Being able to tell when your Siberian Husky is bothered by something or someone in his environment is important to his well-being and your safety. A scared dog can often bite out of fear, so it’s good to be able to read your dog’s body language. But knowing your Husky is stressed or anxious is not enough – you need to know how to react to your dog’s fear or stress in order to help him overcome it. Doing the wrong thing can make it worse. The following are four things to do when your Husky is stressed.
#1 – Find The Trigger
First and foremost, you must figure out what is causing your Husky to be anxious, afraid or stressed. Sometimes it’s obvious – if he’s lunging and barking on his lead at the dog across the street, it’s a good bet it’s the dog. But other times it may not be as obvious. Pay attention to your dog’s body language to give you clues. Is your Husky staring at anything? Running or cowering in the opposite direction of someone or some object? Acting hyper-vigilant (looking everywhere frantically – this may indicate it’s the environment that has him stressed)? If you can’t figure it out, have a professional dog trainer help you.
#2 – Remove The Trigger
At the beginning, you need to just remove the trigger for the well-being of your dog. The more your Husky is exposed to it, the more stressed he will become. So once you know what the trigger is, avoid it as much as possible until you have a plan to get him over his fears the right way.
#3 – Don’t Force Your Husky To Confront Her Fears
Many times, people think, “If I force her to the object she fears, she will see it’s fine and not be afraid anymore.” Dogs don’t work that way. If you force your Husky into a situation that stresses her, it can escalate to the point where she becomes fear aggressive. She may redirect on you, or attack the object/person/dog that is causing her response.
#4 – Train Him
The only way to help your Husky is to use training to overcome his fears. There are many ways of doing this and what technique you use will depend on the trigger, your dog and you – choose the method that works best for the situation. Definitely get the help of a professional trainer that has experience overcoming fear using positive methods. Correction will only make your dog fear the situation or thing more.