Head tilts, ear positions, the soft eye
Body language is the original dog dictionary. Read it correctly and most "behavior problems" stop looking like problems.
Why dogs do what they do — head tilts, sneezes, joyous growls, midnight howls. Decode the behaviors so you can respond, not react.
Body language is the original dog dictionary. Read it correctly and most "behavior problems" stop looking like problems.
What your dog is actually saying when the neighbors complain.
Boundless energy is rarely a problem with the dog. It's usually a problem with the schedule.
The weird stuff dogs do that means something — and the stuff that means nothing at all.
Why some breeds growl when they're happiest, and how to tell the difference.
Fresh from our team — practical guides updated as we publish them.
Hello, dog enthusiasts! Today, let’s unpack a rather peculiar, sometimes baffling dog behavior – air licking. You…
Read the article →Hello, fellow dog aficionados! Have you ever found yourself buried under the enthusiastic licks of your furry best friend,…
Read the article →You might have noticed your Rottweiler offering you a peculiar sound that seems to oscillate between a rumble and a growl when…
Read the article →Oh, the vibrant world of our fur-babies, always brimming with an unrestrained zest for life, right? It’s both a joy and a…
Read the article →Hello dog lovers! Have you ever caught your furry friend tilting their head in a peculiar yet utterly adorable manner when you…
Read the article →Ah, the tranquil canvas of the night, frequently punctuated by the captivating, sometimes haunting, howls of our canine…
Read the article →Hello fellow dog enthusiasts! Have you ever paused and wondered, amidst the enthusiastic frolics of a play session, why our…
Read the article →
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Almost always anxious. "Misbehavior" is usually a stress response or a need that isn't being met. Reading body language is step one.
Sudden change is the signal. New compulsive behaviors, sudden lethargy, or out-of-pattern aggression all warrant a vet visit before assuming behavioral.
Sometimes. Mild cases respond to predictable routines and counter-conditioning. Severe separation anxiety or noise phobia often needs a vet-behaviorist team.
Context matters more than the sound. A play growl, a possessive growl, and a fear growl all sound similar but mean very different things. Read the rest of the body.
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