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Posted on Tue, Jun 7, 2011 : 5:55 a.m.

Excessive barking due to separation anxiety can be daunting, but a simple approach might help end it

By Julia Levitt

Levitt-June-2011-barking-dogs-in-car

Juila Levitt | Contributor

Dogs bark for many reasons — they want to go out; they’re asking for attention; they want you to throw their ball; or “Look! Someone is at the door!” Or maybe they see another dog and want to say ”Hello,” or want to defend their turf.

There can be many reasons for a dog to bark, and all of this barking can drive us crazy!

In future blogs I’ll address many of these situations, but in today’s blog I will address one specific dog barking scenario: when a dog is left alone and barks all day.

Last summer I received a call from Barbara and her adult son Jonathan. Dr. Jess Franklin, their veterinarian, recommended they call me for what they reported to be separation anxiety.

Their beagle, Scout, was barking and howling all day long when Barbara and Jonathan were away at work — and their neighbors weren’t going to put up with it anymore. Scout, as with most beagles, has an exceptionally loud howl!

How do you stop a dog from barking and howling when no one is there to correct the dog?

The answer in this case was not to focus on barking or separation anxiety.

Instead, we focused on walking Scout — the right way — with no pulling or running. Barbara and Jonathan had not been walking Scout regularly, so this was new for both the dog and his owners. Here’s how Barbara tells the rest of the story…

“About four or five days into walking twice a day, I was getting ready to leave for work, and Jonathan had already left. Scout usually went to the door or the window right next to it and started whining and barking right away, but on this particular day Scout was lying on his bed in the kitchen. I went to the door, opened it, and Scout was still lying on his bed. He never came to the door, whined, barked, or anything. I was so flabbergasted!

Julia had said that the dog knows you are going to take him for a walk, and when you come back he's going to get another walk, and that alleviates all of his anxiety about separation. Who would have thought! We enjoy walking with Scout now. Scout doesn't tug on the leash or walk in front of us, and he doesn't go pulling on the leash when he sees people or other dogs.”

Dogs bark for lots of different reasons, and shouting at the dog to “Shut up!” isn’t usually the most effective solution. Stay tuned to this blog for future stories about barking dogs!

Julia Levitt is the founder of In Harmony Dog Training (www.inharmonydogtraining.com) in Ann Arbor. She can be reached at julia@inharmonydogtraining.com or at 734-645-4707.

Comments

Melinda Regner

Wed, Jun 15, 2011 : 8:40 p.m.

What it the world! I didn't even blink an eye, thinking If I would miss even a single thing about dog barking, I won't be able to do the training correctly. Then this? OK, that's fine with me. Please post ASAP the next one.. Thanks though!