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Advice on how to deal with your dog’s humping habit.
My dog Sam does weird things around other dogs, including humping them during play. If a dog has been neutered, I don’t know if that’s necessarily a bad thing. Is it a nice thing to look at? No. But it makes me nervous, and I wish I had a way to tell if he’s just playing. But if dog humping really is a canine social faux pas, what can I do? Please help—I am super excited to bring my dog to the dog park, but I don’t want my dog (or me) to become a dog-park pariah.
Dog humpingopens in a new tab can make everyone feel weird; it’s just so awkward. Murphy’s law—anything that can go wrong, will go wrong—often seems to come into play as well: the dog your dog has chosen to, um, befriend probably belongs to the one person at the park whose opinion matters to you—maybe the cute single pet parent you’d like to meet, or the super-critical person whos regularly frequents the dog park. In the time it takes your heart to sink, the situation goes from, “Woo-hoo, our dogs are playing!” to “What is going on with those two?”
What’s going on is pretty normal behavior, actually. Lots of dogs—males and females alike—do it. Humping (more properly called mounting) tends to happen when a dog’s arousal level is very high. When you say that your dog does “weird things around other dogs,” it sounds as though he’s overly excitedopens in a new tab, and that’s likely the reason he’s mounting other dogs.
No less than 7 animal behaviorists weigh in on what’s behind all of this bumping and grinding.
Humping is often associated with play, greetings or other situations that lead to high arousal with dogs. By the way, the words “arousal” and “excitement” in this context have no erotic connotation, but it’s clearly not a winning strategy to shout, “Nobody freak out—it’s not sexual!” (There’s no reason to go from awkward to crazy-awkward, after all.)
As a rule, mounting upsets people more than it upsets dogs. However, like most rules, there are exceptions, and some dogs won’t tolerate being mounted. The humpees who object to it may make their feelings clear with a growl or a snap. Then, things can go from uncomfortable to problematic. Even if the humper is trying to play, the other dog may react in a way that leads to tension or even aggression between the dogs.
Because so many behaviors in play are borrowed from other contexts, such as fighting, hunting and mating, determining whether a behavior is appropriate play, awkward and inappropriate attempts to play, or something else altogether is not always completely straightforward.
A good guideline is that it’s only play if everyone involved is having fun. That means you should intervene and stop the behavior if a dog is correcting your dogopens in a new tab, trying to avoid the interaction or clearly not having a good time.
If the other dog doesn’t care and the other people don’t either, the mounting need not be an issue, especially if it’s short-lived. Often, great play happens after the initial excitement is over. If the humping is relentless or if the recipient of this behavior keeps trying to escape, you should intervene and break it up.
Interrupting a humping dog is easier said than done. If your dog won’t come when calledopens in a new tab or back off when told to “leave itopens in a new tab,” you may have to go to him and gently lead him away by the collar or with a leash.
This simple dog training skill could save your dog’s life.
Then, redirect him to another dog or person to play with, try to get him interested in a toy, or remove him from the situation entirely. Your dog may be one of the many who gets very excited at the dog parkopens in a new tab with so many dogs present but is capable of controlling his emotions and behavior when just one or two other dogs are around.
For the record, dogs share none of our embarrassment about humping and don’t care when we give them nicknames like Wednesday (Hump Day), Humpty-Dumpty or other names that clearly reference their tendency to mount (Olympus, Fuji, Everest). Unless a dog is upset by it, we would be wise to take their low-key approach when humping happens.
Karen B. London, Ph.D., is a Certified Applied Animal Behaviorist and Certified Professional Dog Trainer who specializes in working with dogs with serious behavioral issues, including aggression, and has also trained other animals including cats, birds, snakes, and insects. She writes the animal column for the Arizona Daily Sun and is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Northern Arizona University. She is the author of six books about training and behavior, including her most recent, Treat Everyone Like a Dog: How a Dog Trainer’s World View Can Improve Your Lifeopens in a new tab.
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