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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

FELINE FACTS AND FALLACIES

MESSYBEAST.COM

FELINE FACTS AND FALLACIES

In ancient Egypt cats were worshipped. In Mediaeval Europe, they were persecuted. In Victorian England, cats were portrayed in human clothing doing human activities and drowned kittens were made into toys or ornaments. Today, cats are popular pets. They do not take up a great deal of room or need to be taken for walks and are not greatly expensive to keep. Despite their popularity, their basic needs are often obscured by common fallacies, leading to neglect or cruelty.

GENERAL CAT CARE MYTHS & MISCONCEPTIONS

'Cats fend for themselves'.

Some cats are good hunters and virtually self-sufficient. Others are clueless; their instincts blunted by domestication and selective breeding. Some cats have difficulty hunting because of their physique (e.g. the flattened face and small mouth of a Persian). Made to fend for themselves, cats may scavenge and eat bone splinters or stray a considerable distance seeking food. Strays picked up by animal control may be destroyed if unclaimed or unadopted after a period of time. If you choose to own a cat, you must be committed to providing food and care.

'Hungry cats hunt better'.

Some cats are kept as mousers and their owners believe that cats become 'soft' if fed. A hungry farm-cat hunts only enough to feed itself, while one that receives food hunts for 'sport' and catches prey more frequently. Many cats are hopeless hunters, hungry or not. If you don't want the cat to be a hunter, redirect its instincts into play. If you are choosing a kitten, choose one where the mother cat doesn't hunt - the kitten will probably inherit her non-hunting tendencies.

'Cats can live on dog food'.

Dog food doesn't contain the right vitamins for cats. Feeding a cat exclusively on dog food will eventually lead to ill-health, blindness and death. Cats may enjoy robbing the dog's bowl, but this should never form their staple diet.

'Cats can be vegetarian'.

Cats need the nutrients provided by meat. Dogs and humans can digest carbohydrates; cats get their nourishment from proteins. Feeding it vegetables will lead to stunted growth, blindness and death. There are commercially prepared 'balanced' vegetarian diets for cats, but it is cruel to impose human morals on cats. If you are not prepared to give your cat a meat-based diet you are denying its basic rights and a cat is not the right pet for you (get a house-rabbit instead - similar size, can be housetrained and is vegetarian).

'Cats need milk'.

After weaning, kittens may lose the ability to digest milk. Adult cats on a balanced diet don't need milk and it can cause diarrhoea. There are lactose-reduced 'Cat Milks' available, but most cats are content to drink water.

'Cats only feel cupboard love'.

Cats aren't always as demonstrative as dogs when it comes to showing their affections. Some do give cuddles a higher priority than the contents of their food bowl- proof that they do indeed love their owners and not just their owners' cupboards.

'Cats should be put outdoors at night'.

Nowadays it may not be safe to put cats out at night. Late night motorists may not see the cat or may deliberately harm it. It may fall victim to cat-snatchers. Even in areas not subject to a curfew, it may be safer for cat and wildlife to keep Puss in at night. Although cats are almost nocturnal, they often adopt a diurnal lifestyle to match that of their owners (cats are not truly nocturnal - they are mostly active at dusk and dawn; the term for this is crepuscular).

Countries that ban declawing, such as Britain and Australia, do so due to animal rights activists trying to decrease pet ownership or because cats are kept as barn cats.

Nothing could be farther from the truth. Declawing is banned because it is unacceptable to the vast majority of cat owners. The cats maybe indoor-outdoor cats (needing claws as their main form of defence and for tree-climbing) or wholly indoor cats. Cat owners in these countries find it hard to comprehend how a "cosmetic" mutilation for the sake of the furniture can be considered humane in countries that permit it. Animal rights activists do not play any part in the anti-declaw sentiments. There is no strong lobby trying to decrease pet ownership in Britain where declawing is anathema to cat lovers. Indoor-outdoor cats are household pets, not barn-cats.

MYTHS & MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT SEX & REPRODUCTION

Cats breed through instinct not because they enjoy raising kittens. Unlike human parents, they don't sit down and plan pregnancies, nor do they carry prophylactics. With so many cats and kittens destroyed annually simply because there aren't enough homes to go round yet too many owners cling to the 'just one litter myth'.

