Skip to content

Can you keep them from pulling?

Behavioral Issues
  • My basenji pulls very often on his leash and I'm afraid he'll hurt him self. I live in a big city and there are way to many distractions for my B to stay focused.

    Is it possible to have them walk at your pace and at your side or is he going to need a chest harness?

  • You can teach them to walk on a loose leash. I have posted a couple of link before to a couple of different approaches. For walks where you can not focus on training you should use an Easy Walk Harness, Sensation Harness, or Gentle Leader that will keep him from practicing the pulling while you work on loose leash walking.

    Here are some links for loose leash walking

    http://www.shirleychong.com/keepers/LLW/index.html

    Leash starts at Level 2 of the Levels book
    http://www.dragonflyllama.com/%20DOGS/%20Dog1/levels.html

  • You need to learn how to properly use a choke chain for training - the heel position. The key is correction and release rather than getting into a tugging match. A chest harness fosters pulling as well.

    One training tip is what I call "change direction". Handlers use it when they pick up a new dog to show and have to get it ready to go in the ring with little notice. You have the dog on your left - with a properly applied chain collar. walk forward and if the dog and then with little warning make a turn and change direction - and again and again. never give your dog more lead and never take in less - when you change direction - they get pulled and soon learn that staying with you is the path of least resistance.

    Next a basic command like sit - and when there is something on your walk that they see and is distracting or interesting - put in a sit and when they attend to you again - continue forward.

    You do really need a training class to make sure you get the hang of the chain collar.

    FYI - to reference your comments on another thread - I've bred, raised and showed basenjis since 1984 - and this is the kind of information that people that I've placed a puppy with can count on getting from me - forever. This is what sets the reputable breeder apart.

  • Thanks for the info :)

  • Danny we just bought a Gentle Leader today. Our Basenji Roo does pretty well with me except for times when he sees new people or young kids. I have socialized him so much he just wants to see and greet everyone. So at those times he will attempt to pull and walk on his hind legs until he gets close or the people pass by. Miranda just put the gentle leader on him and took him down the street. Miranda's first words for the Gentle Leader were "Amazing, who would have guessed it would work that well!!"

    Of course we strongly suggest that anyone that decides to use the gentle leader throughly read the directions that comes with it and also watch the CD so you fit the collar properly(it does fit different than other collars), and to understand how you use it because old traditional correction techniques will not work.

    Jason and Miranda

  • For those that are a bit more interested in the Gentle Leader - it was designed by a long time trainer in MN Ruth Foster with a vet from the University of MN. Here is the story for some background that might interest you.

    http://www.inventionatplay.org/inventors_fos.html

  • Training slip collars (choke chains) work well if placed on the neck right-side-up and used for short corrections. If placed upside down and/or used to the point of choking you could cause physical damage to your dog.

    Many pet owners don't even realize there is a right way and a wrong way of putting these on their dog.

  • @dmcarty:

    For those that are a bit more interested in the Gentle Leader - it was designed by a long time trainer in MN Ruth Foster with a vet from the University of MN. Here is the story for some background that might interest you.

    http://www.inventionatplay.org/inventors_fos.html

    Thanks for posting the link Diane. Even though we use Martingale collars we have always been concerned that there could be damage to the dogs trachea if they pulled hard enough or decided to lunge.

    We can see the Gentle Leader assisting our Basenji to teach himself without causing him undue stress or the possibility of him harming himself as he learns.

    Jason and Miranda

Suggested Topics

  • Why does she keep weeing inside??

    Behavioral Issues
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    1k Views
    No one has replied
  • Basenjis that can't stand other basenjis

    Behavioral Issues
    7
    0 Votes
    7 Posts
    3k Views
    wizardW
    My previous males never had an opportunity to meet other basenjis (outside their breeder kennel) so don't know if the experience with my current female is "typical" or not. The first time she encountered another, it was a tri-color older female that was a real bitch and instantly got aggressive (now whenever they see each other its "hackles up"). The first time I took her to a lure coursing event, mine was friendly enough until a little blind female came up and bit her. The second time I took her to a LGRA event, a lady came up behind us (while mine was trying to potty) with her tricolor female and her dog attacked mine. So now hackles go up any time another female comes within shouting distance.
  • Can Basenjis bark?

