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When finding your dogs perfect playmate! Remember dogs communicate with one another through the use of vocalization, body movements and postures. You may see one dog orient to anther only to have the second dog turn away saying "not now". It is important that both dogs are enjoying the engagement otherwise, one dog can be practicing rude behavior and the other may escalate to aggression to get his needs met. YOU WILL SEE 3 DISTANCE CUES IN THIS VIDEO: Distance cues are used to tell another dog that he or she has no intention of engaging in play or socialization. Calming signals are used by a dog that is trying to tell another to relax, and he has no intentions of fighting. Social Postures tell another dog they would like to be friends and engage. Aggression can result when these clear intentions through the use of body postures are not respected. DISTANCE CUES are used to tell another dog to go away and are the cues that Drake is using with Baxter. However, Baxter is not listening! Watch for these passive cues from Drake: turning head and neck away Trying to walk away Ground sniffing or completely avoiding the other dog hiding behind owner More direct communications signals are: up on toes with stiff body standing tall with head high tail carriage is up high over back straight up stiffness in tail, head and body barking rapidly and unable to look away hard eye stare with a tightly closed mouth hair on neck bristles all the way to the tail growling with head lowered showing teeth with stiffness throughout body