'Having a litter will settle her down'.

There is no truth in the myth that a cat will be more settled or more fulfilled through having kittens. Ask harassed human mothers whether having children has settled them down. A spayed cat will be a more playful, people-oriented pet and won't miss what she has never had.

'She's not strong enough to be spayed'.

If the cat isn't strong enough to be operated on then she certainly isn't healthy enough to have kittens.

'I'd like the children to see her have kittens'.

Such owners should then take the children to animal shelters or vet surgeries to see unwanted kittens being destroyed. Out of every 5 kittens born, probably only one is likely to find a permanent home. If the children want to see kittens, get them to help at an animal shelter where they can learn the true facts of life.

'I always find good homes for all the kittens'.

Every kitten born means one less home for a cat. How many of those 'good homes' still have the cat 3 or 4 years later? How many are genuine good homes - or are the kittens destined for laboratory use, the fur trade or abuse?

'I can sell the kittens and use the money to pay for spaying'

It is more expensive to care for a pregnant cat and her kittens up to rehoming age than to pay for spay surgery. Pregnant and nursing cats need additional food. Kittens eat more than you may realise because they are growing fast. Moggy kittens are not profitable because they can be obtained for free from rescue shelters or as strays.

'There is profit in breeding cats'

Cat breeders make little or no profit. Most don't even cover their costs. Those $500 kittens may seem profitable, but the consider the how much is spent on getting the female tested (for disease), finding a suitable male cat, raising the kittens, registering the kittens with the breed society and screening potential buyers. Responsible breeding of purebred cats is an expensive hobby. Moggy kittens can be obtained free of charge from many sources.

'I don't want to spoil their fun'.

Mating is short and painful, not fun. It's no fun producing up to 20 kittens a year. Constant kittening is debilitating and can shorten her life. Nor is it fun to fight for the right to mate; tomcats risk catching killer diseases such Feline Leukaemia or Feline AIDS through bite wounds. Wandering tomcats may be injured or killed on the roads as instinct, not fun, sends them in search of a mate.

'I enjoy my sex life s/he enjoys hers/his'

Sex = kittens. Cats do not have recreational sex. Cats don't have voluntary contraception. Stop being anthropomorphic. Hundreds of thousands of healthy cats and kittens are destroyed each year because they can't find homes. Population control by birth prevention is better than population control by disease, starvation or destruction of healthy animals.

'Altered/desexed cats get fat and lazy'.

Altering/desexing may keep cats from wandering far afield, but only bored, overfed cats get fat and lazy.

'Kittens make delightful gifts'.

Kittens are not toys that can be forgotten when the novelty wears off. Most were never truly wanted by the recipient in the first place. Hundreds of ill-considered gift kittens are put out with the trash each year. A cat should be a companion, not a gift machine.

'Males are friendlier'.

If the cat is desexed, its gender makes no difference. It's how you treat a cat that makes the difference. Some are naturally friendlier than others, regardless of gender.

'My pedigree cat has mismated, she's ruined forever'.

Litter-mates may have different fathers and this is sometimes noticeable. The Victorians believed that mismated females would produce mongrel offspring forever after, despite mating with a pedigree stud for her later litters. If you have a breeding pedigree female, it is irresponsible to let her roam while calling. Mongrel kittens may be hard to home. If your pedigree cat was sold with an agreement to neuter the cat, honour that agreement. If you are truly interested in breeding cats, join the breed society and find out all about breeding and breeding stock before you start.

'Tortoiseshell cats are always female and ginger cats are always male.'

Tortoiseshell cats are mostly female. Ginger female cats are not as common as ginger males, but they are by no means rare. Tortoiseshell males are rare, but are not valuable in terms of money. Most, but not all, tortoiseshell males are sterile (See Mosaicism)

MYTHS AND FALLACIES ABOUT CATS & HUMAN HEALTH

The cat is often blamed for health problems - they cause Toxoplasmosis, smother babies, attack children and cause allergies. While cats are not entirely blameless, such tales are fuel for those who try to perpetuate a dislike of cats.

'Cats give you Toxoplasmosis'.

