Skoll is making baby steps, but at the same time huge leaps.
Two days ago Skoll was downstairs with me (babygated out of the kitchen, we like digging in the trash apparently) and my cat Saffron came out from her hiding spot and sat on her cat tree where she is used to going when she's uncomfortable because of dogs on the floor. Unfortunately for her, the dog she's used to escaping from is a 50#/18in chow mix, not a 95#/30in doberman, so she didn't think to sit on the highest perch. Instead she sat in the "house" which is quite perfectly aligned with poking height.
Skoll of course wanted to sniff the kitty so he stuck his entire head in the "house" like the silly dog he is and learned very quickly that kitties protest quite violently to such invasions of space. He had a red stripe on his nose that has since disappeared so I don't believe she broke skin, just let him know that her warnings were to be heeded. After that he demonstrated that he'd learned to leave angry kitties alone, especially when they're on cat trees which apparently amplifies their power 10x! They've been able to coexist- so long as he's loose- in the same room ever since. He still barks at them from his crate, BUT the most recent time he spotted Saff from his crate all he did was stand up, no barking or growling. My roommate's cat, now that they've had a proper introduction, is completely unfazed by this big barky individual and merely smacks at him as he walks by, thus he ignores her. It seems Saff's more violent reactions are amusing to him.
He's adjusting to the new food well. He's got a spot of the runs again- though I don't think its related to his food. While walking the other day there was a gentleman who was eating some sort of cookie it looked like and offered it to Skoll as we walked by him. Skoll of course thinks food is the best thing in the world so he took it before I even caught on to what this man was doing. Since he was eating it, I don't think it was poisoned and neither does the vet, but the timing lines up with the upset tummy. Granted my tummy is upset today as well so perhaps it's just a bad day for tummies overall.
I've discovered that he walks best and is the least stressed when he's got his backpack on and I've clipped the 2ft lead to either his collar (we're learning not to pull YAY!) or harness (for control when in higher stress environments, currently). We are no longer barking at passing strangers, now we think it's okay to jump up and put our noses in their face to greet them. I shall have to fix that. I was SUPER IMPRESSED- today he did not bark, growl, or lunge at any dogs we spotted and there were a good few due to the nicer weather. He was even okay with the (illegally) offleash english bulldog barreling toward him (until its owner realized what it was doing and called it back), he actually playbowed to that one. Yesterday he about lost his head over a neighbor's cane corso but only growled a bit at the other dogs he spotted. I've been making dogs Not A Big Deal, rewarding calm behavior when I see it, and using parked cars/buildings/dumpsters/whatever as a shield to abruptly remove the dog from sight if he's not consolable. Apparently, it works!
Because strangers are no longer The Scariest Thing Alive, we've done a few stranger meetings. Well, "stranger", I know who they are but he doesn't. Mainly old buddies from back when I used to take the GSDs to the dogpark and some of my college's staff who I've "talked dogs" with previously, and one business owner (bookstore). He has done very well so I'm crossing my fingers that he'll do well with dogs eventually too.
I had this mostly stopped in the third week; he'd lunge and get bouncey and excited (he does like other dogs, he just doesn't like approaching other dogs) but no barking/growling/going mad at the sight of another dog and lord forbid if it barked back at him. There was an incident where someone who, sadly, I don't think understood the severity of the situation (possible that he had a mental disorder- his speech was slurred and he was in a wheelchair), followed us for about a block trying to sic his puggle/pug mix of some sort on Skoll. Luckily the dog was connected to his chair and I walk faster than electric wheelchairs, so no physical damage ever happened.
After that though it's been an uphill battle to get Skoll back to that good point. We were having a good walk yesterday where he'd ignored THREE!!! dogs, I went around a corner at the same time an elderly woman with a pitty mix came around that same corner and we ended up practically face to face. Identical reactions on both dogs, lots of "I'm so sorry!"s thrown over our shoulders, but again no physical connections. He also calmed down after about 5 steps away from the dog- was agitated but only paced in a circle, no more violent (loud) outbursts.
He very rarely barks at people anymore, on walks or otherwise. The couple times he has, it was at night, they were far away, and they were acting rather shady so I was getting nervous and I think he's been picking up on that. He's done his guard dog impression (quiet and no teeth, but body language that says "GO AWAY"... hard to describe, looks kinda like he's pointing at them with his body instead of a foot?) at people who are about to walk past him and I guess only just then notice that he's a doberman? They get very close, then freeze and act afraid of him.
Cowering is hit and miss still. If someone moves toward him that he's not expecting, mostly kids jumping out of cars to greet the doggy before their parents yell for them not to do that, he'll cower. Also if we're passing someone holding a tool/trash can/bag/whathaveyou. He recovers quickly, it's just a flash of "whoa that was pretty scary" and then he's back to normal.
At the moment the most common reaction with greetings is, if we're passing a stranger he wants to jump up and bop his nose on their face. I know this, because this is how he thought to greet my roommates when they get home until he learned they tolerate jumping far less than I do. If we're inside, such as in the bookstore where he is currently a celebrity, he's a leaner and a licker and generally loves everyone.
Roommate's boyfriend was over for the first time since last night. We started with boyfriend behind the kitchen gate for safety, Skoll was fine. Stepped over it, wiggles and love and leaning. Whatever he didn't like about the boyfriend previously, it's fine now.
He's still a little unsure of my mom, but she's decided she doesn't like him and I think he knows that. She's taken his reactivity personally and now she's been trying to convince me to rehome him before I fall in love (too late, did that the first day) and since dogs react to the nervous energy and tension between people... Likes my dad though!
We heel on command!Not for very long if he figures out that I don't have a treat but we're working on it.
I had to stop using his harness. It works, but because it tightens around his shoulders, he's got a nice horizontal bald bar on his front now and he's starting to worry at it because the nylon is irritating his skin. Luckily he is mostly controllable with just his (leather) collar but I've had to fall back on the halti for control which I was desperately trying to avoid. I've only used it on the 2ft lead (meaning his head can't snap around because he can't dash) and only when I start noticing a LOT of dogs around. He's pretty good otherwise on just the collar by this point though, sometimes if he's VERY excited for the walk he needs a stop&pivot reminder that I'm not going to let him haul me down the street, but otherwise if he hits the end of the leash he "corrects" himself and gets back beside me.
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