Does anyone else have a normally well behaved dog that acts crazy at the vet's?

aubriee

<font color=brown><marquee>Chocolate always makes
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Dec 3, 2004
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Does anyone else have a dog that goes bananas everytime he enters the vet's office? I have an Akita that weighs about 80 lbs. He has been through two obedience classes (one individualized one on one for commands and another at a dog park that was more for socialization skills). He is very smart and did wonderfully. He follows his commands with no problem, EXCEPT for when he has to go to the vet. As soon as he enters the office, he forgets every command he's ever learned and acts like an idiot.:mad: Yesterday I took him for his shots and to get his nails trimmed. He was excited, but did fairly well at first and I thought 'thank god, just maybe we'll get out of here without him embarrassing me again'. The vet has a table/scale that lowers and raises. Niko got on it fine, went down when I commanded him to, and stayed lying down while it was being raised. He stayed fairly still while the tech was weighing him and stayed down until she came back in with the clippers and syringes. As soon as she came in, he refused to lie down and started howling at the top of his voice like he was being killed. You could hear him all over the premises.:rolleyes1 I held him by the collar while the tech tried to cut his nails and he continued to howl and tried to roll off the table. Another tech came in and made the comment, "Oh, it's wild Nico". She hugged him, played with him, and tried to get him to calm down. He did for just a minute, then started howling again, so she wrapped her arms around his neck petting him, while I kept trying to down him and held his leash. The original tech was laughing and just petting his side. By this point we had stopped messing with his nails and were just trying to calm him down. He was having none of it, kept his face pointed straight up to the ceiling howling, and acted like we were killing him. The vet finally came in to see what was going on. As soon as Nico saw him and the open door behind him, he easily threw all three of us off, and made a flying leap off the table to leap into the vet's arms. He didn't jump down. He jumped straight up and out with an expression on his face, like 'Help, catch me'. He and the vet both went into the wall with the vet letting Nico slide to the floor. Nico stood up on his hind legs and wrapped both front paws around the vet's neck, blubbering and howling the whole time. He then spotted the open door behind the vet and tried to make a run for it. Unfortunately the vet was in the way and Nico just buried his head in the vet's groin and tried to barrel his way through him with all four feet just spinning. The vet kept trying to push Nico's head out of his groin, saying, "you can't go through me Nico, you can't go through me", while everyone was roaring with laughter. The stupid dog never let up howling the entire time, like he was being killed. He never barked or tried to bite. He just howled and blubbered the entire time and kept trying to get free. My mom had gone with me to the vet's office and told me later that they could hear him all the way out in the lobby and he sounded like we were killing him. The vet finally slipped out and got a bag of dog treats that he fed him the entire time he was getting his shots and nails cut. That was the only way to stop his howling. He didn't give them any trouble after that, but I was so embarrassed by his behavior that I could have killed him. He did the exact same thing in Dec and again last March when he went in. I'd think it was this particular vet, except he acted the same way at his previous vet's. When I got him home yesterday, I took him walking and we went through every one of his commands with no problem. He was as calm and laid back as he could be, obeying every command instantly. I took him to the park where we met several other dogs and again he acted like a perfect gentleman. I took him home and messed with his feet and nails and he just calmly held the paws out to me. He can heel, sit, down, stay, come, fetch, shake, open doors, etc with absolutely no problem. I can take him anywhere else and he is perfectly quiet and well behaved. I get compliments on him all the time about how well behaved he is. I swear the only place he acts like a wild commanche is the vet's office!:mad:
 
:laughing: Poor baby! We don't always have the vet clip our dogs' nails, but if they are already there, we have them do it. At our vet, they always do it behind the scenes when I'm not with them, I guess they think they act a little better about it if Mommy or Daddy aren't around - less histrionics. Kinda like kids, they throw less of a fit about certain things if the parents aren't around to make a scene for. :confused3 One of my dogs acts like getting a shot is the worst thing ever, but mine are smaller so they don't get very far trying to make a break for it! :rotfl2:

Sounds like you have a nice doggie, just be glad he only acts the fool at the vet -- I'm sure they are used to it! :thumbsup2
 