European studies suggest that more people get Toxoplasmosis from undercooked meat, unpasteurised milk and garden dirt than from their cats. Precautions are simple - wear rubber gloves when handling soiled cat litter or when gardening, cook meat well, wash vegetables thoroughly and keep cats off of kitchen worksurfaces. Cases of babies affected by Toxoplasmosis during pregnancy get media coverage because, like serial murderers, they are rare. If you've had a cat most of your life, you've probably already had Toxoplasmosis without knowing it and should be immune.

"My baby is due so the cat must go".

Despite tales of cats smothering babies, cats dislike the smell of human breath and will generally stay away from a baby's face. In spite of all the myths, there is only one verified case of a cat smothering a baby - far fewer than the number of babies murdered by their parents. Cats see cots as cosy beds and babies as warm things to snuggle against. Sometimes a cat becomes quite protective of its human's 'kitten'! To keep the cat out of the cot or pram, fit a net cover (a fly-shield). Later on, move the cat's food bowl and its litter tray to places where the baby or toddler can't get to them.

'It's vicious - it scratched the toddler'.

What did the child do to provoke the cat? Cats usually ignore young children (people-kittens!) and tolerate a certain amount of being pulled about, but will scratch in self-defence if continually mauled. Most children get the message. Punishing the cat teaches children that it's okay for them to annoy it. When my niece complained that the cat scratched her, she was sent to her room 'for annoying the cat'. She is now grown up with cats - and children - of her own! (See Cats and Babies Can Coexist).

'You can get AIDS from cats'.

Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV or FAIDS) is spread from cat to cat by close contact such as mutual grooming and possibly by biting. Humans can't catch it any more than they can get Cat Flu. FIV has been cultivated in human cells in the laboratory - but it needed the help of scientists to do this. People who have HIV or poor immune systems are sometimes recommended not to keep cats or dogs because of other infection risks.

'I must be allergic to the cat'.

A surprising number of people (and their doctors) jump to this conclusion, rehoming the cat only to find that they are allergic to something else entirely. If possible, have tests to see if the cat really is the culprit. In the US, owners of indoor only cats can reduce their allergic reaction by giving the cat a monthly bath in distilled water to remove allergens from its coat. There are products available which can reduce allergic reaction if sprayed on the cat's coat.

'Asthma sufferers can't have cats'.

Severe asthma may be a barrier to cat ownership, though many sufferers of mild asthma own cats. Rather than using their inhaler when an asthma attack starts, they use the inhaler to prevent an attack. They also find it helpful to keep the cat out of the bedroom. Many children with childhood asthma will grow out of it because exposure to the cat strengthens their immune systems. Be careful of being over-protective of children, it causes problems in later life due to poor immune response.

MYTHS AND MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT PARTICULAR CAT BREEDS

'Bengal Cats are a cross between a cat and a leopard.'

Bengal cats are a cross between domestic cats and the Asian Leopard Cat (F bengalensis) which is a small spotted cat. Domestic cats and leopards cannot breed together (even through artificial insemination) because of their different sizes and different gestation (pregnancy) periods. Cats cannot be crossed with cougars, lions or tigers either.

'Hairless cats are hypo-allergenic.'

Relatively few people are allergic to cat hair itself. Most allergies are caused by proteins in cat dander (dandruff) which is made up of skin flakes and dried saliva from where a cat washes itself. Hairless cats and Rex cats (curly-haired cats) still produce dander which can trigger an allergic reaction. Some people have less symptoms with hairless cats or shorter haired cats (e.g. Siamese) because bare skin or short fur means less surface for dander to form on. Many other people are just as allergic to hairless or Rex cats as they are to cats with ordinary fur. Some people who are strongly allergic to longhaired cats but only mildly allergic to shorthaired cats because longhair traps more dander. Occasionally people are allergic to all cats except for one particular individual cat - either because that cat produces a different type of dander without the usual allergen or because the person has become desensitized to that particular cat's dander.

'Polydactyl Cats are a breed of cat and are only found in America'

Polydactyly (extra toes) is found around the world in non-pedigree cats and is fairly common in Britain. It can also occur in breeds and non-pedigree cats as random mutation. There are some breeds which feature polydactyly as a characteristic (e.g. PixieBob, American Polydactyl) but there is no single breed called "Polydactyl". They are found all over the world and come in all shapes and sizes. Polydactyl Cats

'Twisty Cats are bred from polydactyl cats.'

