Anika is my third Weimaraner. After having had two prior Weims, I thought I knew how to handle them. Ha! Ha! Joke's on me!
We acquired her when she was eight months old. My prior Weim, Coco, was about 18 months old when she came to live with us. Those months make a difference. Anika always had that extra reserve of energy. Nothing wore her out. She is exceptionally suited to be the hunting dog she was bred to be. She is extremely focused on the various squirrels, cats, birds, and flying insects that enter our yard. However, my husband and I do not hunt nor do we have any interest in beginning. So our hunting dogs are pets.
Having been broken in with Coco, I thought I knew what to expect. And although Anika resembles Coco in many ways (her sire is Coco's brother), I didn't realize what a challenge she would be the first couple of years that we had her. Those first two years of Weimaranerdom are crazy! But as time went on and I researched and learned more about her behavior, I realized I had a reactive dog on my hands.
Out walking in our neighborhood, if we walked past another dog or person, she would pull on the leash, jump, bark, and bite the leash. If I was walking her with Steffi, my calm 11-year-old Weim, she would bite her and they would both pull and bark. It became not only a spectacle, but a danger since they are very strong, and once pulled my off my feet, and Anika once bit my arm in her frenzy. I had to do something other than never take her for walks.
I bought Patricia McConnell's book, Feisty Fido: Help for the Leash-Reactive Dog. Although the book was helpful, I really needed personal, one-on-one help from a trainer. If you've never had a leash-reactive dog, you don't realize how difficult it is the take a simple walk around the neighborhood. When walking Anika, I had to constantly be on the lookout for anything that might raise her threshold into the red zone. Nothing was relaxing for me or for her.
With the help of Cheryl Flemming of
For the Love of Dogs, LLC, I am now able to walk her! Cheryl was recommended by my riding buddy, Betsy Adams. What a godsend Cheryl has been! We started with an at-home session where Cheryl could observe our interactions and find out what I wanted help with.
Cheryl is an advocate and practitioner of clicker training. She quickly had me clicking and rewarding Anika for walking by my side and watching me. Once we had that behavior established, outside we went on a walk. It's much more difficult out where there are more distractions, but we worked and worked on it under Cheryl's watchful eye.
After four or five at-home sessions with Cheryl and practicing on my own with Anika for several months, I've been able to manage her anxiety on our walks by watching her behavior and always having some high-value treats along to reward her. Our walks are never really totally relaxing, but they are so much better than they used to be and I now have the tools I need to help reduce her anxiety and boost her confidence.
I always bring a bag of treats with me for her and just in case I need to throw treats at a dog who's not on a leash to distract the dog from us (don't get me started on that!). Plus, I no longer walk the two dogs together.
Now when I walk Anika, I can observe her and when I see the signs of high anxiety, I stop her, have her sit and give her a few treats to calm her. Most of the time she turns back to me when she feels anxious and waits for her praise. Now my job is to fade her from all the treats, but we are not there yet!