. You may also be battling a dominance problem, which is covered
in another section of this discussion. Trading aggression for
aggression may get you into an escalating spiral that can cause
the very problem you're trying to avoid!
Insist that your children and
any visitors not play chase allowing the dog to pursue them.
If dogs could talk, they'd probably call this game "Chase
the Prey." Given the right set of stimuli--the right movements,
the right sounds, the right smells--this can become pursuit in
deadly earnest.
When you send your charges on
to new home, you don't need to scare your buyers to death, but
you should make them aware of appropriate behaviors. Give them
a book like Terry Ryan's Alphabetizing Your Dog or Carol
Benjamin's Mother Knows Best and ask that they read it
before they pick up their puppy. The expense is negligible when
you consider the tragedies it can prevent.
ACCEPTANCE
OF AUTHORITY
Any dog in its relationship
with other dogs and with people fits onto a scale of what is
most often called "dominance behavior." At the upper
end is the dog that does what he wants when he wants and enforces
his will if he is thwarted--the alpha, the most dominant dog.
At the lower end is the dog that seems to have no ego strength
at all-the omega or most submissive one.
Perhaps this component of behavior
is better viewed as acceptance of authority. Many people want
strong, brave Akitas and are afraid that a submissive dog will
be everyone's doormat. In fact, the relationships formed between
dogs themselves and between dogs and humans are very complex
and very fluid, subject to change depending on circumstances.
Also important to understanding the significance of such measures
is the character of the breed itself. A dominant Rottweiler is
a very different dog from a dominant Papillon. A submissive Akita
is not the same thing as a submissive Chihuahua.
The Pack Incorporated
The roots of dominance behavior
are found in the dynamics of the pack, the social unit into which
canines organize themselves. Observations of naturalists have
given us great insight into how the pack functions. These have
been done in the wild on wolves and coyotes and in academic settings,
on dogs.
They show us an organization
that in many ways is analogous to one of our corporations. At
the top is the pack leader, the CEO. He is responsible for the
welfare of the group and charged with its protection. His perks
are commensurate with his responsibility. He gets first pick
of the food and gets as much as he wants. Everyone looks up to
him and curries his favor. Unless a corporate takeover is in
the works, no one challenges his authority in the slightest way.
At the bottom of the corporate
ladder is the fellow who has virtually no status, either personally
or as a result of his position He's the step-n-fetchit for anyone
who gives him an order. While the CEO may have a genuine liking
for this guy and may even share the table with him once in a
while, you can bet the rest of the group will have very little
social interaction with such a low- status individual.
In fact, among the lower-status
members is an element of contentment. They know their place and
keep it. Friction occurs most frequently in the middle and upper
management individuals. Always trying to move up the ladder means
exchanging places with someone else, so they may well scrap and
squabble. Too serious a fight might draw the attention of the
CEO, however, so fights are more to intimidate than to damage.
If the head honcho does intervene, his discipline is quick, sure,
and accepted by the offending parties.
The Pack At Home
When dogs move in with humans,
they interact with other animals and with humans in much the
same way as with a group of other dogs. Their sense of where
they belong in a hierarchy is finely tuned. They have no trouble
assessing their proper position in the group and quickly move
to occupy it.
Problems arise when the position
of the dog is at odds with the other members of the group. For
instance, suppose the dog lives with a couple. The husband is
very strong but the wife is a shy, non-assertive person. When
the wife is home alone, the dog is very protective of her. He
remains positioned between her and any visitors and maintains
a watchful posture. One day, a coworker, who is a more dominant
person, comes over. He is leery of the dog, and the wife decides
to put the dog in another room. When she takes his collar and
starts leading him out, the dog growls at her. She lets go, makes
apologies to the friend, and they both leave the house.
Several weeks later, a similar
circumstance arises. The wife is thoroughly aggravated with the
dog and decides to make her point. She takes his collar and begins
leading him out of the room. When he growls at her, she yells
at him. He jumps up and bites her in the face.
An alternative scenario given
the same relationships is that the wife opens the door and admits
the friend. The dog stands between them and displays some hostile
body language that makes the friend wary. He asks her to leave
if she can't put the dog up. She moves around the dog, standing
next to the visitor. As they are walking out the door, the dog
attacks the stranger.
Is this a vicious dog, turning
on its owner or engaging in an unprovoked attack? While it may
appear so, in the first case, the dog is carrying out what it
perceives as its responsibilities as an assistant pack leader.
When the husband is gone, that mantle falls upon the dog, and
nothing the people have done makes the dog think otherwise. He
does not approve of the wife's decision to take him out of the
room, since he will then be unable to protect her from what he
considers a threat, so he tells her he does not approve of her
actions by growling. Her acceptance of his authority confirms
his judgement. When she leaves with the stranger, however, his
authority is defied and he is worried about her safety.
The next time she tries to take
him out, several factors come into play. He knows she can circumvent
him because she did it last time and he is worried about her.
She is his responsibility. He growls at her, but she does not
let go. This is a challenge to his authority. His subsequent
bite is discipline delivered by a higher status individual to
a lower-status one who is transgressing. These bites are almost
always delivered to the face because that is how a disciplinary
bite is delivered between dogs.
With another couple, the husband
is a mild personality and the wife is more assertive, Both are
showing the dog; however, when the husband shows him, the dog
often growls at the judge. He never does this with the wife.
Again, the dog is acting as
a protector of a lower-status member of his pack. His inclination
to do so is reinforced by the husband's body language. He leans
down next to the dog and frequently puts his head level with
the dog's in a gesture of what he thinks is affection, but what
the dog perceives as submission. Because he knows the dog is
likely to grow~ the man has become very anxious in the ring.
The poor dog senses this anxiety and incorrectly interprets the
approach of the stranger as the cause, thus reinforcing his decision
to warn this person away.
Curing these problems can be
relatively simple. In the latter case, the husband developed
a more assertive posture with the dog after reading a book about
dominance behavior. He quit bending over, never kissed the dog
again, and corrected him firmly when the dog growled. In short,
he moved up the social ladder to a position above the dog, so
the dog was no longer obliged to protect him.
In the former case, the dog
and the wife went through several obedience classes where she
firmly established control over the dog. They developed a routine
for meeting and dealing with visitors and strangers. Instead
of regarding the dog as her husband's major inconvenience, she
has developed a deep rapport with him. They love and respect
each other.
In a more serious case, an Akita
behaved peculiarly around one of the middle children in the family,
a nine-year old boy. While the child sat on the floor watching
tv, the dog brought his chew-toy over and dropped it near the
child. Then, he circled the child and watched sharply. When the
child reached for the toy, the dog growled and snatched it up.
Correctly alarmed, the mother returned the dog to the breeder.
Clearly, like the middle management
of the corporation, the dog considered itself only slightly above
this particular child in the family hierarchy and perceived the
child as a threat to his position in the group. His opinions
were probably confirmed by some of the actions of the child,
such as sitting on the floor. His actions with the toy were a
way for him to enforce his higher status. Had the dog not been
removed, the situation would surely have escalated, and the child
might have been severely bitten.
Puppy
Evaluative Tests
Fortunately, a fairly reliable
method of testing young dogs to determine how willingly they
accept authority has come out of all the research on dog behavior.
Originally developed for guide dog organizations to aid in selection
of promising youngsters, these tests are valid for other applications
as well. Information about the PAT or PET (Puppy Aptitude Test,
Puppy Evaluation Tests) is available from many sources. Gail
Fisher and Wendy Voihard published a long article in the March,
1979, and in the 1985 AKC Gazettes on administering and interpreting
the test Mrs. Volhard also sells a pamphlet and scoresheet which
you can obtain by writing her at: RD 1, Box 518, Phoenix, NY
13135, (315) 593-6115.
PATs are usually done initially
at around seven weeks. Puppies are born with an immature brain
which should be fully functional at about this time. The first
administration should be indicative of the puppy's natural tendencies
before his environment has had much impact. Subsequent tests
will show changes because of outside influences. Tests are given
in an area new to the puppy and by a stranger.
The first section of the test
deals with social attraction and dominance measures, and you
can use these yourself to select a puppy with an appropriate
temperament for you even if no testing has been done on the puppies
you are looking at.
First, the puppy should be removed
from his littermates and observed in a room or area away from
them. You want to see how the puppy interacts with people, not
with other dogs, and how he interacts with you.
Quick Puppy Evaluation
First, sit on the floor and
call him in a friendly voice. If he comes to you, notice whether
his tail is up and wagging or tucked. Does he come willingly
or slowly and reluctantly? Don't give up if the puppy wanders
around exploring first or doesn't immediately respond to you.
