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From a Wolf
When you grow up in a circus family, working with animals feels like a birthright. All the most important adults of my childhood were animal trainersâand the kids naturally followed in their footsteps. As a toddler, I snuggled and bottlefed tiger cubs. As a preschooler, I rode elephants, chatted with bears, cleaned up after monkeys, and handled snakes like it was all the normal, everyday business of a four-year-old. As a young boy, I studied the ways my dad and my uncle moved when they worked the big cats, mimicking how their feet practically danced through the enclosureâalways on their toes, ready to react.
It was a nomadic, strange, and sometimes lonely life for a kid, but it was never dull.
In time, with total immersion and plenty of opportunities to practice, I picked up the skills of the family business. I learned to train animals of all sizes and temperaments, to respect them, to read their body language, to know when to push for a little more trust or cooperation and when to call it a day. I learned to move deliberately, knowing the animals were reading my body language, too. By the time I was ten I could do a fair job of working with most species, but the ones that were my closest allies, my playmates, and even my private source of pocket money were dogs.
I had a knack for training them, so much so that by around the third grade Iâd figured out I could use my skills to do private training for the residents of whatever town we were living in (and there were a lot of them). I made up a few hand-colored flyers, but the bread and butter of my business was to catch a dog in the act of misbehavingâjumping up on people, not coming when called, counter surfing, being destructive or aggressive to other dogs, or just not responding in general. If I saw a dog had a behavior issue, then I knew I could help. Iâd march up to the person at the other end of the leash (or the front door if I spotted the dog in the yard) and offer to helpâfor a small fee. Most people were so surprised at my confidence-to-size ratio that they would give me a shot. And so I made canine friends and left behind better-trained dogs pretty much wherever I went.
When I got a little older, the excitement and the bigger jobs that came with working large, exotic animals caught my attention, and I traveled to every continent except Antarctica, and of course to Hollywood, honing my skills and training wildlife for television shows, movies, commercials, and music videos. I built a foundation of knowledge and experience that qualified me to train just about any living creature, from the colossal elephant to the mighty wolf to the lowly cockroach. Ultimately, though, after working within earshot of a high-kill animal shelter in Southern California, I realized that the animals I most wanted to work with were the dogs barking in those kennels. I had been scoping out dogsâ behavior problems and helping to resolve them since I was a kid. For those dogs the stakes were sky-highânothing less than life and death. It was impossible to ignore them.
The way I gravitated toward dogs, the choice I made to follow that inclination and make their rescues and forever-home placements my lifeâs work, was an organic, easy decision. I get dogs. I feel a natural affinity with them, a simple joy in their company, and an overwhelming impulse to protect them when theyâre misunderstood or mistreated.
That connection isnât unique to me, and it didnât just happen overnight or even over my lifetime. For thousands of years, the bonds between humans and canines have been forming and deepening. Our species rely on each other, and even as the range of appearances, temperaments, and skills of dog breeds widens, in many ways weâre still living the outcomes of the time when ancient humans and dogsâ oldest ancestorsâwolvesâfirst forged a tenuous partnership. We still have work to do. And we still have issues, big ones.
The heart of those issues is this: my Chihuahua, your Lab, your neighborâs beagle, and every other pet dog we know have the vestiges of wolf DNA coursing through their veins. Those genes account for some of the behaviors that most frequently cause tension between dogs and ownersâthings like shyness, aggression, and territoriality. Such issues can all too easily end with dogs being abandoned in shelters, and owners at a loss to define what went wrong except to say their pets were wild or untrainable. (I have a special place in my heart for dogs who fall into that last categoryâand a list that stretches around the block of âuntrainableâ dogs Iâve brought home, taught basic and advanced obedience, and placed with forever families who love them to pieces.) If we want to truly understand our dogs, train them effectively, and keep genetic behaviors from eroding our relationships with them, we owe it to them to set aside our anthropomorphism and take a close look at the primitive drives that are an indelible part of their minds and hearts.
Once Upon a Time
Thousands of years ago, on a cold hillside in whatâs now China or Mongolia, Germany or Ireland, an ancient hunter makes his way through dense brush, tracking the movements of a wolf. The ancient man is a hunter-gathererâthe only means of selfpreservation available to him at this point in history. He ekes out his survival one day at a time. The wolf is a wild creature with no loyalties but to its own pack. The man has seen the wolfâs gift for scenting and tracking prey, and so tracking the wolf helps him find potential food sources. The wolf in turn may have picked up a few meals of scraps hanging around the manâs shelter. The two have learned to tolerate each other (at least most of the time), but theyâre not friends . . . yet.