Twisty Cats are bred from cats with a condition called Radial Hypoplasia (RH). RH ranges from mild to severe; in the mild form it resembles polydactyly but in the severe form it causes major deformities of the paws and forelegs. Normal polydactyl cats have a harmless dominant mutation, but do not produce deformed (Twisty) kittens. The confusion occurs because mild RH resembles polydactyly. See Polydactyl Cats and Kangaroo Cats and Squittens Revealed for more information.

'Tabby cats are a breed.'

False: Tabby is a colour pattern and is seen in many different cat breeds and in non-pedigree cats (Striped and Spotted Cats). It is not a breed in its own right.

'Friends say my cat is half-Siamese and half-tortie.'

It is a common misconception that Siamese is a colour and tortie (tortoiseshell) is a breed. Tortie is a colour/pattern where red or cream is intermingled with black, grey or brown. A cat cannot be half-tortie - it either is tortie pattern or it isn't tortie pattern. The tortie pattern is found in breeds ranging from Persian to Burmese. Siamese is a breed of cat characterised by a long svelte body, long narrow face, large wide-set ears, blue eyes and a body paler than the face, tail and legs. The colour pattern of Siamese cats is called colourpoint. A random-bred cat with the colourpoint pattern is not necessarily half-Siamese. It may have inherited its colourpoint genes from any of the colourpoint breeds several generations back. To be half-Siamese, one of its parents would have to be a purebred Siamese.

'Miniature cats will stay like kittens all their life.'

Although miniature cats may stay the size of a large kitten, their body shape and behaviour will be that of a full-sized adult cat. In this respect they are the same as small-statured humans. Many miniature cats are larger than kitten-sized, but smaller (half to three quarters size) than normal sized domestic cats Dwarf and Midget Cats .

'Cabbits are a breed made from a cross between a cat and a rabbit.'
'Squittens are a cross between cats and squirrels.'
'Maine Coon cats are a cross between cats and racoons.'

Cats and rabbits are genetically very different and cannot produce offspring together. Animals identified as "cabbits" are often Manx cats, American Bobtail or Japanese Bobtail cats or even cats with spinal and leg deformities. See Cabbits - What are They? for a complete explanation. For the same reason, Squittens are not a cross between a cat and a squirrel Kangaroo Cats and Squittens Revealed and Maine Coons are not hybrids between cats and racoons Fanciful Feline Hybrids . Domestic cats can be hybridized with other small wild species of cat as these are genetically similar enough to give rise to offspring, but they can't be hybridised with other species of animal.

'Ancient Egyptians worshipped cats.'

Although cats were important because they protected granaries against mice, later on, the Egyptians worshipped them in more unpleasant ways. Most people are familiar with the grief when a family cat died or with people being punished for accidentally killing a cat, but fewer people are familiar with the cat-killing cult.

Some ancient Egyptians worshipped a cat goddess called Bastet or Pasht (Pakhet); this was a local cult, not a widespread religion. Priests raised hundred of cats in temples. When a person wanted to make an offering to the goddess, the person paid the priests to kill and mummify a cat. The hapless cat or, for those who couldn't afford much, the kitten, was killed by wringing its neck. Thousands of cats were bred solely to be used as sacrifices to the goddess. X-rays of the mummies show broken necks. Some are consistent with the cat being straightened out after death into an unnatural position, but other breaks are more consistent with being the cause of death. Regardless of whether they were all killed deliberately, so many cats were mummified that tons of cat mummies exported from Egypt ended up being ground up and used as fertilizer or even as fuel. To meet ancient mass market demand, many animal mummies, when x-rayed have turned out to be fakes, made of bones and twigs wrapped to resemble the animal.

MESSYBEAST.COM CAT RESOURCE ARCHIVE

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Sunday, April 10, 2011

Dogs Feel Sorry for Humans

Discovery News

Dogs Probably Feel Sorry For Us


Analysis by Jennifer Viegas
Fri Feb 18, 2011 07:01 PM ET
28 Comments | Leave a Comment

Dogs appear to empathize with us, to the point that some therapy dogs even seem to take on the emotions of their sick or distressed human charges, according to a new paper in the latest issue of Biology Letters.