Next, get up and walk around
slowly, talking cheerfully to the puppy. Watch what he does.
If he follows you, see where he positions himself and how he
carries his tail.
These measures of social attraction
are followed by two measures of dominance and a third test which
indicates the puppy's reaction to them. Sit back down on the
floor and gently roll the puppy over on his back. Place your
hand across his chest, then restrain him and observe his reaction,
After about 20 seconds, let the puppy up. Bend your face down
to his, gently stroke his back and talk to him. See what he does.
Last, pick the puppy up by placing
your hands on either side of his chest behind his legs. Interlace
your fingers together to provide support for his ribs and let
him hang in the air. Again, observe his reactions.
Responses to the Test
Akitas are not usually strongly
attracted to strangers, so their behaviors on the social interaction
tests have a wide range. Some do not come at all and will not
follow the tester. This does not mean they are hopelessly anti-social.
Such behavior reflects instead a strongly independent nature.
More typical for the breed in
my experience is a puppy that first busies himself exploring
the area, looking around and sniffing. This is probably a displacement
activity, a face-saving advantage which gives him something to
do while he makes up his mind. After a few minutes of this, most
will "suddenly" notice your calling them or your walking
around and they will come or begin following you.
How they come and what they
do when they get there tells you something about the puppy. So
does how they follow. If the puppy approaches and/or follows
with his tail down and the ears held back slightly, you are witnessing
a submissive response. The average puppy approaches the tester
with his tail up. Confidence in meeting a stranger is indicated
by his demeanor and by a wagging tail. The more assertive puppies
will paw at your hands or even your face and the most assertive
will bite at them also.
When they follow, average puppies
walk along beside you. As they move up the scale in assertiveness,
they will get between your feet, wandering purposely through
them and may even paw at your feet or bite at your shoes. Less
social puppies may balk at the come but warm up to the tester
by the time he is walking about. Again, tail down and/or ears
back are the more submissive indicators.
Most of the Akita puppies I
have tested are mildly attracted socially. That is, they go to
the tester, either with tail up or down after some exploratory
behavior. They may greet the person and immediately wander off.
They may follow for a few steps and then drift off to explore.
Little holds their interest strongly.
Many of the herding breeds I've
tested are put off by the strange surroundings. They seem, however,
positively thrilled to see a person, even though they don't know
him, and bound over to the tester. In contrast, we've had Akitas
who have resolutely refused to participate. None of them grew
up to be intransigent monsters, but they were very independent
dogs. They were not eager to meet strangers but tolerated them.
Turned on their back, most Akitas
lie still, carefully looking away to avoid any hint of eye contact.
This is a submissive response and very acceptable. Others lie
still for a second, then struggle briefly before calming again.
These might glance quickly at your face, but as soon as they
see you are looking at them, they deliberately look away. This
is a moderate response, indicating a slightly more assertive
dog but well within acceptable parameters.
Akita puppies lifted in the
air invariably just hang there. Their bodies are usually relaxed,
although they might be stiff. More assertive responses on these
tests range from flailing and struggling to whining, pawing,
and biting. A very assertive puppy may also make eye contact.
The middle test tells you something
about the puppy's acceptance of correction and willingness to
forgive. As you might expect, many Akitas are less than enthusiastic
about undergoing unpleasant experiences and are not apt to easily
forgive the responsible agent. With no real attachment to the
tester, many Akita puppies just stalk off. Others remain with
the tester but stare off into space. A few of the more forgiving
will nuzzle the tester's hands. Assertive responses include pawing
or biting at the tester's face and hands.
Selecting a Puppy
Choosing the right puppy requires
a frank assessment of not only your personality but that of the
others in your household, too. Pick a dog that suits the personality
of the least dominant person in your family. That too runs on
a scale. The least dominant person in my family is well able
to handle a mildly dominant Akita. We are all very assertive.
My sister-in-law, however, is just able to hold her own with
my brother's old Akita, who is a medium dog. Any harder temperament,
and she'd be the looser in a contest of wills.
A medium puppy might be appropriate
for the family with three brash youngsters but not for the one
with two girls who hide behind their mother through the whole
interview. An unforgiving puppy is not a good choice for the
former; he may not be tolerant of rough play that accidentally
hurts. The latter is probably better off with the most submissive
female.
Breeders who avail themselves
of the PAT have a very useful tool for placing puppies appropriately.
If you are fortunate enough to find one, heed her advice. These
tests have no pass or fail, good dog or bad. They are helpful
in assessing the native character of a puppy and in suggesting
where best to place him and how best to work with him.
For instance, all puppies will
need some sort of correction and an unforgiving one must learn
to accept it in a good spirit. Owners of a less-forgiving puppy
should be encouraged to find a training class with positive training
methods. Force-training is not only ineffective with this type
of dog but may well sour him on training altogether.
A very independent puppy makes
a poor candidate for a home where no one is at home during the
day or where he is left outside most of the time. These dogs
are capable of getting along on their own and may not bond well
or at all to members of the family. When one of them comes out
and finds the dog digging in the flowerbed and tries to issue
a correction, the result may be aggression on the part of the
dog. Even mild Akitas do not take well to corrections from strangers.
Of the Akitas I have observed,
the vast majority show medium to extreme submissiveness on the
PAT. They also show a strong tendency towards independence and
some tendency to resent unpleasantries. I personally tested a
litter where all the dogs scored in the medium to upper ranges
on the entire temperament test. While this would be great for
a German Shepherd, my experiences since have made me very cautious
with such dogs. Two of this litter attacked people, the other
was with a very active, very assertive family who loved him dearly
but kept him well in hand. He was their beloved pet until his
death at ten.
If I had an Akita puppy that
tested as very assertive (biting hands, etc), I would have serious
reservations about him. I certainly would repeat the test several
times and would be ultra careful about his placement, making
sure that the new owners were able to handle such a dog. Certainly,
I would be less likely to be concerned with a female that showed
dominant tendencies than a male. While some breeds have little
difference in temperament between sexes, I don't believe this
is true for Akitas. An adult male Akita is just tougher than
his female counterpart.
The Dominant Dog
Life with a dominant dog is
recounted briefly in the Nov/Dec, 1986, Akita World centerfold
by Leslie Bair describing Ch Fukumoto's Ashibaya Kuma, CD, ROM.
On his first day at their house as a six- month old puppy, Leslie
"awoke to find Kuma's imposing muzzle about two inches from
my face and two dark, unfathomable eyes staring at me. We stayed
that way for what seemed like an eternity, then he clicked his
teeth several times, turned around and trotted out of the room
as if dismissing me." She goes on to say that "no one
ever really owned him." His place in the family was undisputed,
but he wielded his authority with great dignity.
Families can accommodate to
such a dog in two ways. The family can respect the dog's decisions
or be so much more dominant than he is that the dog recognizes
their authority and respects them. In between lies nothing but
trouble.
On the other hand, this dog
is easier to accommodate than the dog that is jumped up to a
dominant position when he is truly not an alpha dog, an example
of the Peter Principle in action. The dog has reached its level
of incompetence. In these households, the dog have moved into
a power vaccuum which is created by his interpretation of his
human family's behavior.
Really alpha dogs, like the
CEO, don't have to keep reminding everyone of their position.
It's obvious. Beta and delta dogs pushed into the alpha position
often lack the appropriate tools for maintaining their position,
so they are often bullies. If recognized soon enough, these dogs
can be demoted back to a place in the pack where they are more
comfortable with their role. Left too late, they can be so entrenched
in their position, they can't give it up easily.
Other Signs
If a PAT is not available, you
should try to do your own testing on the puppy to determine how
dominant he is. Other clues to his temperament can help you make
your assessment. The puppy that runs out first to greet visitors
is the most dominant puppy, not necessarily the friendliest.
Put a chew toy in the litter box and see which dogs end up with
it. Dominant dogs eat first and get their pick.
Puppies in a pen will run up
for attention. The more dominant puppy will step on the head
or push away the less dominant one. When they are very small
and sleep in a pile, the more dominant puppies are on the top.
When you were a kid did you
play "look-away", where you and a friend stared intensely
at each other, and the first to look away lost? With dogs, this
is not a game. Eye-to-eye contact is a challenge. If your puppy
or dog locks eyes with you, he is issuing one and he'd better
look away first or you're in trouble.
Again, dominance is relative
to the social structure in which the dog finds itself. The terror
of litter x may be the milquetoast of litter Y. In fact, one
of the best ways to deal with a bully puppy is to put him in
with an older dog or more assertive litter where he gets a quick
lesson in manners and humility.
In your own family, a dog that
gets to big for his britches may need to be taken down a peg
or two. This can be accomplished with careful attention to dominance
body language and dominance behaviors by all the members of the
family.
