Small, fragile, with huge ears and glowing eyes. The Russian toy terrier is not just a house pet. It is a personality that needs freedom. Not the freedom of a husky or a shepherd to run through the forest without a leash. But a unique one: the freedom to choose, express oneself, and move. A paradox: the one who is often carried in a bag actually craves to explore the world, make decisions, and even… command. In this article, we will discuss what freedom means for the Russian toy terrier and how to provide it safely without putting the tiny pet at risk.
Many owners of toys make the mistake of limiting walks to 10-15 minutes. "He's small, he'll freeze, get tired." This is a mistake. The Russian toy is an energetic breed, the descendant of rat catchers. They need long walks (at least an hour a day), the ability to run off the leash (in safe, enclosed areas), climb low obstacles, and communicate with other dogs (not aggressive ones). Freedom of movement is not only physical health (muscles, joints, weight) but also mental. A toy kept in an apartment starts barking for no reason, chewing things, and having tantrums. Walking a toy on full freedom (in a special park for small dogs) gives him happiness.
The Russian toy is a dog with a character. He can refuse an offered toy in favor of another, choose a route for a walk, decide when to sleep. Many owners suppress this freedom: "Don't go there," "come here," "eat this." A good owner gives the toy terrier the freedom to choose within safe limits. For example: "Where are we going: left or right?" Offer two toys — let him choose. Allow him to decide when to go out on the balcony. This develops his intelligence and strengthens your bond. A dog that can choose is less anxious and more confident.
Toys often suffer from the "small dog syndrome" — aggression due to fear. One of the reasons is isolation from conspecifics. Owners are afraid that a larger dog will bite (on the contrary, the toy may be hurt). But complete isolation leads to neurosis. Freedom of communication means regular meetings with friendly dogs of similar size (toy terriers, chihuahuas, yorkies). You can take them to special groups for small breeds. In this case, do not force the toy; let him approach or leave on his own. The skill of communication reduces fears and makes the dog balanced.
One of the most common mistakes is to carry the toy everywhere and all the time. "He's small, he'll get tired, get dirty." As a result, the dog gets used to the idea that the world is the owner's hands. She does not develop independence, she is afraid of everything except hands. Freedom for the toy is the ability to walk on his own. Yes, he may stumble, get dirty, freeze (within reasonable limits). Buy him warm clothes and shoes, but let him walk himself. The exception is dangerous places (roadways, crowds of large dogs). Gradually accustom him to independence: first let him go a few meters in the park, then long distances.
Toy terriers are vocal. Prohibiting barking altogether is the same as prohibiting a person from speaking. Freedom of self-expression means allowing barking in certain situations (greeting, warning of danger, joy). But teach the command "quiet." Also, freedom in games: allow growling, "hunting" for toys, shaking them, running with the prey. Do not prohibit expressing emotions: if the toy is happy, let him jump, if he is sad, do not scold but find out the reason.
Russian toys are prone to timidity. The owner's task is not to protect from all fears but to teach to cope with them. Freedom from fear is not the absence of the terrifying, but the ability to overcome it. Gradually introduce the toy to new places, sounds, people. Do not coddle him when he is afraid, but calmly explain that there is no danger. Do not punish for timidity. Allow him to explore the terrifying object from a safe distance. Over time, the toy will become braver.
Freedom without boundaries is chaos and danger. For the Russian toy, the boundaries are: an enclosed territory, a leash on the road, no contact with aggressive dogs, a ban on eating from the ground. This is not a restriction of freedom but a condition for its existence. Explain the rules to the dog calmly but firmly. Then within these boundaries, the toy will truly be free.
Freedom for the Russian toy terrier is not "do whatever you want." It is the opportunity to be a dog, not an accessory. To run, choose, communicate, express emotions, overcome fears. When the toy is happy, he does not bark without a reason, does not chew furniture, does not tremble from fear. He simply lives a full life. And gives you his love. And what else is needed?
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