Slice of Life is inspired by the desire and challenge of living our lives in the moment. Days go by, weeks go by, years... but we can still choose over and over again to look at our own lives in small installments. These installments (or slices of life) can be walks taken in the hills, naps or a glass of Rioja. For me, what makes my slices super meaningful is being able to share with others the moments of my day with dogs in play, training or napping where we're all piled up on the bed.

My slices of life are full of events and experiences that are meaningful to me. As a former professional photographer, I still “see” so many pictures (or vignettes) as I interact with my dogs and the world around me on a daily basis. Most of the time I am not capturing these moments with a camera anymore. Instead, I am just showing up... I must say, that I do miss having a register of events outside of my head so that at my leisure I can relish a past moment as I am transported by a visual or written recollection of days gone by.

With the immediacy of all things digital, perhaps I can have my cake and eat it too. I can continue to do my work as a dog trainer and also register here and there moments of living a life in the company of dogs. I hope you will occasionally take a peek, and that my slices of life transport you in a glee of YOUR own!

Showing posts with label piloerection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label piloerection. Show all posts

Monday, July 13, 2015

Arousal

Have you ever seen a dog with “raised-hackles”? I bet you have. The technical term is piloerection and it means just that – the hair standing up.

What you probably don’t know is that piloerection is NOT aggression, as many folks believe. It is actually arousal. The best way for me to describe arousal is to say that arousal is an autonomic response from the nervous system. In other words, it is not a voluntary response that the dog can turn on and off at will.

Whenever we see a dog exhibiting piloerection we should pay attention because it could just mean that the dog is very excited over something; such as seeing a person or a favorite pal. But also, piloerection – or best said - arousal can also be a precedent to an escalation of aggression.

So how is one to know? It all depends on the context. It is never advisable to just focus on one visual element of dog body language because most likely this will not give enough information to make a good assessment of the situation. So if we pay attention to the dog’s overall body language, and this could be done in a matter of seconds, we will be more successful in anticipating the motivation behind the piloerection.


This is a good illustration as to how piloerection can “mean” different things: My two female dogs Laika and Rio display piloerection often. Laika would almost exclusively when she was ready to interact with a dog she consider “soft”. Dogs that she wanted to intimidate just for fun.

Ahh, and Laika was a very “nice” dog with great dog skills who also enjoyed bullying them on occasion until I said no more! Laika was a very confident dog.

In the case of Rio, our current female pup, she exhibits piloerection daily. If she spots someone in our driveway her howling and barking will always be accompanied by piloerection. She will do the same even when the person in our driveway is John coming in back from out of town. Rio also does other things when she is in situations that she finds a bit overwhelming such as saying hello to someone.
She will bark, howl, have piloerection AND turn around looking to see if Deuce is in the vicinity and following her because she lacks the confidence to interact. So here arousal is a bit more a case of the “jitters” – to use a “very” technical term. :)

The learning I wish folks would take from this is that piloerection is an easy identifiable visual cue that we must pay attention to and to remember that is not aggression, but it could be an antecedent to aggression. Physiologically and evolutionarily speaking, pilorection also functions to make the animal look bigger to a potential threat. But as you can see by my examples above, there might be different motivations for this.

Back to Rio and her arousal. I can almost bet with great certainty that if Rio found herself in a situation where she felt somewhat threatened, her first line of defense would be to retrieve. Now Laika, for example, I am not sure she would. Same response from the nervous system, but a different outcome.

When I see either my dogs or a dog that I know well have pilorection, one of the things that I like to do is to gently press the back of my hand down their spinal cord beginning at top of the neck and down to the tail. Literally “combing” down the standing hair. Over and over again, the reaction that I have seen is the dog returning back to equanimity. Our dogs cannot “control” pilorection, just like a person that has road rage cannot control feeling the emotion. However, what our dogs and the road-rage laden individual can learn is how to respond when they are going “through the motions”. And this is where it gets very interesting! Enter the world of learning….