CHILDREN
Akita lore tells us that the
dogs acted as babysitters while the mothers worked in the fields,
Do you believe this? I didn't until I got the dog I'11 call Babe.
At eight weeks, she left her breeder who did have small children
and spent the next two years in a childless environment. I picked
her up at a show. At a rest area, she was squatting taking care
of her business as I looked out at the park, when a toddler seized
her from behind Hugging her, he put his head up against her spine.
I was so alarmed, I was frozen to my spot and could only watch
as she gently turned her head and gave him a big lick.' Lucky
me and lucky child!
Later on another trip, I walked
by a statue of a man and child sitting on a park bench. The sun
was behind them, so they appeared in silhouette to me and were
so lifelike, I thought they were real. So did Babe. She trotted
right up to the child and stood there wagging her tail. Then
she did a double-take and sniffed the child statue, sniffed the
adult, then tried another wag. When this didn't make them move,
she gave up and walked off.
After these experiences, I started
watching Akitas around small children, especially at shows. My
observations convinced me that in its finest expression, Akita
temperament should include a natural affinity for children. Retrievers
like balls and sticks, pointers will freeze when shown a bird
wing, and Akitas should be attracted to children.
I've seen many Akitas change
their whole demeanor in the presence of a child. They wear an
ingratiating, very non-threatening expression and may well try
to accompany the child if it wanders away. This attraction is
very different from the protectiveness of guarding and herding
dogs. It is a genuine liking for our small folk even if they
are strangers and can occur with dogs that are none too fond
of the large ones. It also seems independent of the dog's exposure
to children, although in adult dogs unfamiliar with them it may
not appear instantly.
Liking children is very important
in our breed because when Akitas do bite, the victim is quite
likely to be a child. Also, because of the size of the dog, if
a child is bitten, the damage is likely to be severe. Akitas,
especially males, are very aware of status and, in addition,
are rather independent in nature. Dogs with a special regard
for children are less likely to see them as threats and more
likely to tolerate from them what they will not tolerate from
an adult.
Again, I am reminded of the
centerfold on Ashibaya Kuma. Leslie Bair says, "[M]y daughter,
Heidi, was four...when she walked across the living room past
the slumbering Kuma. His tranquility disturbed, Kuma growled
at the source of the irritation. An equally independent and unafraid
female toddler walked up ... reached over grabbing this powerful
head in her tiny hands and before I could move, lifting the head
and slamming it down on the floor,'shut up' I was frozen ..Kuma,
though not in the least harmed, was stunned, and made a visibly
conscious decision. Mutual respect was established and each went
their own way."
In the same vein, when my younger
daughter was about ten, I asked her to put our three-year old
male in his run while I talked with some people interested in
Akitas. The wife had just asked me how the breed was with children
when I noticed Meredith and Bart were having a "meeting
of the minds!" Not wanting to go back to his run, Bart had
planted his 120 pounds into a sit and was steadfastly resisting
the tugs of his 60-pound mistress.
Meredith picked up a metal food
pan which happened to be close at hand and whacked him on the
side of his head with it. "Come on, Bart," she demanded.
He looked at her with an appraising glance, then, literally shrugged
his shoulders and followed her off to my complete surprise. While
he is a rather easy-going dog, I honestly don't know if he would
have tolerated this treatment from my husband, for instance,
who has little if anything to do with the dogs.
Like retrieving, I believe this
is an inherited component of temperament. I feel so strongly
about this that I will not breed any Akita that does not like
children. I also try to ensure it is a component of any breeding
partners I select. If you don't have children, you may not feel
so strongly about this. However, you should at least try to never
double up on dogs that do not like them. You may have none, but
puppies that you sell may well be around children all of their
lives even if your dogs are not.
TOLERANT
OF STRANGERS
If an Akita bites, its next
most likely target after a child is a visitor to the house. He
may even be someone who has come to your home frequently. To
lessen this possibility, a valuable part of the dog's temperament
is the ability to accept the presence of a non-threatening stranger
whether he is neutral or friendly.
Ian Dunbar makes a particularly
cogent observation about Oriental breeds, especially Japanese
ones. He says the most stable dogs can be unreliable around strangers
because the culture in which they were bred far longer than they
have been here does not select for that trait.
When asked why, he pointed out
that privacy there is at a premium and most homes are small by
our standards. So, in Oriental countries little if any entertaining
is done at a person's home. Instead, social activities occur
at communal baths, restaurants, hotels, clubs, parks, etc. Only
intimate friends and family are invited home.
As a result, dogs that do not
like strangers may never be weeded out of the gene pool. Further,
in guard-type breeds, distrust may be encouraged, since any stranger
at the house would be a subject for alarm. Just as the herding
instinct may or may not be present in city dogs, Oriental dogs
such as the Akita may have a profound distrust and dislike of
strangers that is never identified because it is never tested.
Changing Temperament
With Akitas, this tendency to
be wary of strangers is something that needs to be selected away
from in breeding and trained away from throughout the dog's life.
Unfortunately, if you don't realize it exists, it's hard to do
either. And, yes, doing so will change the character of the breed
from its original state. I think it's ironic that those who quibble
the most about attempts to make the breed's temperament more
socially acceptable see nothing wrong with the drastic changes
in structure and type accomplished over the last two decades.
Acceptable Behavior
Please don't think I'm advocating
a temperament incompatible with the character of the breed. We
are not raising Poodles or Golden Retrievers, and if we wanted
that type of dog,we certainly wouldn't be in Akitas! However,
when a visitor comes to your house, gets in your car, come up
to you when you're in your yard, or is talking to you at a dog
show, your Akita at least should be neutral. He should show no
sign of anxiety or hostility toward this person. He should be
tolerant of the stranger's presence.
Many Akitas totally ignore strangers,
and that is a perfectly acceptable response. If the person is
particularly "doggy-acceptable," you may find your
dog making a few overtures, especially if you're at a show and
the stranger has ever had liver in his pocket. This breed, though,
likes to make the first move, and you may find the friendliest
dogs seem uncomfortable with someone who forces attention on
them. That is not a cause for hostility, however, and your dog
should accept this attention even if it is not with enthusiasm.
This reserved demeanor is part
of the breed's innate dignity. I'm still waiting for a few of
my bitches to develop this! At ten, Mikki remains a terrible
clown who will do absolutely anything for a cookie. You may find
you have a few of these, too, and their temperament is just as
much an Akita's as her cousin's. He gazes off into the distance
when strangers pet him as if no one is there. If they disappeared
into a poof of smoke, he wouldn't notice or care about their
absence. He really only cares about his family and a few of our
friends, but he tolerates strangers.
Problem Areas
You may see problems with your
dogs or puppies you place depending on how they are raised and
trained. Certainly, the worst- case scenario is a dog that is
left outside all the time in a house with little social activity
and that is rarely taken anywhere else. These dogs can be time
bombs. The best way to avoid tragedies is to make sure you sell
puppies only to homes where they will be kept inside.
I also require contractually
that puppies be taken to training classes. To encourage this,
I help buyers locate classes and provide information about them
and rebate $50 when they bring me a certificate that says they
graduated from a class.
Training classes
I do have one serious reservation
about classes and discuss it with buyers when they take the dog.
I bring it up again when we discuss class. Allowing the instructor
to take an post-pubescent Akita, especially a male, for a demonstration
can be a real prescription for disaster.
Dogs taken to training classes
are socialized to strangers outside the home. If the dogs are
then shown or continue to be taken out in pubic, this socialization
is reinforced and eventually will become a way of life. Here,
dogs that get into trouble usually do so because the trainer
has a major lapse in judgement.
I suspect that most trainers
are alpha-types who on a subliminal level are bugged by the typical
Akita's lack of concern for their authority. Sooner or later,
they feel compelled to use the Akita as a demonstration dog,
so they take it away from the owner and try to make it do something.
In the best case, the Akita turns into a sack of meal and steadfastly
resists all their efforts to elicit a proper response which just
makes the trainer look like a fool.
In the worst case, the dog is
offended by the instructor's orders and tells him so. He may
whirl around and face the instructor, a very mild refusal, or
he may growl. Calling what he thinks is a bluff, the trainer
may meet the challenge by some sort of discipline, perhaps a
jerk on the collar or a smack. Unfortunately, Akitas don't have
a lot of bluff. They are very serious dogs.
Having failed to make his point,
the dog ups the ante and tries or succeeds in biting the trainer.
Since most trainers have been here before, they usually just
get nipped which means they have to escalate their response.
This can go on until the trainer is mauled or the dog is hung
by his collar and passes out.
