Well it is your responsibility to either put him in a cage, or keep your dogs out of the room. You are smarter than your dogs. If they know how to open the door, figure out how to LOCK it so they can't get it open.
Well it is your responsibility to either put him in a cage, or keep your dogs out of the room. You are smarter than your dogs. If they know how to open the door, figure out how to LOCK it so they can't get it open.
Well there /is/ no lock on it. But we're getting one tomorrow, and now what I'm really worried about is the dog's behavior.
R.I.P. Hedwig... I miss you baby birdie. Fly strong at RB.
R.I.P. Sputnik and Magic. I hope they have spinney-wheels at the bridge.
Saphira (cocker spaniel), Snuggles (white german shepherd mix), Ocean (blue parakeet), and Evra (ball python), and Ghost (kitten)
a small flapping bird will catch the attention of almost any dog, and most dogs will get over exited and accentdnly hurt the bird. I keep Happy Muzzled when my parakeet is out, Misty is trained to leave him alone(her prey drive is not as strong as Happys)
Shayna
Mom to:
Misty-10 year old BC Happy-12 year old BC Electra-6 year old Toller Rusty- 9 year old JRT X Gem and Gypsy- 10 month ACD X's Toivo-8 year old pearl 'Tiel Marley- 3 year old whiteface Cinnamon pearl 'Tiel Jenny- the rescue bunny Peepers the Dwarf Hotot Miami- T. Marcianus
"sister" to:
Perky-13 year old mix Ripley-11 year old mix
and the Prairie Clan Gerbils
What a cute bird...What kind of dog you have?![]()
she's a mixed breed, we're not exactly sure but she looks like a White German Shepherd mix.
R.I.P. Hedwig... I miss you baby birdie. Fly strong at RB.
R.I.P. Sputnik and Magic. I hope they have spinney-wheels at the bridge.
Saphira (cocker spaniel), Snuggles (white german shepherd mix), Ocean (blue parakeet), and Evra (ball python), and Ghost (kitten)
It isn't a behavioral problem. It's instinct!!! Dogs are carnivores and, as such, almost all dogs have a relatively high prey drive. Because of this, almost ALL dogs will try to attack a prey animal flapping around helplessly. There is a natural urge for them to attack the lesser animal in the flock, and this is why you need to physically separate your birds and dogs.
I NEVER EVER EVER let my birds loose in a room with Giselle or Lucky. Even if they are muzzled, they can still grab the tails of the birds, knock the bird's head against the floor, and essentially kill the bird. To prevent accidental deaths, cage your birds whenever your dog is in the room. If you want to let your birds loose, lock the dogs out and be sure you are in the room to supervise the bird anyways. Birds left unsupervised in an empty room are dangers to themselves. Good Luck and I'm sorry for your loss.
As the last poster mentioned, dog are natural born hunters, some have stronger prey drives than others, I have greyhounds who are former racers, and one has a very high prey drive they were gradually introduced to my cats which I adopted later and corrected if they tried to chase them, praised when they acted appropriately, they needed constant socialization and supervised contact with the cats to the point where they now view the cats as dogs and accepted them as part of their pack. If one of the dogs had not been able to accept the cat, I would have been forced to make a decision either to return the newly adopted cat or keep them permanently seperated, Outdoors the dogs do not view a stray cat as the same, they view it the same as any rabbit or squirrel, simply put as prey. I could never do the same with a bird as the interactions between the species are no where near the same, plus the movements are totally different. When my ferret was still alive, he was kept in his cage, only one of my dogs with a low prey drive was allowed to be near him and even then it was under strict supervision. I hope you understand that what your dog did was not out of any form of aggression but out of instinct, he is exactly the same dog as he was the day before this happened.
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