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Community Corner

Soule: When Your Dog Bites, What Do You Do?

Cody had latched on to my goat and won't let go. What could I do to save Dixie, the goat?

Cody must wear a muzzle around vulnerable livestock. Wearing a muzzle doesn't mean he's a bad dog. A muzzle means I'll have more time to train him to ignore the goats.
Cody must wear a muzzle around vulnerable livestock. Wearing a muzzle doesn't mean he's a bad dog. A muzzle means I'll have more time to train him to ignore the goats. (Miles Smith Farm)

Cody, my aggressive pitbull, shook his head back and forth as Dixie the goat, neck clasped in his teeth, bleated for mercy. I grasped Cody's collar, lifted him, and waited. This wreck was a consequence of a bad decision.

Click here to learn how I got Cody to let go of the goat.

When Cody arrived at my farm last March, I was told he "might" bite. He did bite—other dogs, moving tires, horses, and cattle, but never people. Later, his rescuer told me she had found him in the Virgin Islands at a St. Croix dump. The St. Croix dog rescue organizations don't have space for all the homeless dogs, so she feeds them "in place," hoping shelter space will open up. One day, she found a pack of dump dogs clustered around one pitbull who was growling and snapping at them.

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This fearless woman crouched down, and Cody galloped over to her, climbed into her lap, and nuzzled her. The dog was intact and covered with wounds and scars. She took him home and fed him. She also neutered him, doing her bit to stem the tide of surplus dogs.

A year later, Cody was a foster dog at Miles Smith Farm. On his first day out, he lunged at my horses and cattle, snapped at my dogs, and attacked every moving vehicle.

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The first thing I did was put a muzzle on him for walks around the farm. When in the house, he lived in my dining room in a crate, a space he loved.

A crate is a blessing for dogs and their owners. Dogs don't see the crate as a cage; they feel safe and comfortable after being trained to stay in one. Cody's crate is his "man cave," a carefree sanctuary where he doesn't have to make decisions.

That's the thing about dogs. Dogs want to avoid making decisions; they want their owner to take control and be their leader.

When Cody chomped on Dixie, he was reacting to my frustration. Cody was sitting in front of me when Dixie butted in for food. I yelled at Dixie, and Cody read my frustration as his chance to help me.

Click here to learn how I got Cody to let go of the goat.

Carole Soule is the owner of Soule Coaching. She can be reached at carole@soulecoaching.com. Carole is a certified Life Coach who helps humans and canines achieve the impossible a little at a time. On Dec. 28, 2024, she's retiring from full-time farming at Miles Smith Farm in Loudon and will work full time with dog coaching.

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