Fast-forward to today, to a major airport in New York or London, Tel Aviv or Beijing. A dog wearing a vest with government insignia and an expression of total focus threads a path through dozens of luggage racks, stopping and starting, putting its nose to the ground and then in the air, searching for contraband. Close behind him, a handler follows, noting the dogâs movements, monitoring distractions, watching for an alert that will let her know the substance theyâre âhuntingâ has been found.
At first glance, the two scenes are mirrors of each other, millennia apart. But what happens at the end of the day shows how different they are. The wolf and prehistoric man go their separate waysâthe wolf slinking silently home to its pack under a rocky ledge in the woods; the man cautiously making his way back to a family and a fire and a crude shelter. They keep tabs on each other, but they donât let their guard down or get too close. At best, thereâs a grudging respect between them because their shared interests may help them survive.
When the drug-sniffing dog of today finds contraband, the handler immediately offers a rewardâplaytime with a favorite toy. Later, the dogâs body language is open and eager as the partners hop in a truck together for the ride home. The handler feeds the dog, then spends time showering him with affection and praise. When she tucks him into his kennel for the night, the dog curls up contentedly, tired and satisfied. The two are partners who understand each other, and, most important, it is tacitly understood by both that they are members of the same pack.
Thatâs quite an evolutionary turnâfrom separate animals living separate lives to members of the same pack, happily relying on each other. This relationship, one that slowly and surely evolved out of the tenuous connection between early humans and wolves, is one of the longest and most cooperative interspecies partnerships in all of history. While thereâs endless debate about exactly who first domesticated dogs and when, itâs largely agreed on that the practice began nearly fifteen thousand years ago, initiated by hunter-gatherers.
How do we know they were hunter-gatherers? Because thatâs the only kind of human society that existed until our long-lost ancestors enlisted wolves to work beside them. Dogs were the first of all domesticated animals, and without them all the domestications that followedâchickens, sheep, goats, pigs, cows, horsesâwell, they might never have happened.
Itâs easy to sit back now and imagine an orphaned puppy wandering up to prehistoric manâs fire one night and setting this all in motion, but it hardly seems like one isolated case could bring us to where we are todayâwith nearly ninety million dogs living as pets in the US alone.
A Metamorphosis
There are tons of theories about just how the domestication of wolves beganâwith scientists continuing to cull more information from ancient bones as DNA technology improves. Even with the wealth of data available, most theories come back to the idea that this didnât happen in a single place and then from there spread around the world. More likely, ancient humans and wolves found their way to one another in multiple locations across the globe at roughly the same time.
We may never know exactly how a wild creature became humanâs best friend, but one leading theory argues that in the beginning, wolves more or less domesticated themselves. Seeing opportunities to scavenge food and maybe gain security by getting near a fire, a few brave, nondominant wolves may have chosen to live near and even interact with humans. If their approach was friendly and deferential, it might have increased their odds of survivalâmeaning that survival of the fittest and survival of the friendliest might have been one and the same.
Considering how humans have treated wolves throughout historyâhunting them to near extinction across most of the globeâa theory of wolves coming to us may hold more water than one of us trying to live cooperatively with them. As the animal we now call âdogâ adapted and integrated into civilization, the wolf did not. In fact, as man evolved from hunter to herder with incalculable help from the domesticated dog, the wolf became a fierce competitor in the race for survival.
However it started, the partnership of these two intelligent, independent, family-oriented (pack-oriented) species changed the world for both of us. With each generation, the wolves who found their way into human communities became a little less feral and a little more tuned in to people. That adaptation aloneâpaying attention to our body language, gestures, and even facial expressionsâwas a game changer. It opened the door to training, working together, and fostering attachments between our species. After all, an animal that cares what you think, what you want, and whether you are physically present can be more easily trained than one that finds you either terrifying or beneath its notice.
Studies show that the dog breeds genetically closest to wolves are also the ones that are the least tuned in to human actions and voices. Even more interesting, evolutionary biology studies have found that many of our pet dogsâ traits seem to have been selectedânaturally or deliberatelyâto keep them in a state of arrested development compared with their wolf ancestors. This might help explain why dogs are often so amenable to being coddled and trained (things adult wolves absolutely wonât tolerate), and it might even offer a little insight into some of the physical features that make adult dogs appear more like wolf puppies than like wolf adults. Characteristics like wide, round eyes and soft, floppy earsâthose just donât exist among mature wolves.