I've heard this story so many
times, I now tell puppy buyers never to let their instructors
take a dog once it is an adolescent or older. Some dogs are fine,
but if they are not, the owner will drop out of training. (If
you're thinking, what kind of trainer would do this, believe
me, some really good ones can get caught in this trap before
they realize that it is one). Keeping the dogs and their owners
in class is more important than refusing an instructor.
Strange Children
Another inclination that is
not uncommon in Akitas is a distrust and even dislike of non-family
children. The most distressing thing about these dogs is that
frequently the are devoted family pets who adore their own children
and will tolerate anything from them. They may be tolerant or
even friendly to adult strangers, but visiting children are at
risk.
Until the dog does something
overt, identifying these dogs may be difficult for inexperienced
owners since the beginning signs of hostility are often very
subtle. Even more unfortunate, because the dog is so good with
his own children, the owners tend to justify the first obvious
signs of trouble by blaming the child or extraneous circumstances.
Therefore, when I sell puppies
I tell buyers in written material and reinforce it verbally that
no children, especially toddlers, should ever be left unsupervised
with any dog. To do so is to bet with a child's life as the stake.
Even the most stable dogs can put two and two together and get
five.
What happens, I ask them, when
your son's best friend picks up a toy and bashes your son in
the head with it. Don't you think your dog will see this is an
attack on his child? What do you think he's going to do?
A dog that does not like strange
children might not need even this much provocation. My first
encounter with this is an excellent example. Since it happened,I've
heard the same song, different verse more times than I can count
which is what leads me to believe this is an inherited component
of temperament.
This family had two dog-loving
boys and an indoor-outdoor Akita they had had from puppyhood.
The mother was firm but non- assertive and had had dogs all her
life. They did not go to a training class. The dog was wonderful
with her children. When he was almost a year old, she called
me and told me he was growling at one of her younger son's friends.
I asked her if he bothered any other children, and she said,
"No, only this boy. He is partially deaf and speaks differently
from the other children." Of course, it wasn't the dog!
I told her the dog's behavior
posed a significant risk to this child. I asked her to return
the dog to me, offering her a replacement from an upcoming litter.
She refused because they all loved the dog. He was crate-trained,
and at my urging, she agreed to keep the dog crated whenever
visiting children were over at the house. I made several follow-up
calls about the dog, still asking them to return him, getting
a refusal and an assurance that the dog was crated.
Well, children just aren't always
able to remember what is vitally important to adults. One day,
her son took his friend out in the back yard without telling
the mother and without putting up the dog. The visitor bent over
to pick up a toy on the patio. Unfortunately, it was next to
the dog's food bowl. He attacked. Hearing the screams, the mother
rushed out and yelled at the dog, who immediately let go.
Because the dog attacked the
back of the child's skull rather than his face and let go when
commanded, the physical damage required only stitches in the
emergency room. The scars are hidden by the child's hair. He
is now terrified of all dogs. The mother, who is not afraid of
Akitas herself, becomes almost phobic when children are around
them. She told me she is sure the child would be dead if she
had not been right in the next room.
They still refused to have the
dog euthanized. Instead, they placed it with an out-of-town friend.
I talked to this man several times and finally agreed that the
dog had a chance with him. Despite my misgivings, the placement
has worked out well. At ten years of age, the dog is now nearing
the end of his life.
Dealing With Problems
I don't know what I could have
done differently once the dog was out of my hands. My mistake
was in selling a male to this family in the first place, and
I no longer sell them to people who have not had at least Northern
dogs before unless they come over and just bowl me over with
family assertiveness. The incident sent me to several seminars
on aggression and to a number of books.
Now I would insist that the
dog go to a training class, and that the less-assertive mother
be the one to train him. Instead of relying on isolation to protect
visitors from the dog, which is doomed to failure in the most
compulsive of homes, I should have encouraged a course of desensitization
and probably some sort of behavior consultation with a trainer.
Intervention with a young dog that has not become so distressed
that he attacks might have changed the course of events.
Dogs have a threshold of tolerance.
Its height is determined first by their inherited temperament,
which differs among breeds and within a breed among its individuals,
and secondly by their degree of socialization to strangers in
and out of the home. Not only does the dog need to get out and
see people, people need to come to the dog's house and see him.
Of course, you normally don't
invite people over for your dog's benefit, but if you own an
Akita you should make a point of it. Your dog may be less than
enthusiastic about visitors. Don't worry unless he shows signs,
even subtle ones, of hostility. This may include: looking the
visitor in the eye; sitting or standing (worse) between the two
of you; anxious looks at the visitor accompanied by whines; and/or
pacing.
I even have a few that make
monkey-like noises and blow through their lips like horses. This
is their equivalent to a growl and is a warning to me that they
are very suspicious and distrustful of the stranger. Of course,
sometimes these actions are justified, and I am not in any way
suggesting that you should not heed the warnings of a guard dog
doing his job.
If the visitor on the porch
is pitching magazines and you've never laid eyes on him before,
you'd be smart to shut the door and keep your dog around. On
the other hand, if it's your next-door neighbor or a friend from
work--someone you know, someone who is safe in your judgement--your
dog is out of line.
A dog that is obviously hostile
should be leashed and put on a down stay next to you. If he is
so suspicious you cannot get him into a down, then put him in
a sit stay. If he breaks the stay, correct him and put him back
in it. Otherwise, ignore him and continue your conversation with
your friend. Both reinforce your own dominance, although the
sit less so, and will eventually show him your friend is no threat.
Giving him no attention keeps you from inadvertently reinforcing
one of his hostile responses. Just like children, dogs can and
will do things for your attention even if the attention they
receive is negative.
Never try to reassure a distrustful
dog by petting him and telling him, "It's okay." First,
it's not okay and secondly, you're not allaying his anxiety,
you're rewarding it and, thus, encouraging it.
My veterinarian gave me a great
piece of advice about dealing with anxious, fearful, or angry
dogs. Physiologically, the dog's activated state is maintained
by the release of adrenaline. Since the adrenals can produce
only so much of it, eventually, the dog's hyper-attentive state
will wear off. The more agitated the dog is, the more quickly
this will happen; the calmer, the less so.
While you and your visitor are
talking, observe your dog's behavior. He will eventually have
to relax When you see this, you can acknowledge his good behavior
with some attention and a treat, so long as he remains on the
down-stay. If he gets so bored he goes to sleep-great, you've
made a giant step forward!
Take all this in small steps
and realize you may have some set-backs. When your dog is comfortable
with visitors that sit and talk, have them stand up and walk
about. Reinforce the dog's down- stay and ignore any signs of
suspicion or wariness on the dog's part. Eventually, the visitors
can give him treats for good behavior. Perhaps you can teach
him to shake hands for a treat to break the ice. All sorts of
techniques can defuse the dog's suspicions.
If your problem is with children,
you will have to stand or sit with the dog while your child and
a visitor play quietly. Over time, the dog will become more comfortable
in the children's presence. Then, their play can become more
active. The trick here as with adults is to let the dog get control
of himself, learn that the situation is not dangerous, and develop
appropriate responses that get everyone's approval.
Desensitization should be reinforced
repeatedly and done with many different children The dog should
still not be left alone with them, but if someone forgets, which
will inevitably happen, the children and the dog won't have to
pay for the oversight.
In summary: If you have a dog
that has a behavior problem, you not only have to correct the
problem, you have to give him a socially acceptable alternative
to that behavior. He doesn't like children, he has to learn to
leave them alone; he doesn't like visitors in the house; he has
to learn to accept them.
You have to learn how to recognize
the initial indicators of problems and instead of making excuses
for them, you've got to move quickly to stop them. You have to
lead your dog on a path that makes him an acceptable companion
and pet.
Breeders must learn not to accept
the owner's comments at face value. Ask specific questions about
the dog and his behavior so that you can identify any problems
that might be developing. You'll have to listen carefully to
the replies and be ready to offer constructive advice about handling
problems.
When the dog in question is
a breeding prospect, you will have to evaluate the strength of
the problem and try to identify its source. In the above case,
we looked at the behavior of our dogs and decided the problem
lay with a common ancestor. Almost all the males and some of
the bitches with her behind them had some oddity of behavior,
although it was by no means the same from dog to dog.
Two dogs, for instance, disliked
anything with wheels. No, they had not been run over as puppies.
In fact, they had only the one bitch in common in their pedigrees;
they just had the same phobia. Some males didn't like children;
others didn't like strange adults. We ultimately abandoned this
line completely in favor of ones that produced more stable temperament.
In fairness, this action wasn't
all that difficult since none of these dogs were big winners,
and in accordance with Murphy's law, the very best ones in terms
of conformation had some of the weirdest behaviors. Breeding
is after all a balancing act, so had we been unable or unwilling
to sacrifice breeding these dogs, we would have looked at lines
very strong in temperament and bred to something line- or inbred
on it. Then, to continue, we would have used only the dogs that
showed improved temperaments.