Monday, June 24, 2013

Keeping It Real

This morning I was struggling with the choice of either taking Rioja with Deuce and me sheepherding or leaving her at home with her breakfast in Kongs™. It gets so hot so early that leaving her in the car is not an option.

In the past, I have put her in a large pen with Mary’s Border Collies where they have shade and water, but Rioja decided that she did not want to hang out there and barked most of the session so I was thinking of other options for her. I decided to take her along with the Kongs, knowing that I could leash her to a
tree close by where she could lay down in the shade, watch the show as she worked on the Kongs.

Well at least that was my plan but Rio had other ideas about how to spend her time! She sort of worked on her Kongs and decided to whine and bark as I struggle to concentrate on what I was doing. Sheepherding is hard enough when you are focused, mission impossible if you are distracted. Thanks Rio! Part of my distractive thoughts included wondering if Rio was whining and barking because she felt left out of the fun or if she was anxious being left under the tree even though she could see me… she is not telling so I will never know. However, once Deuce and I took our break and joined her in the shade she decided to eat - only to stop once again when Deuce and I went back to the sheep.

At the end of the session and as we were leaving, Mary’s next student showed up. Rioja spots the car in the distance and began to bark and howl. Remember she is part Beagle and her howl is quite somethin’. The barking did not stop as the student with her perfectly well mannered and friendly dog approached us.

Instead, she began to pull hard on her leash and to exhibit piloerection, the hair on her back fully raised. Piloerection is an autonomic response of the nervous system, not something the dog can control or turn “on” and “off” at will. It is NOT aggression, just arousal. Similar to us getting goose bumps or as we say
in Mexico… chicken skin – the differences in these names deserves its own blog post don’t you think?

I know that if I had let Rioja go meet the other dog she would have been “fine” and they most likely would have ended playing, but not all circumstances allow for this. Also I think it is important to take the “hint” when someone else does not want his or her dog to meet yours. Besides, if I had “given in” allowing Rio to
go say “hi” I would be reinforcing her aroused state, a bad idea. Instead I began to gather my things quickly as I held firmly to her leash and Deuce’s slippery rope that he drags while herding. All this because the message I perceived from the other student was more on the vein of: I would appreciate if you could keep
your dog under control and keep her from barking and… when are you leaving? I don’t know if it is because I am a professional trainer that I put additional pressure on myself and fall prey to the idea that dogs must comport themselves at all times and not show any of their emotions especially if they make us uncomfortable. I have thought about this phenomena a lot and I think it has something to do with pets being thought of as substituted children or a direct reflection of one's parenting skills…

Funny you might say, this coming from someone that makes a living by teaching other people’s dog among other things to be polite. Sure, nothing wrong with wanting our dogs to be well-adjusted (as well-adjusted as any living being can be) and able to deal with an ever changing environment – “there is no dog in sight and the next minute dog in sight…and why can’t I play with him?”


The problem is, in my view, when we set unrealistic and unfair expectations of our dogs. Not even trainer’s dogs should be expected to be devoid of emotional lives: barking when happy or afraid, quiet when tired, or aloof and  wanting isolation after a hard-day of running after sheep. Dogs are sort of permanent visitors in our world. A world that they must constantly ascertain. Similarly to one traveling in a country where we do not speak the language and we can’t relate to their customs. Poof! Now we can sympathize!

Perhaps a better approach is to pay attention to the areas of our dog’s behavior that we feel must improve either because they “bug” us or because our pal will have a better quality of life and work on them. Just like us, our dogs are a work in progress and they deserve our patience (oh so difficult sometimes!!) and our
understanding when their response is not the one we would like. In addition, I want to make sure that I am crystal clear as to the motivation behind my requesting my dogs do something or stop doing something. Not fair that I ask them to modify their behavior because I am feeling embarrassed (bad trainer!!) or because someone has expectations about how dogs should behave etc, etc. Our dogs are more than awesome companionship and a source of fun and laughter they also force us to look at our own “issues” and in my book, this is just what a good relationship/friendship should do. So… thanks Rio, for keeping it real…