HELP! Kipawa nipped twice in 3 days


  • @sonnyboy:

    Fran please rule out anything medical before you chalk it all up to a behavioral problem….The 1st indication I ever had that there was something wrong with Sonny was when he started nipping at my nephew..who up until then he had done nothing but love from the minute he was born. After numerous vet visits and a full thyroid panel we were still so confused why my loving boy suddenly was behaving this way...little did I know until this past winter Sonny had been slowly loosing his vision..and looking back on it the sudden movements of my nephew when he started walking at a year old were spooking Sonny because he couldn't always see him.....Not that in anyway do I think this is related to Kipawa's problem.....but just stressing the need to rule out all the medical possibilities...wishing you the best and hoping for some answers for you!

    I definitely will do a full medical check up on him, including his eyes. I will talk to Therese - if I remember correctly he has minor PPM in one eye. I can get my vet to arrange an eye check up for Kipawa.

    Today I visited a friend and I mentioned what happened. She could tell I was concerned and she reminded me that I will have Kipawa's breeders and numerous basenji people to speak with this weekend.


  • hi Sharron,

    I will have time this weekend to discuss this with Therese and Kevin in person. And they will have a chance to see what his behavior is like and how we work together. I plan on having Kipawa until his last days on the face of this earth. He is really a very sweet dog. I have never given up on a pet and I never will.

    We do use baby gates and I will get one more for my the bathroom. And tonight I will keep Kipawa in the living room/with me from 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. while Darrel's evening care worker is here. We usually take our last walk of the day around 9:30 p.m, so that gets us out of the house right up until she leaves.


  • I'm glad that article was helpful. It's easy to get lax about rules and sometimes you need to re-read somethings and go "Oh, yea, I should be doing that." Yep, I'm sort of at that point myself.

    I'm also happy to read that your breeders will be able to observe him first hand. Diagnosing over the internet can be a little dicey just b/c we're NOT there. Someone not as emotionally involved with the expertise to offer some good suggestions is invaluable.

    One more thing, I would be sure that if K is with you, to make sure you're not in the same room with your husband AND caregivers. (I have no idea what the routine is) I almost mentioned you should teather him OR crate him, but upon reflection, I wasn't sure that would make K more inclined to guard/protect YOU and that's why I said crate him. So, please keep that in mind and don't accidently put him in the postition where he might feel like he needs to take things into his own paws.

    And most importantly, Fran, you are a GOOD dog mom. Try not to panic and get too worked up about this. It is that time of the year for girl AND boy basenjis.


  • I was just thinking that exact thing, Kim..it is that time of year…..I agree with all of the above...and don't panic Fran 🙂


  • @Kipawa:

    hi folks,
    The oddity is that he LOVES the care worker that got nipped today. She gives him massages in the morning, sings to him and she loves to pet him while she works. He also is very affectionate with him.

    Not so very odd that he would nip the person he "loves", who showers him with such daily (and free) affection, while he does not (I assume) nip you or your husband who makes him work for his affection via the Nothing in Life Is Free protocol.

    If the daily workers are the same workers who will be caring for your husband long term, they need to be exercising the same NILIF protocol that you both follow. He needs to be reminded he is not the top banana who gets daily massages, a personal aria and constant petting while they are working. All with supervision of course until such time he realizes they (caretakers) are at the high end of the pack along with you and your husband and that you all are constistent in how he is treated.

    Good luck.


  • CongaMama could be onto something there, might be asserting his dominance to his "slaves" - who knows 🙂
    hope you all can work something out 🙂 i know you can.


  • @Kipawa:

    Thank you so much for an excellent article.We practice NILIF consistently.

    k9deb is a friend of mine and simply wonderful. Glad to give you her email if you want to chat with her about any questions.

    I would suggest, on top of the other suggestions, that you make the kitchen totally, absolutely completely off limits. When I do NILIF, anything they guard is GONE, including food bowls. (Yeah means I have to feed by hand til they GET it). I also would not stress–- it's that time of year, he's recently neutered, and he's entering that stage. It concerns me he broke skin, but then they have razor blades in their tiny little mouths.

    I do want to say--- whew. So often you read posts and you know the owner is clueless and the situation only going to get worse. People on this board, mostly, are such good dog owners. They'll go the mile. I see a post and I know the person is here to fix it, get help, and things will be okay. Theresa was as lucky to find you for Kipewa as you were to find her. 🙂


  • Just a quick note Fran, PPM would have no bearing on his eye sight. Even heavy PPM (which my OJ had) never caused any vision problems and he was 17+ when he passed


  • My Buddy has some PPM too and his eye sight is excellent. He can see a crumb on the carpet!:)


  • You guys are the best! I am drinking in all of the comments and totally appreciate them.

    Sharron - Kipawa will be 1 on September 25. So he really is still a little whippersnapper.

    Agilebasenji and Andrea - I wasn't thinking that at his age he would be so clued into the fact that it is 'THAT time of the year". I think it will be interesting to see how he interacts with other basenjis this weekend. I'd be lying if I told you that I wasn't a little worried. He has only growled quietly when coming into contact with other intact males. This seems to be on the downswing. Two days ago he acted very submissively with an intact male - he rolled onto his back while the other dog stood over him.

    CongoMama - yes! We all have to get on the same page, because the care workers are going to be around for the rest of Kipawa's life. One of the care workers does not like dogs. She is ambivalent towards Kipawa, but I do have to ask her to ignore him calmly. She is quite a hyper person. For her, I will have to tell her that she can give him commands like "door" or "off" or "sit", but she needs to do it without freaking out. The other lady LOVES Kipawa. She is the singer, massager, dance partner for Kipawa. She is also much easier to talk to than the lady that comes in the evenings. I will tell her that she can give Kipawa love and attention and massages, but that he must sit for her, stay in that position and THEN give him bits of love. She really pampers him, and I think you are right on when you are saying that Kipawa does not view them higher than him in the pack. Kipawa needs to go back to earning her attention.