:laughing: Poor baby! We don't always have the vet clip our dogs' nails, but if they are already there, we have them do it. At our vet, they always do it behind the scenes when I'm not with them, I guess they think they act a little better about it if Mommy or Daddy aren't around - less histrionics. Kinda like kids, they throw less of a fit about certain things if the parents aren't around to make a scene for. :confused3 One of my dogs acts like getting a shot is the worst thing ever, but mine are smaller so they don't get very far trying to make a break for it! :rotfl2:

Sounds like you have a nice doggie, just be glad he only acts the fool at the vet -- I'm sure they are used to it! :thumbsup2

What makes it worse is that I also have a little 13 lb shih tzu that doesn't obey nearly as well as my akita, but at the vet she is never any trouble. She never makes a sound or acts nervous in the least. She doesn't even flinch when she gets her nails cut or her shots. She loves the petting and treats they give her every time she enters the door. My 80 lb akita just goes hysterical howling and acting like a wuss every time he enters the vet's office.:rotfl: It's just so embarassing. If anyone tried to enter my house without my permission, he'd eat them alive, out in public he's always a perfectly well behaved gentleman, but take him to the vet and he's just a big howling, coward.
 
At least yours walks in the door. Mine stops at the door just stands there I have to pick her up carry her inside. Once inside she just shakes and tries to bury her head in my lap. She is a great dog otherwise doesn't behave that way anywhere else she goes. I'm always jealous of the people with dogs that act normal at the vet.
 

The stupid dog never let up howling the entire time, like he was being killed. He never barked or tried to bite. He just howled and blubbered the entire time and kept trying to get free.

I'm sure that was embarrassing, but in the grand scheme of things, your dog was pretty well behaved. I've been to the vet's more than once where my entire visit was accompanied by a dog's howls - and I was taking in a cat. ;) Most dogs lose it a bit at the vet's, but losing it by howling and trying to get away is a whole different thing from losing it by snarling and trying to take the vet's arm off. I don't think the staff really minds a dog's misbehavior unless the dog's a biter.

Even then, in my experience, they understand. I don't think our dog ever bit a vet, but there were a couple of times she tried! The vet was totally cool about it, pointing out that they were hurting her, so it's not surprising she wanted to hurt them back. Our dog was one of the ones who looked well behaved, but if they did something that hurt (like accidentally pinching her while doing her nails), different story.
 
My 2 collies I had prior to the ones I have now, I showed. Both in obedience and agility competitions. At one time one of my "girls" was ranked 4th in the country in obedience. Plus I taught obedience classes.

That being said, when they walked into the vets office, they howled and whined, uncontrollably. Both of them. It was so embarrassing. I always hoped someone wouldn't come in who was a member of my obedience class. LOL

Poor babies. They are afraid. I would try and pet and comfort them. Sometimes it worked, sometimes not.

The 2 collies I have now are bad too. One whimpers the other barks non-stop.
 
Poor dog - sorry he gets like that. The vet does strange things to dogs. My very sweet 10yr old mix who is sweet as pie with us has had to be muzzled at the vet since it stresses her out so much.

She has been through obedience and is such an intelligent dog - I find that my 2 little dogs, who aren't as smart as she is and are often fresh at home, just walk right in and are fine. They love their vet - LOL!
 
No but I have two kids that play up as soon as you get to my Mother In Laws. ;)

Kirsten
 
I have read this over and over and I am sorry that you go through this at the vet but...:rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:

I keep thinking how he howled with his head up in the air!
 
my dog shakes like crazy at the vet. I even had someone ask me what was wrong with her the last time we were there. She never did that until a few visits back when they had to express her anal glands. I think she felt violated :lmao: I think she must remember and fears it's going to happen again.
 
My parent's have an 11 year old chocolate lab that is an absolute LOVE. He is the most mellow, well behaved dog. He is PETRIFIED of the vet. It's like he knows when he's going?

When I was house sitting for them last summer, he had some horrible skin infection.some kind of excema. He was miserable. It's chronic, but I didn't know how to help him so I put him in the car to take him to the vet.

