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Showing 3 posts about brussels griffon
(see also: dog breeds, companion dogs)
It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas and I'm getting in the mood with my Christmas ornaments. I just love to make these little guys, they get me in the spirit so expect to see lots more until Christmas!

This ornament is a sweet little Brussels Griffon and she is holding her very own ornament to put on the Christmas tree. She can't wait until the tree goes up so she can place her ornament in a very special spot -- right on one of the front branches.

The Brussels Griffon is hand-sculpted from polymer clay and is holding a large green crystal ornament. She has a sprig of holly at her ear and sits on a red base in a silver cameo setting. The ornament hangs from green satin cord. Approximate size of the ornament is: 2-1/4" long (with satin cord 4-1/4" long) x 1-1/2" wide
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He he he... I have been craving Brussels Sprouts lately and it is late tonight as I finished this and I could not hold back the pun...
This Brussels Griffon caught my eye with his pink little tongue and that look of forgetting to stop before the wall came up!

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Amigo___kelley_small

 


Predatory Drift is a sudden, and drastic change in a dog's demeanor that is characterized by behaviors associated with hunting small prey. 

The term is most often used to describe a medium to large dog who has suddenly and uncharacteristically targeted a smaller dog as prey (dinner).  

Predatory Drift is NOT Aggression, but it can mean injury or death for small dogs.




Predatory Drift happens when the larger dog's instinct to hunt are triggered

These instincts can be triggered when play escalates or gets too much like the real thing (an out of control chase game).  It can happen when a small dog gets scared or injured and squeals or wriggles in a way that makes them look like prey (dinner), Predatory Drift can happen just because thesize difference says, "You are comparatively bite-sized, or move like something that is bite-sized, and I am a canine predator." 

 

The most alarming fact about Predatory Drift is that it can happen even with well-behaved, well-socialized, playful dogs who play well and often with no aggression, and no fights

Dogs who are triggered into predatory drift, may or may not have ever been in a dog fight, and may or may not be generally well-behaved and obedient.  There is NO protection against predatory drift.  It is not a good dog/bad dog problem. 

Predatory Drift is not about how brave, strong, feisty, or fearless the small dog acts.  Predatory Drift is not about how well your medium or large, or extra large dog plays, listens to you, or how many times they have met, played with or been around a small dog.

Predatory Drift can even happen between two dogs that know each other well and have lived, played, and or known each other for years.  In the right situation, a sudden shift happens and the predatory sequence (like dominoes falling) is triggered and completed with lightening fast speed.

While it is not a problem seen every day, all it takes is the slightest trigger -an injury, a fight, a response to something startling or scary.  Predatory Drift is a SIZE MATTER! It usually involves a grab and shake, which instantly breaks the small dog's neck.  There is no time to react.  This in not a fight, it does not escalate.  There is a trigger and then it is over.

 

Read more...

Should dogs of different sizes be allowed to play together?

Are off-leash parks and fenced dog parks safe for your small dog?


 

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