Pure Dog Talk

682 – Akitas: Guardian Dogs of the Samurai


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Akitas: Guardian Dogs of the Samurai
[caption id="attachment_13805" align="alignleft" width="441"] Colleen Sullivan and one of her Sondaisa Akitas.[/caption]
Colleen Sullivan joins host Laura Reeves for a Love the Breeds episodes on Akitas.
The breed, one of six national monuments in Japan, was introduced to the US by Hellen Keller in 1937. Originally used as guard dogs and companions for the Samurai warriors, the breed is quiet, clean and very devoted to their owners.
Sullivan notes that the breed is best for owners who are willing to be leaders in the relationship and that same sex aggression with other dogs and wariness with strangers is par for the course with the breed.
Sullivan agreed with Laura’s description of the breed as “people with fur” and treating them that way.
“They think too much sometimes,” Sullivan said. “If you hesitate, if you're not a calm, confident person, yeah, you're suspicious (to the dog). You're not gonna walk up to some stranger or allow some stranger to give you a hug and a kiss. You know, you're just not. It's like dogs there's Golden Retrievers the extrovert and then there's Akita the introvert.
"One of the things we all have in common that have owned an Akita is pride. They’re such magnificent dogs, magnificent beings. They're like artwork but with power."
Easy grooming, with the exception of “blowing coat,” and a cat-like insistence on cleanness make the breed easy to live with in Sullivan’s experience.
Training Akitas requires some creativity, Sullivan said, and an ability to make the dog think the work is their idea. Consistency is key to training.
“You can't let your dog jump all over you one time and then get mad at it the next time,” Sullivan said. “You have to mean what you say.”
Bloat can be an issue with the breed. Sullivan encourages owners to be educated about this disease.
“I hesitate to make this statement, but one of the things that I do because the Akita is such a primitive breed, it’s one of the oldest breeds, is I look at more the wolves and the coyotes and how they exercise and how they eat. All the exercise is done because they're chasing their prey. Then they're gorging themselves and they're getting all these bodily fluids and all of that, and then they rest. So all my (dogs’) exercise is before eating, they get lots of fluid on their food when they're eating. And then rest.”
 
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