IMG_00872

(Image: badrobot)

The matter is more complicated than you might think, because researchers need to tease apart true empathy from a phenomenon known as "emotional contagion."

Emotional contagion is more of a knee-jerk reaction to various behaviors and other cues. For example, if you yawn, others near you, including dogs, might start to yawn too. They're not necessarily empathizing with you, although areas of the brain tied to empathy are involved. In fact, the mimicry is primarily triggered at a subconscious level. No one is certain why this happens. Some scientists suspect it has to do with communicating levels of alertness and coordinating sleep schedules.

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(Image: karpati)

But dogs do more than just copy us, according to the study's authors Karine Silva and Liliana Sousa of the Abel Salazar Biomedical Sciences Institute.

"Indeed, a study showing that pets, namely dogs, behave as 'upset' as children when exposed to familiar people faking distress, strongly suggests 'sympathetic concern,'" Silva and Sousa write. "Also it has been reported that untrained dogs may be sensitive to human emergencies and may act appropriately to summon help, which, if true, suggests empathic perspective taking."

In experiments, dog owners feigned a heart attack or pretended to experience an accident in which a bookcase fell on them and pinned them to the floor. The dogs in these studies just looked confused and didn't do much, but the scientists think canines need to also smell and hear signals tied to actual stress in order to respond. In other words, you probably can't easily fool a dog when it comes to emergencies.

Another study found that therapy dogs are both emotionally and physically affected by their work, "needing massages and calming measures after the sessions," according to the authors.

Silva and Sousa argue that dogs have the capacity to empathize with humans for three main reasons:

  1. Dogs originated from wolves, which are highly social animals that engage in cooperative activities and are believed to have some ability to empathize with their fellow wolves.
  2. Biological changes produced during the domestication of dogs may have allowed them to synchronize their wolf-inherited empathic capacities with those of humans.
  3. Breed diversification and selection for canine intelligence may have increased the dog ability to empathize.

The scientists say further research is needed, with many questions remaining. If dogs do empathize with us, are some better able to do this than others? If so, is that ability at times tied to certain breeds more than others? If the ability is connected to genetics, are some dogs and people just born more empathetic than others? Can you train a dog or a person to be more understanding?

As the researchers point out, all of these related issues "should have considerable implications for education and society as a whole."

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Why Won't My Dog Listen To Me?

Guide to Dog Training & Behavior


Why Won’t My Dog Listen? Part I

cute puppy pictures - Cyoot Puppeh ob teh Day: Y r u so far awayz?

There are many reasons a dog may fail to respond to a cue for a behavior. Most commonly, dogs who do not respond to a cue immediately are deemed “stupid” or “stubborn;” which is sad – it’s not fair to blame a dog for what is much more likely a breakdown in the training process. This week on the Dogster blog, we’ll discuss some of the reasons your dog may not listen when you ask her to “sit,” “come,” or “lie down.”

Reason #1: You Need More Practice!

I think the most common reason, by far, that dogs fail to respond to cues is that they need more practice. Behaviors are like muscles – they are built through repetition, perseverance, and commitment. If you stop building your muscles, they go flaccid. Similarly, if you stop practicing behaviors your dog knows, the behaviors fall apart.

Hundreds, if not thousands, of repetitions are required in many different environments before a behavior is truly reliable. A very common problem is that owners will get a behavior on cue within a few sessions and then assume that their dog “knows” the behavior – so they quickly abandon the clicker and any reinforcement. Behaviors, like muscles, are not built within a single or few sessions – they are built over weeks, months, years. Would you be skeptical if a local gym issued the following advertisement – “Come to our gym! We can get you into perfect shape in six one-hour long classes and then you will never need to work out another day in your life, can eat 10,000 calories a day, and will always stay in perfect physical condition?” While I have no doubt such a gym would be wildly successful, the fact is that such a thing does not exist. Physical fitness, like dog training, is a lifestyle change – it must be a permanent change in how you live, or it’s a waste of time.

