New rescue and I attacked by a dog on a walk

sunshine74

New member
Hi all. I’m writing this from the human emergency room after getting my broken/crushed finger bite washed out and splinted (so please excuse typos)

Background: H is a 45lb lab/pointer/who knows mix that we foster failed 6 weeks ago. She is sweet and goofy but extremely timid and has demonstrated some dog reactivity (on and off leash). We have been working diligently and are getting to the point where the dogs she reacts to on walks seem “random” (I know they aren’t but haven’t figured out the pattern for whom she calmly ignores and whom she lunges at). She has had no off leash interactions since her first two snapping events (she was in heat, now recently spayed).

Events: So H and I were on a walk and I spotted a little boy was running after his dog. Dog was unleashed and running across busy streets. I offered to help him at least find the dog (didn’t want dog getting hit by a car). We see the dog and dog is HUGE with no collar/leash (kid said he bolted out of the front door) and he is getting cursed out by another woman so
I slowly approached to see if I could help him. As soon as we got close (6ish ft) his dog turned on H and clamped down on her neck. I tried everything I know (loud noises, poking back of the dog, picking up back legs and “wheelbarrowing” the dog backwards) but nothing worked so instinct kicked in as my poor baby is screaming and yelping and I went to pry his jaws off. It worked but I got bit in the process.

Poor kid witnessed the whole thing. After I broke them up I didn’t want this dog with no collar or leash going back after my dog so I handed the kid my dog’s leash and told him to go across the street while I sat on his dog. Kid’s mom then came down the street, nervously asked me whose blood was on her dog, I told her mine and my dogs, then she looks at the dog and says “they’re going to put you down now”. Took her a minute to get the harness on her dog but as soon as she had him secured I bolted across the street, got H and left.

I raced H to emergency vet and she SOMEHOW escaped without any bite wounds (turns out all
the blood on her was mine). I was not so lucky but think my intervention protected her from worse so I’ll take it.

Question: how do I help her through this? We are still in the settle phase (6 weeks into knowing each other), she has serious separation anxiety we were also working on and now I am sure she doesn’t trust me or my husband (rightfully so ugh). Do I go back to business as usual with controlled exposures or keep her away from other dogs for a while (how long)? Are there ways to help this trauma be short term and not long? Or is it a wait and see game?

Any thoughts would be appreciated. I feel BEYOND guilty for putting my sweet girl in harm’s way and am pretty shaken up and worried about her.
 
@sunshine74 I can’t help a lot as I’ve never been in a situation like this, but at the very least I would take a few weeks of decompression time. Try to avoid triggers for a while, give her lots of mental stimulation inside and go out of your way to find locations where she can be on a long line and just smell, vs heeling or worrying about dogs.

Wishing you guys the best!
 
@trogers Thank you so much. She is acting pretty par for the course inside this am. Walked her in our back alley and she wanted to go onto main street but sidewalk is like Frogger with dogs instead of cars so we are going to hang back here for a bit.

She gets massively car sick so I try to avoid taking her anywhere we can’t walk to (live in dense urban area) but might have to trade off her puking for more unpopulated walks. Appreciate your input!
 
@sunshine74 I feel like this is normally a wait and see situation. When our dog got bitten we've seen it get worse over time, despite him originally being mostly calm in his group lesson. Right after the bite (no medical attention was needed) we went to our group class. Took him two weeks to go from being able to walk past to not being able to stand the husky in our group anymore and finally to not even being able to see him without being tense and reacting at the tiniest look or movement.

I would however in your case just treat it as if you had a major setback. Better safe than sorry. Go back to the biggest distance you can create and start working with her from there. If it was not needed you are not ruining the progress already made, but if it was and you did not take precautions you could damage a lot more than has already been done.

These kind of situations really suck, and you tried to do what you thought was right. I hope you and your girl are going to be alright.
 
@kaye1979 Thank you so much for this. Will go slow and try to seperate my fears from hers. She might actually be the more resilient one in this (but I’m also the one getting rabies injections so...lol)
 
@sunshine74 No problem. I can only imagine how this must feel for you. You got injured as well after all, so maybe it is also good for your own peace of mind to build up slowly. I wish you the best of luck.
 
@sunshine74 So this almost exact thing happened to me and Koda, only the other dog was on a leash, the owner left me there and the other dog never actually got a grip on Koda. It bit me multiple times in the legs trying to get at Koda who had wedged between me and a barrier to try and protect her from this dog. (Healthcare is free in my country so in these situations I always think it's better for me to get bitten than Koda)

I say business as usual, it's what I would have done if I could have walked. I was unable to walk her for almost 2 months, my mum couldn't walk her and I could only get someone to come around here and there to take her out for me.

By the time I was back on my feet and walking. Koda was extremely reactive to other dogs in all situations. I think the lack of practice, the trauma and fright of the situation (I went down and couldn't get back up, 2 ladies walking there own dog found me on the ground with Koda standing guard) coupled with the anxiety I was having over meeting strange dogs tipped her right over the edge. Honestly I was more the problem than she was, once I checked myself on how anxious I was acting, she improved a lot. Make sure you are still your same calm self

I really think it's like they say with horses, if you get thrown off get straight back on. Keep working with your dog, keeping doing whatever you were doing and don't change it. Dogs live for routine, hopefully this won't even be a blip on the radar of your dog's life in a few more days

Hope your finger is ok ☺️
 

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