I NEVER saw anything like it. He was FREAKING out. Crying, screaming..in the car..before I could even get him in the building. I felt so horrible. My mom said he does that all the time. He was shaking uncontrollably. My heart was just breaking for him.

Once we were in, one of the techs that knows him greeted him and he calmed down a bit. It sure was strange though!
 
Poor baby! We have a dog who is his normal sweet self, but also have a cat that spits, claws, bites, and hisses at the vet. Very embarrassing. I feel your pain!
 
I'm glad I'm not the only one that laughed! My dog <------- (that one, in my avatar) L:lovestrucVES the vet! Simple, but true. He likes any opportunity to socialize. He actually kissed the vet one time after she gave him a shot! ...but my mother had a dog that hated the vet. I had to laugh at the OP's story, because he, too, leaped off the table and across the room into my arms! In addition, the dog that was afraid of everything at home, without fail, started a fight with another dog in the lobby every time he went!
 
Growing up we always had issues at the vet, I swear the vet had our files tagged! First, we had a cat-Midnight- that was an indoor/outdoor cat. He hated car rides, but once we got to the vet, he was much worse. He would scratch, try to bite, howl and hiss at the vet, my mom, my siblings...everyone but me. :confused3 For some reason, I could hold him and he wouldn't do any of that. He only went once a year for shots..I felt bad for my mom when she had to take him to the vet without me when I was in college...they ended up sedating him!

Then there was our dog, Peppie- a golden retriever mix. He had to be quarantined at the vet for 10 days due to a stray dog biting a neighborhood kid (the kid said it was our dog, but Peppie wouldn't hurt a fly) and since his rabies shot was a month overdue, he was quarantined. After about 3 days, we get a call from the vet, early Saturday morning...Peppie was AWOL. He had broken out of the kennel:eek: (We lived in FL, and it was an outside kennel). The vet was next to an orange grove and thought that Peppie was in there, but he would not come to them. As soon as he heard my mom's car come down the lane in the grove, he came running out and stopped by the road to wait for us to pick him up. We took him back to the vet and saw that he had chewed through the wood door and jumped through the screen in the window. Needless to say....our animals were the talk of the vet that year:rotfl2:
 
:lmao::rotfl2:

Look at the bright side, it could be opposite and he could act like this all the time!

Thanks for the smile and laugh this evening!
 
I work with animals so I have lots of experience with these things! It seems like animals are one side of the spectrum or the other. They are so hyped up and excited that they don't behave or they are so scared that they don't behave! :) I never take it personally, they are out of their natural element. When pets come in to our hospital and they are there for a routine visit, I try to lavish them with positive praise an attention. I also freely give treats, they don't have to work very hard or do tricks for me. It's kind of like kids at the Dr. office, they get a sticker even if they are not the best behaved.
Rest assured, most of us don't judge an owner by their pets behavior!
Good luck!
 
I worked as a vet tech for 6 years. At our clinic, huskies were sort of a joke because almost all of them howled through the entire visit. Your story sounds very familiar. The staff thought it was sort of amusing and nobody was really annoyed or thought the goofy behavior reflected in any way on the owner. I know I always felt a little embarrassed myself when I was trying to trim claws or draw blood or whatever and the animal was howling like I was killing it. Anyway, I have to say the staff (techs, vets, receptionists) ALL preferred the howlers to the biters!

My cousin had to sedate her little terrier when she brought him in for shots. I could take my very young (at the time) kids over to her house and they could play safely with this sweet, fun loving dog, but bring him to the vet's and he turned into a nasty biting machine. We had to muzzle him, remove him from the exam room to the back and restrain him continuously when he came in for shots. AWFUL at the vet, wonderful at home.
 
Don't worry, we don't take it personally. ;) At least most animals like me when I'm not poking and examining them. It's no different than white coat syndrome at the doctors, but animals can verbalize what they feel.
Your vet doesn't hold it against you and realizes what great work you have done with the obedience classes and training at home. :dogdance:
 
We have the same problem..... our dog stresses out so much he spikes a fever! Makes it impossible to take him for his shots.

We have been told to give him a gravol pill to calm him down before we take him in. He was fine till we had him fixed, now even driving by if we slow down and turn near it he starts to shake! It weird!
 












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