Research on all sorts of animals,
including humans, tells us that the basic composition of our
temperament is inherited. It is constructed of building blocks
we receive from both parents. Although we have elements in common
with each, the material we receive is unique to us. The exception
to this, of course, is identical twins. Studies of twins separated
at birth have confirmed the inheritability of temperament just
as studies of identical twins living together show the powerful
influence of environment on these elements.
Similarities between the former
are eerie in their consistency. For instance, one set of twins
separated at birth were phobic about water but wanted to swim.
Independently, they arrived at the same solution to their fear;
they backed into the water. Another pair lived in neighboring
towns and were both firemen. They both did woodworking in their
spare time and had built identical benches around trees in their
back yards.
On the other hand, most of us
have met identical twins living together who work at differentiating
themselves from each other. Often, these pairs are like two sides
of the same coin with complementary personalities--one is extroverted,
the other shy; one likes science, the other arts; one is bold,
the other cautious.
Inheritance gives each of us
a set of building blocks that represent our basic nature. Our
experiences, interactions with others, and environment determine
how those blocks are arranged. With almost the same components,
one structure may have a good foundation and great stability,
while another is likely to topple into disarray.
The foundation of a dog's temperament
is laid early and will influence his behavior throughout his
life. The structure is dynamic and reacts to outside influences
so long as the animal is alive. We can reinforce strengths and
shore up weaknesses in the dog's nature. We must be careful not
to undermine strengths and encourage problems.
CONFIDENCE
Some dogs are born with confidence.
They accept new surroundings, people, and situations with aplomb
and react, if not positively to change, at least without anxiety.
Unfortunately, bold and fearless do not describe most Akitas.
As puppies, they are very careful and quite cautious. Few I've
seen are ever reckless. Akitas generally look before they leap.
I think of this breed as being
born forty and then getting older. Except when hunting or fighting,
they are rarely risk- takers. They seem stodgy and resistent
to change, a tendency that can cement itself in the older dog.
Anything that tells them their caution is justified reinforces
the reaction. Consequently, unsocialized, unexposed dogs frequently
are anxious when put in unfamiliar circumstances. The dog's anxiety
level is proportionate to the number of strange things in the
environment and their magnitude. In the worst case, the dog may
have a panic attack.
Building confidence is very
important to those of use who are showing and should be important
to pet owners as we;. A self- assured dog can go to the veterinarian,
stay at the boarding kennel, accompany the family on a campout
and even pack some of their equipment, go to dog shows, and compete
in obedience trials. His poise in the face of new situations
is based in part on inherited traits and in part on the ability
to handle stress.
Managing Stress
Puppies encounter stress and
learn to deal with it from the moment they are born. To enhance
this ability, puppies must encounter manageable stress and must
deal with it on their own. From the outset, you should pick up
each puppy and handle it. At first, this will be when you weigh
them after birth. In addition to putting them on the scale, you
should hold the puppy, stroke it, and talk to it. They cannot
hear you, but they can feel the vibrations from your speech.
Individual handling should increase in amount and duration as
the puppy grows. Walk about the house with it. Different rooms
have different smells, temperatures, and sounds.
This should continue when the
puppies' eyes and ears are open. Individually, each can be put
on the floor and allowed to walk about and explore outside the
litter box and without the security of mom and siblings. You
will have to monitor the puppy's reactions. He can easily get
into trouble. He can be mildly fearful but should be able to
allay those fears in a short time. Any stressful situation he
encounters should be mild enough for him to overcome.
In so doing, the dog is learning
not only to handle the particular situation he encounters, he
is learning to learn. That is, he is developing a set of mental
tools that allow him to evaluate and react suitably to new situations.
The more successful he is at this, the more confident he will
become.
To help this process along,
the puppy needs to gain experience. He must be taken out into
a world larger than his whelping box. As he grows, this world
should expand from the back yard to the front, then to the neighborhood,
then to training classes, shows, and other areas where large
numbers of dogs and/or people gather. Here, he will learn to
take cues from you and other humans and dogs.
The world is full of many things
frightening to youngsters who lack the experience to evaluate
whether something strange presents a real threat. To determine
whether fear and perhaps flight are justified, the youngster
will look to his mother, his siblings, and to you.
Discouraging Fear Responses
So, what do you do when the
dog gets into trouble? It can happen anywhere. I've had puppies
and young dogs go bananas over a mailbox or garbage sack. One
of the worst panic attacks I've ever had was when one of my Shepherds
encountered a bronze statue in a neighbor's front yard. She walked
up and sniffed it, then freaked out.
Back to my veterinarian's advice,
abject terror can only last for so long. An animal has only so
much adrenaline, and as the supply decreases, the panic does
too. Until this happens, reason is not the animal's strong point,
but once adrenaline is depleted, the animal calms considerably.
Your best course is to do nothing until the dog's flight response
begins to shut down. You can talk to the dog, but make sure you
are not sympathetic. The tone to strike is as if someone has
told you a mildly amusing joke. If someone else is with you,
you can both talk in a normal tone until the dog calms down.
Throughout, keep the dog as
close to the problem as possible. In severe panic attacks, you
may have to back off, then reapproach. Tell the dog in a no-nonsense
voice, "This is nothing to be afraid of. Look," then
touch the object yourself or walk up to it. Let the dog see you're
not afraid. Eventually, the dog will approach it. Then you can
praise him and tell him he's very brave. As young dogs and puppies
deal successfully with fears, they will become generally less
fearful. Each time they conquer a problem, they gain confidence
in their abilities and in you.
Obedience Training
Very few Akitas are actually
"spooky." Instead, they are cautious and careful. When
these characteristics are coupled with a lack of confidence,
the dog can become very unhappy when he is in a strange situation.
For these dogs, obedience training is a godsend. Confident dogs
can reach into their bag of tricks and find a way to deal with
the unusual. The structure provided by obedience training gives
the less confident dog a prescribed method for handing stressful
situations. As he handles them, his confidence in his abilities
increases, and he becomes less anxious.
TRAINABILITY
Of course, to accomplish all
this, an Akita must be trainable. Personally, I think trainability
is an innate characteristic of all dogs and that all dogs are
trainable. Puppy Aptitude Testing helps match people to dogs
and dogs to training methods, which is one reason I strongly
advocate its use.
Some combinations of people
and dogs just do not work well together, such as a dominant dog
with a shy, timid person. Likewise, a very dominant person may
overwhelm an omega bitch. Occasionally, you may encounter the
person who Ian Dunbar describes perfectly as "dog dim."
A short conversation will tell you that they haven't got a clue
as to why dogs do anything nor do they have a clue about how
to get them to do anything!
If they are otherwise suitable,
they can learn a lot provided they will read or watch videos.
Appropriate reading material, such as Mother Knows Best and a
good training book or video can provide a basis for understanding
their dog. It's a good idea for you to provide this material
for their review before they pick up their puppy and for you
to question them closely to make sure they understood it. These
owners will require a disproportionate share of mentoring to
stay on track. Just as some people cannot learn a foreign language,
a few of these people will never have a clue about their dog's
real personality.
Fortunately, dogs are very adaptable
and better at understanding people than we are at understanding
them.
Training Classes
When we discuss training, I
caution new owners that an Akita is not going to sit at your
feet with shining eyes that beg you to tell him what to do. Compared
to training a Border Collie, training an Akita is an uphill climb.
Does that mean they are not trainable? Certainly not!
On the other hand, finding a
suitable training class and utilizing it successfully can be
difficult for a newcomer. Because most instructors are obedience
competitors, they tend to have the breeds that work well in OTCH
competition, which means most have Goldens or Border Collies,
followed by Poodles, Shelties, or Aussies. Training these breeds
is very different from training an Akita.
If you are fortunate enough
to live in an area with a number of training classes, before
you sell puppies, take a tour and watch how the people train.
Look at the types of dogs in their classes and how well they
progress. Talk to the trainers about Akitas and see if they are
receptive to having your puppies in their classes. Pick up brochures
from those with whom you are satisfied and give them to your
puppy-buyers.
In placing puppies, we can't
rely on the new owner's love for his dog to keep the dog in his
household throughout the dog's life. We have to see that the
ew owner learns to control the dog and gains some understanding
of how they can work together.
Formal training needs to begin
in puppyhood. First, dogs are learning regardless of whether
they are in class. Secondly, a 50- pound puppy is much easier
to deal with than a 120-pound adult.