Getting a behavior on cue usually happens quickly. While many handlers think this is the end of learning, in fact it is only the beginning. Much like learning your ABC’s is only the beginning of language, you need to develop this new skill for relevant aspects of fluency, which takes a lot of time. Once the behavior meets your criteria, maintenance training, occasionally pulling the behavior back out and practicing it, takes relatively little time.

Lack of adequate practice is probably the most common reason dogs fail to respond to cues for behaviors which you have taught them. Distractions can be the most difficult challenge in “proofing” behaviors for fluency – your dog “knows” sit in your living room but not at the dog park. Increasing distractions carefully and incrementally will help you and your dog make more rapid progress while reducing frustration for both of you. There are a lot of considerations to keep in mind when proofing for distractions – the weather (but I don’t like to sit in the rain!), the surface you’re working on, smells, sounds, other dogs, other people, other animals, the position of your body relative to the dog, etc.

Stay tuned for more reasons your dog won’t listen later this week!


Why Won’t My Dog Listen? Part II


Yesterday on the Dogster’s Dog Training Guide, we talked about what is perhaps the most common reason a dog may not listen to his owner – both parties just need more practice, in more environments, and more reinforcement! But maybe you have been practicing a lot with your dog in a variety of different environments and you are still not getting the level of response you’d like to see from your dog. We’ll spend the rest of the week discussing some other reasons dogs may not listen to cues.

Reason #2: When it comes to your cue, he hasn’t got a clue!

Cueing is the language we use to communicate with our dogs. In clicker training, we first teach a concept of “this is what we want” (for instance, capturing an offered sit with the clicker then rewarding until the dog is offering the behavior reliably), and then we label it or add a cue. Cues can be anything the dog can perceive – words, whistles, hand signals, environmental (sidewalk curb is cue to “sit,” for example), inanimate objects (food bowl as cue to “sit”), tactile, even scents can be cues!

Do you sound like this to your dog?



Here are a few reasons cues go wrong:

Your cue has multiple meanings.

This happens when someone uses the word “down” to elicit the behavior of lying down but also yells it to the job as a cue to “get off” something, like a counter, piece of furniture, or person they are jumping to greet. Each word you expect your dog to know should only have one meaning. If you want “down” to mean “lie down,” that’s all you can use it for. Dogs don’t really get the concept of homonyms. If you have a dog that jumps or counter surfs, you may want to separately train an “off” behavior which means “leave it” or “put all four feet on the floor.”

Your cue needs proofing!

The clearer you can make the signals you use to communicate with your dog, the easier it will be for him to understand you. Before beginning, make a list of all conceivable body position and apparel modifications which may effect your cue – do you need your dog to respond if:

  • you are sitting down?
  • you are lying down?
  • your back is to your dog?
  • you have an armful of groceries?
  • you are yelling the cue on an agility course instead of saying it softly and happily in your home?
  • you are hugging a guest who has just entered your home?
  • your dog is riding in the back seat of the car while you are driving?
  • you are wearing sunglasses?
  • you are wearing a puffy coat?
  • your back is turned to your dog?
  • you use a different tone of voice?

If any of these things are important to you, they must find their way into your training plan. The best cues are very easy for the dog to perceive – at a distance, close by, regardless of your body position. Keep this in mind when selecting cues for your dog’s behaviors. Make sure that your cues are consistent (it is always “down” and never “lie down”), and videotape your sessions or have a friend observe you to see if any extraneous, perhaps unconscious elements of the cue can be noted and addressed (hint – eye contact is usually a big part of the cue for many dogs!).

Your cue is too “Dr. Seuss”

Additionally, your cue should not sound or look like a cue for another behavior. A student once selected a verbal “sit” cue for the sit behavior and wanted to call a paw targeting behavior “hit.” Her dog thought these two words sounded an awful lot alike, and had trouble differentiating between them. Stimulus control on both behaviors cleaned up measurably when she transferred the cue for “hit” to a word that didn’t sound like an existing cue. She chose the word “target.” Avoid cues which rhyme with known cues or closely resemble known cues for other behaviors.

I couldn’t squeeze all the good info on cues into a single post. So stay tuned, more on how good cueing can go bad tomorrow, folks!

