What To Do With An Aggressive Dog?

If you're at a loss on how to handle your dog's aggressive behavior, check out the various resources from Leerburg. It isn't easy trying to train an aggressive dog but when you put in the work, you can expect to see some change with an established routine.

Articles

I have written the following articles and provided links to help people navigate to find the information they need. These articles and the Question and Answer categories that follow will help you produce a happy, healthy, and safe companion.

We are constantly adding new training articles and invite you to occasionally check our Dog Training Articles.

DVDs

Leerburg has produced the following videos to help individuals train their dog. We know DVDs are a little obsolete these days. You can view these DVDs on our streaming site as well.

  1. Establishing Pack Structure with the Family Pet — DVD | Stream
  2. Basic Dog Obedience — DVD | Stream
  3. From the Rescue to the Home — DVD | Stream

Courses

If you are looking for a more interactive way to train, we have several self-study dog training courses you can take online at Leerburg Online University:


Dog Aggression Equipment

Q&A Categories

Dont forget to look at our Leerburg's Q&A. You aren't the only one dealing with an aggressive dog. We've had hundreds of emails sent to us, asking for advice on how to train an aggressive dog. Perhaps some of our answers can help you. View Dog Agression Q&A's ».


About Author
Ed Frawley
Ed Frawley is the founder and owner of Leerburg.com and has been producing professional dog training videos since 1982. Over the years, he has collaborated with some of the most respected dog trainers in the country. His body of work includes 194 full-length training DVDs and 95 comprehensive online courses. In addition to these, he has produced and published over 4,000 short training videos available free of charge on Leerburg.com and across the company's social media platforms.

Ed and his wife, Cindy—also a professional dog trainer—bred working-line German Shepherds and Belgian Malinois for more than 35 years. Although they retired from breeding in 2009, they had produced over 300 litters by that time.

Ed also served as a K9 handler for the local sheriff's department for 10 years, working in partnership with the West Central Drug Task Force. During his time in law enforcement, he handled multiple narcotics and patrol dogs and conducted more than 1,000 K9 searches. If you want to learn more about Ed, read about his history here.

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