The problem is not the dog, but the person.
I always think that the kind of person who teaches the dog is the kind of dog, no matter what breed!
I have seen extremely obedient Erha, Labrador who likes to fight, docile Tibetan mastiff, and of course very obedient poodle.
I have an Alaska (poisoned to death at the age of four), a female. She was taught well since she was a child. Because she is a female, she is generally not bullied by male dogs, and of course she is not afraid when she is bullied.
When walking the dog, you can often see that the poodle wants to fuck it, but it can’t reach it, because every time a poodle approaches, it will stand up. The poodle jumps and jumps to fuck, but it just can’t reach it. The picture is made up by your own imagination.
Some qualified poodle owners will scold a few words at this time, regardless of whether it has any effect, whether it is a real scolding or a fake scolding, all such poodle owners I think are qualified.
However, most owners just ignore it as if they didn’t see it. In addition, poodles are such cunning little things, and they will become more unscrupulous with the tacit consent of their owners.
I have met no less than 10 bad poodles taught by bad owners. They will bite when they can’t have sex.
My Alaskan dog has long hair. It won’t play with small dogs, nor will it bite small dogs. It will never play with or bite small dogs under any circumstances.
Generally, my dog follows me to play or lies next to me. When the poodle wants to have sex with it, it will stand up. The poodle can’t reach it, so it starts to bark at it. After barking and no response, it starts to bite my dog. After biting, my Alaskan dog will not be fierce or bite it (probably because it bites the hair and doesn’t feel it).

But as the owner, I am very annoyed, not the dog, but the owner. This is because my dog doesn’t bully small dogs. If it were a dog with a bad temper, wouldn’t it be a matter of one bite for an Alaskan dog of its size? Would the poodle survive if it really bit it? In this case, whether the owner is around or not, I will scold: Whose poodle is it? Will it stop? The owner is not responsible if it bites it to death! Generally, at this time, my dog will cooperate very well and make a whining sound that feels like “I’m angry”.
Usually at this time, the owner of the poodle will come over in shame and take the dog away.
I encountered this once. The owner came and not only did not take the poodle away, but also scolded me, saying roughly, “What’s so great about raising a big dog? Did my poodle bite your dog or make your dog pregnant with a poodle?” It was a woman who was about 40 or 50 years old.
I got angry and replied: You’d better take good care of your dog! I can afford to pay for the poodle!
Then I untied my dog leash from the dog’s neck, pointed at the poodle and said: Go! (I said this because I know my dog won’t bite. Although it won’t bite, it will chase after me after receiving my instructions) The poodle that was chased ran around barking, and the owner couldn’t catch up. After chasing for about one or two minutes, I called it back and went home. I don’t know where the old woman’s poodle was chased to or not.
In the final analysis, I think it’s not the dog that is annoying, but the owner. Have the owners of poodles who were bitten to death by big dogs ever reflected on why they were bitten to death?
Not all big dogs will actively hurt people, such as golden retrievers, Alaskans, Labradors, Huskies and Samoyeds. So why do the owners of these dogs still use leashes when they know that their dogs will not hurt people? Because leashes give a certain sense of security to some people who don’t understand dogs. Some dog owners even choose to walk their dogs at 12 or 1 in the middle of the night so that their dogs can have fun and not scare people. This is called quality! So as a poodle owner, knowing that your dog likes to fuck the sky, the earth, the air, and people’s legs, ankles, arms, etc., wouldn’t others be disgusted? If you don’t use a leash for such a dog, where is your quality? Let me ask, do you see more big dogs without leashes or more poodles without leashes on the street?
So I think it’s not the dogs that have problems, it’s the people!
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