LokiGem said:
Will Loki always feel insecure around intact males? Why does he act aggressive towards them? Other than avoiding intact males, how can I curb this behavior? I would hate for him to become an outcast at the park because he has enjoyed his playtimes there since he was a pup.
I know this is an old thread, but I see no other responses.
The intact males should not be at the dog park. Loki is probably not initiating aggression towards the intact males -- they are probably aggressively challenging him in very subtle ways that you cannot sense.
At the dog park I use, 90% of the time when an intact male is brought in it will conflict with another dog. 50% of those times I can read the dog and see it coming. Most people have no experience, and/or they fail to look at these dogs as animals, so they think it came out of "nowhere". Or they don't realize the intact male was actually the aggressing first (although maybe not physically).
I am not saying that no intact males exist that are not aggressive. But among the sampling I am exposed to at the ball park, it would appear that way.
Here is an example -- intact male stares down another dog, the other dog growls. Dog park people think the other dog "started it".
Another example -- intact male mounts a nuetered male. Dog park patrons laugh becuase it is cute/funny, and then become horrified that the nuetered male snaps at the intact male.
Another example -- intact male is brought to the park and is obviously aggressive to even the most inexperienced dog owner. It doesn't attack, but uses behavioral cues. The owner acknowledges that the dog gets a little aggressive toward neutered males, and the owner seems to manage the problem well. But over time, situation presents that is unmanageable for this experienced owner and a fight results.
You should not have to condition Loki, the solution is that intact males should not be in the dog park. If you are at the dog park and an intact male is brought in, keep your dog away from it and remove your dog if you have to. I recall my dog and play with him until I see the intact male interract with the others, and I get a read on the dog. If I decide to let my dog play at will, I watch carefully and if the intact male shows non-physical aggressive behavior (like staring), I recall my dog and remove him if I have to.
I find that trying to educate the owner of the aggressive intact male on the dog park ettiquette is pointless. Most are in denial, or don't care. Sometimes the owner is as big a jerk as his dog and should probably be neutered as well.
I can recall many instances of physical aggression that involved an intact male. After that, unspayed females. After that, neutered males & females.
My experience also correlates aggression incidents with breed stereotypes -- pit bulls are definately #1. Incidents with Rotties, Dobies, GSD, Akita are very prevalent as well. I have seen few incidents with Boxers as the aggressor (unfortunately our guys are often the recipient). But I have seen intact male boxers initiate an incident. :(