My sales contract contains a
clause requiring the new owners to attend a training class with
the dog. I encourage them to attend puppy classes and give them
information on trainers who are in their area. To sweeten the
pot, I rebate $50 of their purchase price when they give me a
copy of their graduation certificate. Although everyone doesn't
graduate, they all do attend class, so at least they have some
foundation for working with the dog.
If you have some grounding in
obedience training, another approach is to offer classes yourself.
For extra incentive, you could rebate part of the class fee for
graduation with a puppy you bred. A trainer with whom you are
on good terms might discount her rates for your puppies in exchange
for referrals. However you manage it, the new owner should leave
your house with the clear understanding that his puppy must be
trained and the determination to do so.
Training Akitas
Before I send them off, though,
I talk to the new buyers about training classes and discuss a
few problems they might encounter because they have an Akita
and not a Border Collie. After all, back in the days when dogs
actually did work for people, they performed different jobs which
required very different skills. I wouldn't ask my accountant
to wire my house nor would I go to a plumber for brain surgery.
Herding and gun dogs are the
telephone operators of the dog world. We think of them as "smart"
because they learn behaviors quickly and will repeat them endlessly
and eagerly. If you take a retriever duck hunting, you expect
him to go after the last duck just like he went after the first.
What would a shepherd do if his helper suddenly decided that
running back and forth around the sheep was boring?
Although these dogs are capable,
indeed must be capable, of independent decisions, they are not
particularly "independent" dogs. They must be what
shepherds describe as "biddable;" that is, when the
master gives a command, the dog should hasten to obey it unless
he has a compelling reason not to. In that case, sooner or later,
he will communicate it to the owner.
Looking at the way an obedience
trial championship is obtained, it's hardly a surprise that most
of the dogs achieving it are herders or gun dogs. Even breeds
not classed in these groups such as Papillons and Poodles have
that background. Poodles were originally retrievers and Papillons
were bred down from spaniels.
Akitas are shown in the working
group, but where do they fit in the obedience picture in terms
of working traits? To determine this, you have to look at function.
The forerunners of the breed were used to hunt large game in
the mountainous territory of Dewa Province on the Japanese island
of Honshu. Accompanied by a hunter, they located, followed, and
held or tackled bear, elk, and boar--activities which make them
a hound.
Evaluating them in terms of
appearance, they obviously derive from "spitz" or "Northern
Dog" ancestry. These dogs have certain common traits: short,
erect ears; mesocephalic heads with oblique-set eyes; double
coats; and tails that curl upwards in some fashion. Representatives
are found throughout the Arctic and northern temperate areas
and include the Pomeranian, Keeshond, American Eskimo, Samoyed,
Alaskan Malamute, Greenland Eskimo Dog, Siberian Husky, Norwegian
Elkhound, Norwegian Buhund, the Russian Laika, the Karelian Bear
Dog, the Korean Kendo, as well as all the native Japanese dogs.
The working representatives of this group have served as sled
and pack dogs and hunters, and guards.
Obviously, the Akita fits nicely
with this group of dogs. Like the Elkhound and Karelian, he is
a hunting or hound/spitz- type dog. Characteristics which suit
them for their jobs do not necessarily produce a stellar obedience
performer. Hounds must be flexible in their responses. After
all, the prey sets the pace and determines the course, and the
hunter must be adaptable, ready to abandon one strategy in favor
of another.
In common with the northern/hound
types, he is physically tough with a high pain threshold which
was probably increased through selective breeding when he was
used as a fighting dog. From both his function as a hound and
his heritage as a northern dog, he has a core of independence
that makes him unable to always do what you want. This doesn't
mean he won't do it, just that he might not.
Boredom
How do these idiosyncrasies
translate to training? Akitas, like many hounds, have a very
low tolerance for repetition. Once boredom sets in, and it does
so quickly, the dog looses interest, which means repetition is
not the key to successful training. The problem is that dogs
learn by repetition, so as a trainer, you have to balance the
two by mixing a variety of exercises, using short training times,
and by keeping training a manageable challenge.
Therefore, in class, when your
Akita has done two great figure eights, instead of doing three
more, praise him and go on a couple of other exercises regardless
of what the rest of the class is doing. Of course, you need to
discuss this with your trainer first so she doesn't think you're
being uncooperative.
Even as early as seven weeks
on the PAT, Akita puppies show little persistence. They often
attack the mop but abandon the attack after a few seconds, while
Rottweiler puppies in the same situation may have to be pulled
off of it. The Akitas will chase a ball that rolls in front of
them but quickly loose interest in favor of some other activity.
Variable Behavior
They also tend to vary their
behavior rather than stereotyping it quickly. When we test puppies,
one of the things we do is put them on a box, stand in front
of them, and call them. In most herding and sporting breeds,
done a second time, the puppy tends to repeat what he did the
first, even if it is falling off the box backwards! Akita puppies
may jump off towards the tester once and to the side the second
time. They might jump off once and refuse a second time; jump
off to the side and explore their surroundings the first time,
and go right to the tester the second.
One of the characteristics we
consider "smart" in a breed is the ability to consistently
repeat a learned behavior. Dogs that stereotype quickly are easy
to train. A resistance to stereotypical behavior does not make
a dog dumb; it makes it more flexible. Akitas tend to try more
than one approach to any problem; just because they did it one
way first does not mean they will do it the same way next time.
For the obedience trainer, these
traits present a real challenge. You have to work harder to reinforce
correct responses and learn to shrug off those times when your
dog adds a new wrinkle.
Generalization
Another problem is the Akita's
slowness in generalizing from a specific learned behavior. For
instance, when you begin teaching the sit, your dog may be beside
you in the heel position. Then you teach him sit in front, then
sit when he is away from you. A German Shepherd will quickly
learn to sit anywhere because he generalizes well. He is able
to make the connection that the same action is called for regardless
of where he is spatially. He will seem to understand the concept
of "sit," so to speak.
Akitas, on the other hand, take
much longer to go from the specific to the general. Instead of
expecting the dog to grasp the concept, you may have to break
the exercise into many component parts and teach each as a separate
step and then, chain them together. Some Akitas seem to have
an "Aha!" experience and suddenly get the point, while
others never have a clue.
They may have more trouble with
some exercises than others. In discussing this subject with a
friend who is training an Akita in Open, she said she thought
it applied to the problem she had with teaching the quarter turn.
In this exercise, the dog and handler stand in a heel position
with the dog sitting. The handler then shifts her position, in
place, a quarter turn to the left. The dog must get up and reseat
itself in the proper heel position.
All the class Goldens learned
to scoot into position without ever really getting up, whie Teresa
was still trying to teach her dog that when Teresa moved, the
dog had to move too. Obviously, they need to try a different
training method that takes into account a slower ability to generalize.
Independence
Sooner or later, everyone runs
up against the Akita's independent steak. Hound independence
is expressed in passive resistance. The dog won't openly defy
you, he just won't cooperate. He may lag while heeling or move
a foot on the stand. If you're in the conformation ring, maybe
he continually moves while you are trying to set him up even
though he's not unbalanced or swings his rear out away from you
when you stop.
You can put a stop to this by
introducing some variety and perhaps some levity into your training
routine. Sometimes, passive resistance is the end result of boredom,
so shorter training sessions will help.
Northern-dog independence, however,
runs more to outright defiance if the dog is determined enough.
Again, all of us have seen this with Akitas. Has your dog ever
slipped out the door and headed off? He'll come home when he
is ready or when he's enticed by something more fun than cruising
the neighborhood.
I had one Akita who liked certain
crates. He didn't just escape from crates he didn't like, he
demolished them, just to make his point. I never could discern
what characteristics made an acceptable crate, so I have a varied
collection of broken ones, courtesy of Max. However, if he liked
a crate, he never made any attempt to leave it. One was so flimsy,
if he'd inhaled it would have broken apart, but he stayed in
it peaceful and content. This is Northern-dog independence--my
way or the highway!
Training Methods
The next question that arises
is "what kind of training should I do?" When I first
started, mumble, mumble, years ago, everyone used the
same basic methods for training. Over the ensuing years, learning
research has supplied additional tools for working with dogs.
Plenty of books on dog training are available, and most areas
have some sort of training classes available. To a certain extent,
how you train will depend on the methodology of your trainer.
The method I first learned has
now garnered the rather unappealing name "force training."
Here, you put the dog on a lead and choke collar (we didn't even
have pinch collars when I started) and gave a command. If he
did it, you gave him lots of praise. If he didn't, you gave him
a quick jerk with the leash to get him to do whatever you were
working on and as soon as he did it or was in position, gave
him lots of praise.
