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Doodles
the only names i can come up w are void system or enigma system. mm.
those are good tho!! i feel like some of em might rly like that :D ill ask them what they think
necrolic replied to your post:necrolic replied to your post:I think I want to...
YES honestly its really good!!! every character is super charming and great especially tadokoro hes the mom of the entire group
OKay I'm going to watch it that settles it
necrolic replied to your post:I think I want to watch that bike anime
DO IT
IS IT GOOD? BECAUSE I ALREADY HAVE A FAVORITE CHARACTER AND ITS THE TUBBY ANGRY LOOKING FELLA
necrolic replied to your post “Hi I have a cat who is indoor only, except sometimes when we leave the door open she likes to venture out... a few steps. She always only goes out a tiny bit and then either gets scared or bored and comes back in. She has never tried to run off, but should I continue to let her do this?”
my oldest cat use to be like that, but now he's a full fledged outdoor cat(fam) so it will definitely build to your cat wanting to be outside. and when you stop her she might try to run outside like my second cat does and is hard to get back inside.
so before i always understood that depending on the dog, youd get a different temperament. like dalmations, rotties, dobermen are all aggressive guard dogs. yet in recent years ive begun to believe that all dogs are the same as long as your raise them right and breed doesnt matter. now finding this blog's just got me confused, dogs have different temperaments and some dogs (like pits) can just plain be aggressive for no reason other than it's in their breed, right?
Well, aggression can deal with a couple things. In some breeds (like Dalmatians or Cocker Spaniels), spontaneous aggression can be a hereditary illness. In other breeds like Rottweilers, Doberman Pinschers, German Shepherds, etc, this aggression is trained into them through Personal Protection Training, IPO, Schutzhund, etc. These dogs aren’t inherently human or dog-aggressive by themselves, but have their protective traits (common in livestock guardian breeds and shepherd breeds) honed into a “sport” for them.The aggression shown by Belgian Malinois and the like towards intruders and criminals is not actually aggression so much as the dog performing a command or a trick. Some breeds are better at personal protection than others, and some breeds, like the Alabai, are both extremely protective (being a LGD) but also very dog-aggressive because they are selectively bred for that.Dogs that are needed to kill a coyote or a wolf threatening their livestock NEED to be game and aggressive. Where a dog like a Labrador Retriever might cower after getting a nip from a coyote, an Alabai will continue until the threat is killed and will never back down. We’ve selectively bred these “volkodav” (wolfhound) for their extreme dog aggression, and fights throughout Russia and the middle-east take place to test the skills of these dogs as livestock guardians, where two Alabai are fought against one another.
The American Pit Bull Terrier is similar to the Alabai, where it has been selectively bred to be both extremely dog-aggressive and very game. By breeding the most aggressive and game dogs together, we’ve created an extremely good fighting dog. However, some APBT are selectively aggressive and can be perfectly fine and well with other dogs outside of the pit, but these dogs are not to be considered “non-aggressive”, and one should always expect a fight to happen and be prepared for that event.Dog breeds are dog breeds because we’ve selectively bred them for specific purposes. Some dogs we want to be very aggressive (like Alabai), and others we want to be extremely nice to both people and animals (Labradors). We would never be able to train a bunch of Labradors to be good fighting dogs because they weren’t bred for gameness. Surely, you could abuse a dog and it could become aggressive because of this, but you’d only wind up in having an extremely unstable dog making unexpected and unwarranted attacks on people and animals. The aggression in APBT is most certainly not due to beating, starving, or training the dog to be that way.The belief that dogs can be “trained” to be aggressive is kind of both true and false. True dog or human aggression is mostly bred into the breeds through decades of selective breeding, and “fake” aggression like that in police dogs is trained into them through bite sports.That was kind of long-winded but I hope it makes sense!
what do you think of dog barking spray collars? good or bad?
Bad, they're aversive and just plain unnecessary when you can simply train the dog with positive reinforcement.
- Dark