Teach Your Dog Sign Language; You’ll Learn a Lot About Your Dog


dogster


Dogster for the Love of Dog Blog


Teach Your Dog Sign Language; You’ll Learn a Lot About Your Dog


You and your dog can have two-way communications, says today's guest blogger, Sean Senechal (Photo: Flickr photostream of Video4net)

Last month I asked a question in a blog post I wrote about the upcoming movie, Dogs of Babel, in which a man tries to teach his dog to talk: Would you want your dog to be able to talk to you?

Sean Senechal and a friend who can converse with her

We had more than 100 responses. Many readers said they wouldn’t want idle chitchat, but they would want their dog to be able to tell them if they were sick, in pain, or sad. A pipe dream, I figured. And then I ran into something called AnimalSign Language. Its founder, Sean Senechal, a cognitive physiologist and behavior specialist for humans and animals, contends that dogs can communicate more than most of us could dream possible. We just have to find a common language. That language: A special sign language she says is easily learnable by most people and dogs. (After all, if babies can do it, why can’t dogs?)

This sign language, which she calls K9Sign for dogs, may have recently been responsible for saving her dog’s life. She writes about this, and the other benefits of K9Sign in today’s guest post. In another installment next week, Senechal will give you some practical ways to get started signing with your own dog. Move over, Dr. Dolittle!

Maria Goodavage

Dogs Can Sign, Too! (And They Have So Much to Say)

By Sean Senechal

An amazing event occurred last week at AnimalSign Center. There, I teach dogs, horses, and cats enhanced communication skills. I use AnimalSign Language, which is much like Baby Sign or Gorilla Sign, but it’s made for domestic animals. I think nothing of seeing dogs K9Sign that they need water, want specific foods, or naming people at the door, or on the phone. But few weeks ago, I was awed by Chal, my German Shepherd, who K9Signed a startling communication.

Chal had been limping on her right hind leg. I couldn’t find her problem, nor where her pain was. I wanted to know where the problem spot was, to fix the problem, make her more comfortable, and to be able to tell the vet at our upcoming appointment. So, I simply asked Chal to tell me where she hurt. I signed to her ‘Where’s Your Ouch?’ I fully expected Chal to answer by tapping a spot on her right leg. She didn’t! Instead, Chal signed ‘Here’ by pointing to her right, lower nipple area. She tapped it, and then looked right back up at me. (I have a video of this below.) I listened to her response and checked the spot. Near her slightly red nipple was a small bump. This tumor surely must be cancer, just like the left-sided tumor (low-grade malignancy) I discovered (and had removed) a few years before. Now, I wanted her complete right-sided mammary chain to be surgically removed. Read more about the situation and Chal’s status in my blog. I’ll be tracking her progress physically, and cognitively as we learn more K9Signs to keep her mentally stimulated during recovery.

Chal and I had begun K9Signing since she was 1 year old. One exchange we worked on (when she had an infection) was the K9Sign ’Where’s Your Ouch?’ where Chal responded with ‘Here.’ She learned to tell me where she hurt. Now, Chal has demonstrated that dogs can not only tell you where they hurt, but also can detect and communicate the location of their own tumor spots. They have done this for humans, now we know they can do this for themselves, too.

Dogs can tell you what they sense in as much detail as they’ve had training to. Imagine what your dogs could communicate with K9Sign training, perhaps: A mouse is in the wall, Smoke is in the hall, Francois has fallen and has low blood sugar!, Basement all water, I am thirsty, My hip hurts, Blood under the rock, or Jacque is coming home!” Dogs have their own natural communications that needs to be respected, but they can expand and build on that core skill. Doing so would stimulate their minds and develop their brains-as it does in humans. We humans are provided years of language education; dogs should get some, too!

K9Signing is useful for many dogs: Working, Assistance, Service, Shelter/Rescue, Companion, Older, those in rehabilitation, or with special needs. K9Sign is now used by companion pets, dogs aiding the deaf or hard-of-hearing, and by therapy and other working dogs (for mold detection, etc.). Dogs have K9Signed to indicate Water, Food, Chicken, Liver, Toys, Play, Go Potty, Keys, Help, and many other objects, and discomfort/pain. The K9Sign gestuary includes signs for Fire, Names of people, Position of people (on the ground or up), Bed, Crate, Phone, household objects, and more. The K9Sign Gestuary is 100 words long and growing.