    Behavioral Issues
    19
    0 Votes
    19 Posts
    14k Views
    D
    Is he in the B Pedigree Database? I am curious about his pedigree. Jennifer
  • 0 Votes
    49 Posts
    20k Views
    WooflessW
    I'm late to this thread, but I figured I'd chime in about the shy/abused rescue Basenji. Our Tana has been with us for just over 2 years. She was a puppymill breeding female. At the beginning, she was very very skittish, timid & anxious. She went from her foster home- a big place where she could hide from anything….to our semi truck. Small space, no hidey-holes. No choice but to learn to accept us. I left her alone for the first couple of weeks- no unnecessary advances, just feeding & walks, calm voices....no coddling, no babying. Just being in each other's presence. I let HER get used to me, see the routine, so she'd learn what we were all about. Despite her shyness, from day 1 she did always sleep tucked under my arm. She'd lay there half-crouched, licking the sheets (is that like a thumb-sucking behavior?) until she fell asleep. Her progress was gradual. By two months she seemed to be relaxed around me. By four months, she figured out she could engage me in PLAY...which was clearly a great revelation for her....I could just see the joy in her, for the first time, when she play-bowed and slapped at me and I responded playfully. Before that, she'd only engaged Jibini in play. That may have been the first time she ever initiated play with a human. By 6-8 months, she began to tolerate Fred, began to show curiosity with strangers & new situations. By one year, she was almost entirely a different dog. I don't know if her progress was normal or unusually fast- but I think being a trucker dog, getting SO MUCH constant socialization, really helped her figure things out quickly. Over the last year, she has truly come full circle, finally. She still refused to do more than "tolerate" Fred for the longest time....He felt kind of bad, thinking Tana hated him. She did kind of act like he was contagious....she wanted to be as far from him as physically possible. But when we adopted Chloe, suddenly Tana had COMPETITION for attention! And since Chloe absolutely adores the very earth Fred walks on, suddenly Tana became Fred's best friend too!! It is so funny to see this little dog who used to regard Fred like a fart in a car....suddenly scramble to be the first one to cuddle up in his arms so he won't be able to pet Chloe. She is almost FAWNING over him. It's great. That, and she has FINALLY accepted crating. Until this past October, really, she's been the type to shred, whine and poop in her crate- she became a basket case. I know it's not widely reccomended, but after 2 years together in a semi truck, I was fairly sure Jibini & Tana could be crated in an extra-large crate without trouble. So I started crating them together....for no more than 2-3 hours at a time. So far, so good...and it has helped Tana's anxiety immensely. I notice now, when it's time for me to go to work, Tana will actually let me come pick her up so I can bring her to the crate. Used to be, I'd have to spend 10 minutes trying to catch her, if she knew she was going in the crate. I've also tried crating her alone a few times, and as if by miracle, nothing is shredded or soiled. I am amazed by how far she's come....and now that she has fully realized her potential, I am delighted by what a wonderful, sweet dog she is. She is absolutely perfect. I think, given enough time, most Basenjis will make a good deal of progress. Tana was young when she was sold from the puppymill- only 1.5 years old (and already a mother). Maybe her youth helped her resiliency a little bit. But either way, adopting Tana and helping her overcome her fears has been a very rewarding experience :)
  • Pulls like a team of slead dogs

    Behavioral Issues
    10
    0 Votes
    10 Posts
    3k Views
    Robin_n_JackR
    I had the same problem with the easy walk harness… Don't worry about the spelling....it just gave me a REALLY humorous image...
  • Can I trust him?

    Behavioral Issues
    23
    0 Votes
    23 Posts
    10k Views
    JazzysMomJ
    Originally Posted by Vanessa626 If you introduce your Basenji to water early on in pup hood is it possible >>for them to not have a problem with rain or even be able to enjoy >>swimming?? We brought Jazzy home in March, in Washington. Believe me, she was introduced to rain and plenty of it! LOL She HATES rain, HATES her bath, and I don't see her ever jumping into a lake to go for a swim. I still have to go outside with her when it's rainy and MAKE her leave the covered porch to go potty. When she was younger, we'd both get soaked just with me chasing her back off the porch a million times before she'd finally give up and go potty! LOL She'd pretend to start out to the yard, then loop around and make a dash for the porch. Now, She'll go out to poo, and zip right back. For peeing, she uses my husband's covered boat shed, which is just off the covered porch. I thought that'd bug him, but since it's just pee he tolerates it. She never did try to poo there. That goes back to that pooing far from home thing. She simply won't do that too near the house.