    Debra - I love getting all the info I can get, so yes, if you could give me your friend's email, that would be lovely. I see how it would be good to block off the kitchen, but it is not feasible, as my husband has to be able to get into the kitchen and he would not be able to open and close a gate (he has limited hand function). However, when I am preparing dinner, I can put Kipawa in his crate. I don't like the idea of putting him outside - it seems like a punishment to me? Putting him in the cage would show him I am allowing him to have that space until food is cooked and eaten.

    Pat and Dan - thanks for the info on PPM. I'm glad this would not be a problem. Do you think it is still valuable to get an eye exam?

    This weekend will be a fun one for Kipawa and I. It will also be the time that he will be totally out of his home environment. Even the mode of transportation will be different (I rented an SUV). And he has never been in a hotel yet. And the crate will be different, as the one we have for the house is too big for the SUV. I think he will be overly clingy to me, but I won't baby him. If he needs reassurance I will do that, but he will have to give me something first, for example, sit or stay. I don't want to come back with a bigger problem! 🙂

    Again, big thanks to all of you and I will let you know how the weekend goes when we get back. And yes, we will have pictures!!


  • And just as an another perspective…I instruct all visitors to our house to ignore the dogs...because although the human may LOVE dogs, or be great with dogs, or whatever, they are still strangers to my dogs. And my dogs (or any dog) may not appreciate a stranger singing to them, or massaging them, or whatever. I understand that the home health care staff is different than strangers, per se...but still...the dog may wish to have some boundaries with non-family humans. That being said, it is unacceptable for the dog to show his displeasure about strangers,or their behaviors by biting them 😉


  • Never hurts to have eye exams, but since he had one only a few months ago, I would not do it until it has been at least a year

    Give hugs to Kevin and Therese from me and the girls!


  • Cory my boy who crossed the bridge this year, was always untrustworthy around any male that came into our home. While the kids were young, and we had herds of young males running in and out, Cory wore a soft muzzle, all their friends were told to just ignor him, not even look at him. Cory also would not stay in any type of crate, ate out of all of them. So he was left loose while we were not home. He did fine with this. He was Funny his favorite dog sitters were both female, a mom and her daughter. The one time their son attempted to dog sit, cory tore his jeans. As he go older he was more trustworthy, but we never completely trusted him with anyone outside our immediate family. But he was a show dog, and at shows he was a perfect gentleman, so who knows why this breed does what it does. But I do agree you need to get a solution fast, and get the med checks done first is my advice.


  • @Quercus:

    And just as an another perspective…I instruct all visitors to our house to ignore the dogs...because although the human may LOVE dogs, or be great with dogs, or whatever, they are still strangers to my dogs. And my dogs (or any dog) may not appreciate a stranger singing to them, or massaging them, or whatever. I understand that the home health care staff is different than strangers, per se...but still...the dog may wish to have some boundaries with non-family humans. That being said, it is unacceptable for the dog to show his displeasure about strangers,or their behaviors by biting them 😉

    +1 to this - I was thinking the same thing that perhaps he wanted his space, but also agree that biting isn't acceptable. I am adamant that visitors to my house ignore the dogs (not even look at the dogs). If I have people come over that I know or suspect won't ignore the dogs, the dogs are crated or put outside to run. I have one b-kid that does not like to be approached by strangers - she prefers to make the first overtures. Since I want to set her up for success, I don't put her in a situation that could go wrong.

    The other thing I was going to say was about it being "breeding season". I do have one intact boy that nibbles people (usually preceded by intense sniffing) when it is that time of year. He does it to me and to my brother - but I put the kibosh on it when it happens (it feels like a pinch when it happens, but it definitely isn't a bite or breaks skin). During breeding season, he definitely isn't out of the crate (unless in the yard) when visitors are over because I don't want them to mistake his nibbles for bites. However it sounds like since Kipawa broke skin, it might be more than a nibble.

    Good luck with everything and let us know what you figure out.


  • Andrea, you must think our home is a training facility for opera singers! Just kidding. 🙂 The way you worded it in the posts made me laugh, though. Your point is excellent. The two ladies I mentioned are care givers that are here every day. They do some cleaning in our home, so Kipawa is very familiar with them/their smell/movement/what they do. He doesn't like the one lady who is high strung. He likes the other (the singer) very much. But I agree that even a dog needs a break/quiet time. I am going to start putting him in his crate for 1 - 2 hours in the a.m. and an hour or so every night. Thank you for the excellent suggestions.


  • One of the bites was with teeth (broke skin). The other barely left a bruise. So, mating nibbles perhaps, but it doesn't matter to which degree he used his teeth on these ladies. We are not ignoring this behavior. We'll do more crating while they are here, and more work with the trainer, of course. We already tell people to ignore him when they come in, so most everyone is trained with that already. Still, he is such a people lover, always has to see who it is. He's a wonderful, sweet dog. We just need to have some better house rules so we can set him up for success.

    I definitely will keep everyone posted. We are at a basenji event this weekend and I will keep a very close eye on him.


  • @tanza:

    Give hugs to Kevin and Therese from me and the girls!

    I certainly will, Pat! I think it's going to be a great weekend. 🙂

  • First Basenji's

    sounds like resource guarding. counter condition and desensitize. He must not be there in the kitchen when humans eat. and/or you feed him yummies in front of care givers so he associates good things in that spot of house when caregivers are there. Timing is critical so if you need to hire a professional to help, do so.


  • Kipawa…how did the weekend go?


  • Fran, what did Therese say about this behavior?

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