Back in the dark ages, no one
even considered training a dog until it was six months old. This,
of course, made the dog harder to train, both because he'd been
learning on his own all along and because he was that much bigger
than a puppy. So, maybe part of the "force" was because
the dog was just harder to work with.
Finally, some enlightened people,
Dr. Ian Dunbar among them, advocated working with puppies. The
age to start formal training then halved to three months. This
type of training goes by the more attractive terms of "lure"
or "food training." It is grounded in the surety that
puppies will do almost anything for a food treat or a favorite
toy.
Using natural actions, the puppy
is persuaded through use of the lure to perform. For instance,
if the lure is held slightly behind and above his head, he will
have to look up and sit to get it. Likewise, held between his
feet, he will tend to go down to get it. The lure, coupled with
a command and praise teach the dog. When the command and action
are firmly associated, food rewards are decreased and eventually
ceased.
Bill Bobrow one of our most
successful obedience trainers cautions that older dogs may not
work all that well for food rewards unless they are encouraged
to do so as puppies. This applies also to baiting dogs in the
conformation ring. He also points out that food rewards may not
be enough with Akitas and that sooner or later you will have
to resort to some type of physical correction.
His comments reminded me of
a young male I was working on the down-stay. As his hormones
have kicked in, he's become increasingly reluctant to down in
the presence of adult males. A few nights before at class, I
had given him a down command along with one of his favorite goodies.
He started to go down, taking the treat in his mouth. Then he
stopped, looked at the adult male next to us, spit out the food,
and sat up. There and then, I decided it was time for a different
training technique.
Much to my surprise, I found
an even newer technique which uses food too but couples it with
what psychologists call an event marker. The first people to
introduce this training method to the world of dogs came from
dolpin training at marine exhibitions. While they use whistles
with the sea mammals, with dogs most use a clicker (those toys
we used to call "crickets").
The seminal book for this training
method is Don't Shoot the Dog by Karen Pryor. In it, she discusses
the basic principles governing what is now commonly referred
to as "click training. While it shares many aspects of lure
training, it relys on the dog's figuring out what you want him
to do rather than your forcing him to do them. Thus, he becomes
an active participant in his own training. One of the reasons
I think this method is so successful with Akitas is that it challenges
them--no boredom here! Because of this participation on his part,
the dog isn't resentful or sullen because you are making him
do something. Instead, he's figuring out what to do which is
made easier for him because correct behaviors are marked with
a click at the instant it occurs. He keeps working because he
is given a reward which can be food, play, or verbal praise and
a pat.
Almost everything you'd like
to know about this training method can be found on the internet.
I've got several excellent sites linked on my web page. Vendors
at most shows carry video tapes and other equipment, and seminars
are held all over the country by Karen Pryor, Gary Wilkes and
other excellent trainers.
Akita trainers I've consulted
and my own experiences lead me to think that while clickers,
food rewards and lure training are effective tools when they
work, expecting them alone to carry you through a complete obedience
course may be unrealistic. Therefore, when you pick a trainer
look for someone who is willing to combine methods. Above all,
try to find someone who understands that not all dogs have the
same temperaments, abilities, or tendencies, someone who recognizes
that one training technique may not work all the time with every
dog and who has more than one to offer.
Unfortunately, not every area
has enough trainers for you to pick and choose, in which case,
you will have to get additional help. Through the dog training
books at vour local library, you have access to some of the finest
trainers in the world and a plethora of training methods. The
internet offers information on web pages as well as many e-mail
lists dealing with training. Don't ignore thesr resources.
Talk to other Akita people who
have trained their dogs in obedience. They've already been down
this road and can offer you constructive advice.
Untrainable Akitas?
With humor, understanding, and
persistence, you can train almost any Akita in basic obedience.
For every person who thinks that Akitas are not trainable, I'd
point to my house dog. She has never had an obedience lesson,
came to us at the age of three from life in a kennel run, and
moved seamlessly into our household. My kids and I talked about
this today and we can think of three unacceptable things she's
done in all that time. She stole a steak off the counter--once
and she's run out the door twice.
Like scores of other Akitas,
her training has been so effortless, that we can easily say,
she's had none. She's trained herself by observing our responses
to her actions and carefully fitting her behavior into an acceptable
mode with little or no formal instruction from us. Even though
she has no CD, she is a very trainable and well trained dog!
I think this is very typical of Akitas and one reason they are
so easy to live with in a house.
Fearful Akitas
Although Akitas are naturally
careful and cautious, few fall into the fearful category which
may be the one exception to trainability. Fearfulness may be
the result of an inherited temperament and/or severe and early
abuse.
Very fearful adults are very
hard to deal with. To train them, you must first gain their trust.
They become dependent on your judgement and rely on you for cues
about their environment. While they may be confident with you,
with someone else they may revert to their previous behavior
until that person also establishes a bond with the dog. A few
dogs may extend their trust to people generally, but most will
not.
STRANGE
NOISES
A dog that is not afraid of
noise is more pleasant to own. To some extent, noise shyness
is an inherited characteristic. Steadiness to shot is of primary
importance in the temperament of gun and guard dog breeds. If
you attend a Schutzhund or field trial, you'll find the dogs
impervious to the guns going off all around. They are also fairly
staunch in the face of all noise.
Historically, I suppose Akitas
have little reason to be unaffected by noise, and many seem unsettled
to some degree by loud noises. I had a female who hated the sound
of generators. Believe me, getting into a show site without passing
a generator can be difficult depending on the parking. If we
walked by one, I might just as well have turned around and gone
home as take her in the ring. Somehow, she seemed to think they
were mobile and any minute, one would make an appearance.
Most dogs aren't so neurotic,
but you never know what will happen. We've all seen dogs react
poorly to loudspeaker announcements, falling chairs, or other
unexpected sounds at a show. Years ago, while the groups were
going on at the dog show site on one side of the river, the city
set off fireworks on the other for some sort of celebration.
We spent hours trying to catch a Sheltie that had gotten away
from its handler. A multi-group winning dog, it was so traumatized
by the experience, it was never shown again.
Noise shyness is a trait you
can breed away from, although it is of considerably less importance
than many others. If you think you might have a problem, the
time to start working with your puppies is while they are in
the whelping box. Make sure they are in a noisy environment,
although it should not be at such a level it makes them unduly
nervous.
Play a radio on rap, hard rock,
and talk stations. I have a satellite dish and one of the channels
we get has nothing but war movies. My last few litters listened
to bombardments, machine guns, and bombs every night.I took two
of them out to a Schutzhund German Shepherd Specialty when they
were six-months old, I was very pleased by their response to
the guns fired off in the ring right in front of us. The male,
who was asleep, looked around, then curled back up and went back
to sleep. The female was unconcerned initially, but after about
ten shots, she turned around and looked at me for reassurance.
I continued talking to my friend and after a few seconds, my
puppy began playing with her toy. Her mother, on the other hand,
would have bolted out of there at the first shot, so I think
early exposure has helped.
Desensitizing puppies to noise
is also important if you live in an area with frequent thunderstorms.
Since these never go away, the dog's fear tends to escalate.
In the worst cases, the dogs engage in escape behavior which
means destruction of their confinement area. This may be a crate
or your windows and doors.
INDEPENDENCE
Everyone who has Akitas knows
that they are independent dogs. This is definitely an inherited
component of temperament and very strong in the breed. I don't
think this is something anyone breeds for. In some ways, Akita
would be more appealing if they were a little less independent,
but it is so intrinsic to the breed, it shapes many aspects of
their behavior. Without it, we'd have a totally different breed
without the reserve and dignity so typical the adult.
I've been around a lot of different
dog breeds, but Akitas are one of the only ones I'm sure could
be depended on to survive without people, barring encounters
with cars about which they seem to have no sense. They are unlikely
to do anything reckless or daring; rather, they consider what
they are doing and use their experiences to evaluate their actions.
In short, the Akita is a survivor, due in large part to his capacity
for independent action.
Therefore, leaving the dog outside
to fend for itself can make him a poor pet. Akitas need to be
around the people in the household to bond with them. Left to
their own devices, Akitas will make their own world and rules
for living in it.
Mutual respect is the key to
working with Akitas. You must be the alpha person, but even so,
sooner or later, you'll run up against their independent nature.
Pick your battles carefully. If it doesn't really matter, let
the dog have his way. He'll be easier to deal with later when
something needs to be done your way.
INHIBITION
Akitas are typically inhibited
as opposed to excitable, a set of inherited characteristics that
mark the dog's response to stress. His inhibited nature is responsible
for the laid-back attitude that makes the Akita a pleasure to
have in the house.
It is obvious in puppies as
they work through the PAT. They tend to get calmer and less responsive.
Sometimes, inhibited puppies get so stressed out, they fall asleep.
