We see it often in behaviour such as, growling when
eating as the handler approaches.
Not exact matches
Delta states that service and support animals are highly - trained working animals and they will only refuse transportation of the animal if it engages in disruptive behavior such
as: growling, jumping on passengers, relieving itself in the gate area or cabin, barking excessively not in response to
handler's needs or distress, or
eating off seatback tray tables.
a.) a considerable amount of exercise, including the use of treadmills and backpacks,
as a way of relaxing dogs to prepare them for counter-conditioning exercises; b.) packs of dogs to rehabilitate unstable, fearful or aggressive dogs; c.) Leashes and chain collars to block jumping, whining, possessiveness, biting, aggressiveness, excessive barking, mounting, fighting, active dominance challenges; d.) Redirection to get dogs doing alternative behaviors in play areas, obstacle courses, a pool, a feeding area, a sleeping area, and an
eating / drinking area; e.) calming techniques using hand feeding; f.) a limited amount of obedience training, such
as teaching the dogs to heel on a loose lead at the
handler's side; g.) a «claw» technique, his own version of the «alpha rollover», and a pursuit technique to deal with dogs that don't show submission to other dogs or people; h.) «flooding» for phobias; i.) «calm / assertive»
handler techniques; j.) touch and sound techniques to interrupt, correct and / or redirect behaviors; k.) a variety of traditional manners rules, which are implemented with the «no free lunch» type of approach; l.) a variety of games and other «mental challenges»; m.) human intervention; and n.) electric collars (not mentioned,
as I recall, in the book)
a.) a considerable amount of exercise, including the use of treadmills and backpacks,
as a way of relaxing dogs to prepare them for counter-conditioning exercises b.) packs of dogs to rehabilitate unstable, fearful or aggressive dogs; c.) Leashes and chain collars to block jumping, whining, possessiveness, biting, aggressiveness, excessive barking, mounting, fighting, active dominance challenges; d.) Redirection to get dogs doing alternative behaviors in play areas, obstacle courses, a pool, a feeding area, a sleeping area, and an
eating / drinking area; e.) calming techniques using hand feeding; f.) a limited amount of obedience training, such
as teaching the dogs to heel on a loose lead at the
handler's side; g.) a «claw» technique, his own version of the «alpha rollover», and a pursuit technique to deal with dogs that don't show submission to other dogs or people; h.) «flooding» for phobias; i.) «calm / assertive»
handler techniques; j.) touch and sound techniques to interrupt, correct and / or redirect behaviors; k.) a variety of traditional manners rules, which are implemented with the «no free lunch» type of approach; l.) a variety of games and other «mental challenges»; m.) human intervention; and n.) electric collars (usually not mentioned in their marketing materials or websites)