Reader Q & A: Are Older Dogs More Difficult to Train?

Thanks to those of you who are submitting questions. It takes time to get to them all so I’ll just start with a couple of recent inquiries:

Is it more difficult to train an older dog?
It depends. In traditional training, most trainers prefer to start dogs after they are about six months of age. This is for a few reasons. Dogs that are older have a better attention span, these dogs are usually settled into the household and have completed their vaccination schedule. The animals are usually neutered by this time as well.

In my view, that is an older dog and I prefer to start training pets the moment they arrive in the new home for a multitude of reasons which I’ll get into in a minute.

Dogs that are older have established patterns of behavior and many behavior problems are really solidly entrenched. Having said that, you really can train a old dog new tricks–but you often have to untrain bad habits and retrain the owners…which is the hard part!

The oldest dog I remember having in one of my group programs was a bassett hound at the ripe age of 12 years! She learned but moved in slow motion–as any species ages the reflexes and responses slow down. It took her a bit longer to process things and she moved in slower motion than her classmates but she still learned and it was a pleasure to have the whole family participate and to illustrate that it is never too late to get good behavior or to train basic manners or obedience.

Personally, I think every animal should be enrolled in school because it is mentally stimulating and teaches them the rules for successful living in a human environment. Plus, good manners allows animals to experience a fuller life–one with travel, dog and human friends, and a variety of environmental enrichment opportunities.

This year I have focused on teach Pet Parenting courses. Puppy training is easier in most instances but harder because puppies have the attention span of a gnat. So the training is vastly different than working with an adolescent or older animal.

However the perks in training a young animal is that it is very positive and nips the behavior problems in the bud (no pun intended…) and so life within the household is pleasurable instead of a pain.

In early pet parenting classes the young critters learn not to nip, to chew only on appropriate items, house training and toileting is not a problem that ruins the carpet or flooring, and other behavior such as jumping, excessive barking, not coming when called, or dashing through doors or gates just don’t become issues–because the young animal learns what is required.

So, you can train an older dog but the only reason it is difficult is because you have to retrain owners (who have to practice those changes for 30-60 day to form new habits) and extinguish bad behavior. It is a matter of perspective–personally my answer is no–but I’ve been training a long, long time. For you, the answer is probably yes…but give it a shot, the results are worth it!

Kevin Richardson’s Lion Whisperer Marketing Campaign and a Lion Attack Video for the Other Side of the Story

I found the lovely marketing photo of Kevin Richardson the “lion whisperer” at quite a few blogs but the original source seems to be the Daily Mail.

The snap reminds me of one of the lions I knew by the name of Zamba–who you might know about as it was recently made into a book.

Male lions can be affectionate but can also get into a grump really quickly but check out the lovely photos from the Daily Mail and you can source the original article by GLENYS ROBERTS, too.

The reality of lion instinct and behavior is show in this video where the lion trainer is attacked and the video begins with an assistant in the corner showing the lion clamped onto the trainer’s neck. Contingency plans are critical to mitigation of such events.

Had they had a C02 fire extinguisher or other plans they might have prevented the escalation. Most animal attacks, in this case a lion attack, are the fault of the humans involved–with rare exception.

The lion was not killed humanely and you can hear it vocalizing as it dies–not a palatable video but one to balance out the reality for when you see such coverage as above in the lion whisperer.

On that note, these videos show young animals exhibiting behavior that most trainers would not allow due to the dangers.

You can see how the older lionesses exhibit the same behavior in this video with Kevin Richardson. Most bona fide experts will teach the animals at a young age that they are not to jump and will redirect the behavior into a rubbing or more mundane replacement–called an incompatible behavior.

If you watch the video via the link in this paragraph you’ll hear the camera guy telling the zoo people to hurry up because the video camera has only four minutes left (insensitive schmuck–BTW other countries do not have the same management standards that we do here in the USA) and see the captive lionesses attacking the live donkeys. In case you don’t get why I posted this, the jumping behavior is the same as you see with Kevin Richardson. Also, in all my years I have seen MORE lioness attacks than lion attacks.

In other news, this was a poor choice–a fight between midgets and lions kills 28…you would think it was bogus but it is a BBC source.

Back in early 2001 or 2002 one of the members of the Mountain Lion Response Team took these photos of a mountain lion watching a family through the window.

My point here is to stress that wild animals are not good pets nor are they play things for human enjoyment. They are wild in nature and although you can train them, build relationships with them, the relationship comes with risk and is not the same as the relationships you have with domestic animals that have been selectively breed for life with humans.