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Chasing animals or anything that moves is
one of the strongest natural instincts in dogs. It is an innate
behaviour as natural to dogs as walking is to a human. It is
also be an expression of the hunt - prey catching.
Dominant as well as fear driven dogs can exhibit
predatory aggressive behaviour and although most do chase and
use aggression many do not. They simply go through the motions,
but don’t attack or bite at the end of the chase, although
this can often change the more they practice the hunt.
The Wolf, your dog’s relation, will
pursue as a norm, its prey the Bison, Moose and other wild
animals. Pursuit and hunting behaviour is natural.
Many
domestic dogs redirect that pursuit instinct into another activity
or onto other moving targets. The habit normally gets out of
control when the dog begins to chase other animals or people
and although the chase starts out as instinctual, each successful
chase, with the reward of a horse or jogger trying to escape,
encourages the dog.
There
is no doubt that the endorphins (‘happy hormone’)
- released in the pursuers brain puts the dog on a high. Dogs
become more and more excited -it’s probably the nearest
the domestic dog gets to being a wolf in suburbia - fulfilling
its natural drives.However, caught in the early stages you
have a much better chance of preventing or stopping the habit
altogether. However, at this centre, we tend to see dogs have
embedded predatory behaviour and we explain and demonstrate
using the most modern techniques how to stop this.