Dog Communication: Are You Listening? Part 3
Do you have the ability to understand what it is your dog is
saying? Learning how these animals communicate is not only
beneficial to proper training, it also helps tighten the bond
between man's best friend and his owner.
In addition to using his barking, tail wagging, and body
movements, dogs can also relay messages by the language of ear
positions. The frightened dog tells of his submissive attitude
to man by flattening his ears as well as lowering himself on
haunches.
Also, in the last step in the sequence of aggression just
before attack, the dog folds his ears close to his head and
bares his teeth. But in the first step of aggressive movement,
the dog picks up his ears to a vertical position.
Even the dog with hanging ears will pull the base of his
ears forward, which makes the rest of his ears stand forward
and outward. This upright position tells his human handler that
there is every reason to be alert or on guard.
During World War II, the marines of M Company of the Second
Raider Battalion laid their lives on the line in their
dependence on the ability of their dogs to communicate to them
what was ahead. While he was in the thick of battle, a Doberman
named Andy had advanced from the shore to the jungle on
Bougainville Island.
Andy liked to work off his leash. The dog was about ten
yards ahead of the men when he froze and alerted his ears. The
soldiers knew that those stiffened ears meant that there was a
Japanese sniper just ahead. The scout leader sent two riflemen
ahead, and they sprayed a mangrove tree with bullets. The
sniper fell out. That same day Andy silently alerted his
handler to snipers on two other occasions.
Now you might not have your own dog trained to such an elite
degree, but you don't have to in order to know how well your
dog supplements his silent body language with his vocal
communication. The vocal vocabulary has numerous and varied
forms – your dog whimpers, whines, signs, grunts, hums, coons,
howls, squeals, growls, and barks.
Your dog can vary his barking enough to communicate with
you. Almost subconsciously, you have no doubt learned to
understand the nuances of your pet's barking. These minute
differences may be in the tone, the frequency, the rhythm
and the level of loudness. Your pet may bark to show his
excitement, his pleasure, his sense of fear, and the need for
your attention.
And your dog, by his tail-wagging, his licking, nosing,
barking, howling and his many clever individual expressions,
talks to you. Your pet tells you how much he wants to be your
protector, your companion and your best friend. Like dogs
throughout the ages, your dog has become your friend by his
uncanny ability to communicate.
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