With excitable breeds, puppies end up running about the room,
jumping on the tester, and sometimes, even barking and whining.
When you start a new training
exercise with your dog, whether it's heeling in obedience or
stacking for conformation, your dog will demonstrate signs of
inhibition. He may work slowly, show little animation, and/or
seem very tired. He may yawn repeatedly, which is a sign of stress.
In the worst cases, the very
inhibited dog demonstrates a sort of waxy catatonia. The best
example of this is the puppy at its first match that allows you
to set it up and then stays like a little statue without a lick
of training. From one show to the next, it becomes more like
the other puppies, moving about and demonstrating a puppy's typical
short attention span.
As the dog gains confidence
through exposure, it is less stressed, so it is less inhibited.
The more puppies are exposed to manageable stress, the less inhibited
their response will be. So, don't get discouraged initially by
your dog's response to new situations. He will become more active
and enthusiastic when he gets used to them. If you make them
more stressful by being disapproving of his hesitancy, you will
only make worse. Just go on positively, and your dog's performance
will improve.
PROTECTIVE
Many people depend on their
Akitas for personal protection. Until very recently, I had both
German Shepherds and Akitas, and I have found many differences
in how they respond to strangers in the house and outside the
yard. First, the Shepherds (and the other guard-type dogs, such
as Rottweilers and Dobermans) are much better area guards, especially
if the owner is in a situation where he needs or wants outsiders
to be aware that dogs are on the premises. Why? The other breeds
bark more. Like the old joke, that's the good and the bad news.
I love being able to have dogs
without offending my neighbors. All twelve of my dogs bark less
than the one dog that lives next door. For eleven years, two
joggers came past our house every morning, and for eleven years,
my German Shepherd barked at them while the Akitas just watched,
a much more sensible response.
However, now that I have only
Akitas, our yardmen have no trouble coming in the backyard so
long as my children are not outside. The Shepherds wouldn't let
anyone inside the fence, no matter how many times a week they
showed up. We have back-door garbage pickup, which means the
garbage men have to come inside the gates. Some of my Akitas
will allow them in and station themselves in front of the door,
watching. Of course, the Shepherds wouldn't let them in at all.
Do I think anyone could harm
my daughters with an Akita present? Definitely not! They are
less concerned with me and even less with my husband, probably
because we are the dominant people. Maybe they figure we can
look out for ourselves most of the time. I'm fairly confident
that their attitude would change if they sensed we were frightened
or suspicious ourselves.
Guarding is a primary duty of
the European guard dogs commonly seen in Schutzhund work--Rottweilers,
Shepherds, and Bouviers. The Akita's basic temperament, shaped
for different purposes, gives it a different approach to life.
Protectiveness is definitely there but takes a backseat to other
facets of the dog's personality.
If our Akita's bark in the night,
we know they have a good reason. They know people don't skulk
around after dark. On the other hand, if Akitas were great protection
dogs, they'd be working in police departments everywhere, and
some of us would be in Schutzhund trials. I remember an interview
with a policeman who trained his Akita for K-9 work. He said
the dog was a good worker but not a breed he would select again
for that particular job.
TOLERANT
OF OTHER DOGS
Low on the list, but still there
is tolerance of other dogs. To some extent, all northern dog
are scrappy. Akitas have the dubious distinction of being one
of the only ones actually used for dog-fighting.
Undoubtedly, Japanese breeders
selected for the more aggressive dogs throughout the years the
breed was used for fighting, but I'm sure their choice to use
the Akita in the first place had much to do with their innate
desire to scrap with other dogs. This tendency made them a good
choice for the sport of dog- fighting. Breeding programs over
the year increased this tendency and kept it in the breed.
Historical data tell us that
the native dogs of the Dewa area were also crossed with European
dogs to increase their size and, therefore, their fighting ability.
These were probably Great Danes (also known as Deutsche Dogges)
which were brought to the area by German mining engineers.
Was this version of the Akita
a ferocious pit dog? They certainly were pitted against similar
dogs. However, Tatsuo Kimura tells me that one of the reasons
the Akita breeders shifted directions early in this century was
because of a fight between an Akita fighting champion and a Tosa
Fighting Dog, a breed resulting from crosses of the Japanese
native Tosa Inu with various European imports. Looking at them
today, I would guess the imports must have included at least
the English Mastiff and probably some other Molossan-type dogs.
Anyway, the Akita barely escaped with its life. Its fanciers
realized that continuing to pit them with dogs like the Tosa
might be the death-knell of the breed. With the rising tide of
nationalism in Japan, they began to value the Akita Inu as a
native Japanese breed, for itself rather than for what it could
do in a dog fight. Instead of crosses aimed at fighting ability,
they began to look for hunting-type dogs to restore the breed
to its original type.
If you can enhance a trait by
selective breeding, of course, you can also minimize it. Certainly,
Akitas today seem less dog-aggressive generally than they were
twenty years ago. This alteration is due in part to selection
for less aggressive dogs and in part to better training techniques
such as early socialization of puppies, continued exposure of
adult dogs to strange dogs, and obedience training of young dogs.
I know several people who keep
same-sex Akitas together and others that have several mixed-sex
ones that run together with no trouble. Sometimes, a pack works
because a dominant dog keeps everyone in line, but maybe these
Akitas are just that much less dog-aggressive. I've never been
daring enough to put my older bitches together, although I suspect
a few of them would get along. One, though, can run with any
male but cannot be put loose with a female without fighting.
She's been dog-aggressive since puppyhood, and I'm sure had she
been put in a pack situation, she'd have inflicted a lot of damage
on other bitches.
Putting dogs in a situation
where they can fence-fight builds up a lot of unresolved aggression.
It starts as a game and then escalates to serious dislike. To
minimize this, I have board fencing between my runs. It is covered
on both sides with chain- link to keep it from being eaten. The
dogs really don't see each other, and rarely ever bark at dogs
on the other sides. Given a chance, though, they will fence-fight
through the gates or the outside chain-link.
According to the standard, an
Akita may be aggressive towards other dogs; however, it doesn't
say that they have to be so. In today's litigious society, the
consequences of an attack that damages someone else's dog can
be severe indeed. Also, many people do not understand that a
dog that is aggressive towards another dog is not necessarily
aggressive to people. Looking at a snarling, bristling Akita
doesn't inspire a lot of confidence about the breed.
If you want to compete with
an Akita, regardless of the venue, you must have a dog that can
be trusted around other dogs. A dog that can't be trusted to
leave other animals alone on neutral ground is a real liability.
In obedience and agility, the dog works off-leash, so he has
to be reliable. At a dog show, he must negotiate crowded aisles
and stand close together in crowded rings.
The demands of such activities
have shaped our selection for less dog-aggression in our Akitas,
and I think this is perfectly acceptable and somewhat desireable.
Nonetheless, you should remember that the most benign Akita can
conceive a sudden and violent dislike for another Akita. In that
case, you'll have to avoid that dog like the plague because if
your's has a chance, he'll get in a fight. That may be only dog
that ever inspires such antipathy, but both dogs will remember
each other and renew hostilities any time they can. It's part
of what makes an Akita an Akita!
LOYALTY
After I started this series,
I realized that I had left loyalty off my list of temperament
components. This is a hallmark of Akita character, and the only
excuse I can offer for overlooking it is that it so much an intrinsic
part of Akita nature that we take it for granted.
I don't think I've ever been
around an Akita didn't have it. Is it an inherited trait? Since
some breeds to not have a lot of personal loyalty to any one
person or group, I suspect it is, and it is vital that we keep
it in the breed.
I think their sense of loyalty
makes Akitas accepting of all the household inhabitants, including
cats, kids, other adults, and livestock. It allows them to form
firm friendships with other people--your friends, trainers, handlers,
neighbors--and to never forget them. Akitas I raised and sold
as puppies have greeted me enthusiastically years later.
To some extent, their sense
of loyalty is the fount from which other traits arise. Without
it, Akitas would not be protective of their friends. Given their
sense of independence, the Akita's working ability probably finds
its roots in loyalty.
Can you imagine an Akita that
is not loyal to its family and friends? I can't; it is such a
pervasive part of the breed that we just accept its presence.
Losing it would make a profoundly different dog.
Conclusion
I hope this article has made
you think about what you want in a dog and how to go about getting
it. I'm sure you can think of things I've left out or with which
you disagree, and I'd like to hear from you in that regard. Again,
you can call me (713/465-9729), write me (726 E. Creekside, Houston,
TX 77024), or e-mail
me.
(Permission to reprint is
granted by the author provided such reprint is for information
purposes only and is not conveyed for any commercial consideration
and further that it is credited to the author, Sherry E. Wallis.)
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