The Wild Side
Over the years, Iâve had numerous opportunities to work with modern wolves. Theyâre not the same creatures that roamed the earth fifteen thousand years ago, but theyâre the closest thing to them that exists today. Trying to get cooperation from a wolf is actually more like trying to train a bear or a cheetah than it is like working a dog. They donât listen, donât look at you, and donât give a damn about what you want them to do. Instead, they avoid contact as much as possible, pace incessantly, and bolt at the slightest provocation. Theyâre large, independent, wired and wary bundles of energy that deserve to be treated with respect and given a wide berth.
For this reason, I often work with hybrids when a job demands a wolf-looking animal be trained for television or movies. These dog-wolf hybrids look the part, but their mixed genetic makeup means that theyâre capable of learning basic commandsâand that I can usually get them to work without them going completely rogue.
I start my training with new dog owners by explaining the five common characteristics of dog-wolf hybrids. Why? Because they offer a unique glimpse into the genetics of dogs and wolvesâboth how they are the same and how they differ. All encapsulated within a single animal. They also allow new clients the opportunity to understand how the wolf instincts in their dog might be magnified, helping them more easily identify mannerisms and behaviors that are wolflike. Itâs amazing how often the wolf side of a hybridâeven if the animalâs bloodlines are primarily from dogsâbubbles up and distinguishes these animals from everyday dogs.
Iâve also (as you can probably imagine) had countless calls from owners of these hybrid wolf-dogs looking for help with training problems, and examining these problems can help us understand just how important a role wolf genetics plays in dog behavior. These are extreme cases because of the animalsâ unique breeding, but they drive home the point that even a little bit of wolf DNA goes a long way. Even when a hybrid is genetically mostly dog, the key issues that crop up in a family-pet scenario offer a spot-on list of the wolf characteristics we see in our pet dogs.
Throughout the book, Iâll talk about how these traits (and others that are part of your dogâs genetic makeup) influence day-to-day behavior, but letâs start with five of the species-defining wolf traits and just how much of an issue they can be when they show up in your pet dog.
One caution: people often romanticize wolves as the ultimate independent, powerful, graceful animal. Itâs hard to argue with that. But sometimes wolf enthusiasts end up going so far as to adopt these dog-wolf hybrids as pets. Hybrid buyers tend to think theyâre bringing home tame wolves, creatures that look wild but behave like shepherds or huskies. In reality, a hybrid is a genetic roll of the diceâand youâre not likely to truly know what youâre dealing with until the animal reaches maturity. At that point, these dogs often end up being much more wolf than almost any household can handle, and in the end both the animals and the families end up unhappy. These outcomes, in addition to the legal entanglements that can arise from owning a hybrid, are enough to make me recommend against buying them as pets. Besides, right this minute there are millions of dogs of every known breed and breed combination sitting in shelters, running out the odds and the clock on finding forever homes. Why not welcome one of those dogs into your life instead of trying to force a relationship with a dog-wolf hybrid that may never truly be comfortable being part of your pack?
While every individual animal is different, this is especially the case with hybrids. Some of these wolf-dogs are manageable pets that get along with other dogs and with their families. But some are incredibly difficultâeven impossibleâto live with. Unfortunately, thereâs no way to predict which way one animal might go because thereâs not even a hint of a breed standard for them, and deliberately mixing the genes of two completely different species is tricky business. This kind of genetic outcross does not work in exact mathematical percentages (i.e., 50 percent wolf). Even if it did, having one wolf parent and one dog parent doesnât mean the resulting pupâs genes will be divided equally. Instead, most hybrids are the genetic equivalent of pulling the handle on a slot machine loaded with all possible genetic outcomes. Thereâs no way to predict which characteristics will come up.
5 Common Wolf Traits
1. Shyness. If you take Hollywoodâs word for it, wolves are bold, aggressive creatures that dominate everything in their orbit. Sounds great, but that image is pure fiction. With few exceptions (read on to meet Theo, who is one of them), wolves are among the shyest creatures on the planet. They prefer to be invisible, and they go to great lengths to avoid interaction unless theyâre breeding or hunting. In the wild, keeping to...