
Some of you will remember Oban. He's two and a half now and a lovely, lovely boy. BUT ........ I think he is beginning to get mean with other intact boys. Now, here in Canada intact boys are not the norm but more and more folks are reading the literature and not neutering. Because intact boys are not the norm I don't feel I can get good advice from my North American counterparts. So here I am, asking you, what do you do to control this? Work with this?
Some history. Oban is a self confident boy and was the terror of his littermates. I worked really hard at socializing him with off leash dogs and he has something of a fan club at a place we go.
Two weeks ago a neighbours GR full out attacked him as the OH and Oban walked back home, on leash. Full out body slam, no posturing before attack. Oban fought back willingly, he is no pushover. The GR later tried to attack another neighbours black Lab girl too, but the owner tackled him and saved the girl who is old.
A few days after the attack we had an obedience class (open trial prep but we are about to try our first novice) he dashed across the room to investigate the 20 month old intact boy MinPin. There was not even a skirmish, just vigorous sniffing.
The next week the MinPin's older spayed house mate was apparently in the line of fire from the intact boy MinPin's pee. She got it on her nose. We know that, the MinPin owner told us. Ms. MinPin's best friend in the whole world, a big intact Doberman boy, growled at her like he thought she was the boy, not the girl. Later the Dobe advanced menacingly on the boy MinPin who was in his crate and behind a low fence. This is highly unusual for the Dobe who is not aggressive and went out of his way to avoid both Oban and the boy MinPin after their mild scrap the week before. Oban did his sit and down stays beside Ms. MinPin. About 10 minutes later he broke from me and charged her across the room. Again there was no fight but they were both hard to catch as Ms. MinPin takes no guff from rude dogs.
The owners in class are worried about Oban and me too. I am the least experieced person in the room. They have all had multiple dogs and trialed them. Our trainer does not seem to be as concerned as they are but I am being asked again if I am going to neuter. Next class the other owners have asked that Oban stay on leash and our trainer says everybody is going to stay on leash. There is a trial in one week that some of us are preparing for so this will be a set back.
More info. While this will be the first dog I have obedience trialed it is not the goal of my life. What I want to do the most with my dog is have him off leash while I hike, bike, run, ski, snowshoe. It will still be a problem if I meet another off leash intact male. Oban was rude to two young intact males recently but they were both on leash in a place where most of us are off. His recall is back to excellent and he left them when I called him. I posted about his recall and his retrieving nearly a year ago and with lots of work, luck and I think maturity we are making good progress. Whistles are great. :)
Neuter is the first thing suggested but my readings say it is not guaranteed to help this budding problem of aggression and one reading says it is more of a problem in the neuter population than it is in the intact. Suprelorin is not available here.
If you made it to the end, thanks for reading. Any thoughts, opinions, ideas, suggestions welcome.