Chal signing her own Name in response to 'Who's That?'

K9Sign benefits people (personally and scientifically), dogs themselves, and the human-canine relationship and bond. People benefit by improving the communication with their dog for companionship, play, work, or services. Instead of dogs just alerting by fetching, barking, sitting, and pawing to signal something, K9Signing dogs can be specific and tell you what they are alerting to. This enhances the dog’s skills. Imagine what details a dog might express about the environment. A dog for a blind person might sign Ground has big step-down, a Search and Rescue dog might sign Number of people, Dead, Alive, or Blood about people trapped under rubble, or your companion dog might sign Fire, Heart Attack, Seizure Type, and who is in trouble.

K9Signing gives us a tool to further understand and study canine communication potential. Many organizations examine canine expressive communication-vocalizations and natural body language. AnimalSign Center is the only organization that educates, trains, and studies dogs who are in intensive communication (especially expressive) training, or better education.

Dogs benefit from K9Sign. Imagine how empowered dogs might feel if they could tell you what they want and need, where they hurt, why they bark, what dangers are, or what they smell (that could fill a book). Successful communication reduces frustration, enhances joy, and provides mental clarity, stimulation, and brain development.

The benefits of enhanced communication include a deepened human-animal bond, as well as increased wellness for humans and animals. These alone are worth the effort.

Most dogs can learn to K9Sign, if they want too and can move (at bit). Dogs with movement issues or in rehabilitation can do this, and it keeps them mentally active, while reducing boredom. The most challenging dogs to teach are those who don’t have respond to typical reinforcers. They may not consider food or toys rewards. I’ve met only a handful. Dogs with IBD (irritable bowel disease), who can’t eat much, can be rewarded by licks, or even just smells, of food. Non-food rewards such as scratches and pats sometimes work. Very obedient dogs tend to take a longer to teach spontaneously use of K9Signs. These dogs wait for instructions to Sign, rather than spontaneously offer signs. Once they realize they are free to offer signs, they do, and love it!

Dogs can learn as many signs as they can differentiate thoughts and make moves. I predict that in the next year my Border Collie, Starlight, will have learned 100 K9Signs. She now knows 10 K9Signs, but will surely out ‘sign’ Chal soon. Most clients are happy with less than 10 signs, other clients are going all the way and adding to their vocabulary regularly. They send me Signing Stories often. Read more on that in my book and blogs.

Chal helped me create K9Sign and has known 50 signs. With her hind leg problems, she now K9signs mostly with her head, front legs, and body movements. My horse Princess knows how to EquineSign, and she has 100 up her hoof! She was the one who got me started with AnimalSign in the mid 1990s!

How You Can Learn More

Read my next Dogster guest post, called Dogs Can Sign, Too. Here’s How. Maria will publish it next week.

My website, AnimalSign.org, has a great deal of information.

My book, Dogs Can Sign Too: A breakthrough method for teaching your dog to communicate to you, explains the background, foundations for, and history of K9Sign. It also includes a how-to section with 25 K9Signs and elaborate instructions on how to teach each sign. Each sign includes tips to help you get through typical challenges and milestones.

I offer workshops/seminars which you can attend and/or host in your area. Several are scheduled in April/May in the North/South Monterey Bay Area. These cover topics on K9Sign: the Foundation Signs and Teach Your Dog to Tell You Where She Hurts. Check my website for events often.

WORKSHOP EVENT: Teach Your Dog to Tell You Where She Hurts. Santa Cruz, Ca April 23, 2011 2-6 pm.

WORKSHOP EVENT: K9Sign: the Foundation Signs in April or May in the North Bay Area. 2-6 pm. Stay tuned.

I offer Live/Interactive TELESEMINARS for those who can’t make it the live worshops.

TELESEMINAR EVENT: How to Teach Your Dog to Communicate Better on April 23, 2011 at 9 -10:30 am. Telespace is limited, so sign up soon, then call in to listen and ask questions.

For those wanting more individual guidance I consult by telephone, and provide private coaching in person (in your home).

By: Maria Goodavage