Aripyanfar wrote:
DecendentMonk wrote:
I have a 3/4 Timber Wolf and 1/4 German Sheppard, he is pretty smart.
Interesting. I saw a science clip that compared the intelligence of wolves and dogs. Apparently wolves are more intelligent overall. They can solve puzzles to grab the meat at the centre of the puzzle much faster than all types of dogs. Dog breeds are so incredibly various that dog intelligence varies wildly with the breed.
But although dog brains are smaller and appear overall less functional, dogs have a social intelligence associated with humans that wolves don't. If a human points, almost all dogs always look at what the human is pointing at. If the dog knows there is a choice of containers, one that contains meat, and a human points at one container, the dog will almost always go to the container pointed at, reaping the meaty reward. Some dog breeds are smarter than others, or pay more heed to human gestures.
However, wolves don't have that human link in their logic chain. When offered containers, one of which the wolf knows contains meat, the wolf disregards any gestures by a human at the containers, and chooses for itself, only succeeding at a statistically random rate.
That is interesting, thank you for sharing that. He does seem to have his own ways at times. Like getting in to trouble (mainly tearing up the house while my wife and I are gone). It's odd, I can get on to him as much as I want and discipline him and he won't stop. Other dogs I've seen they get disciplined and they will stop. He may stop for a week, but then he does it all over again.
Never really paid attention to the food ordeal, normally I just put my plate on the floor and he licks it clean. I may have to try that with him and see what he does.
But he is intelligent, I can tell him to not mess with my plate and he will leave it alone, he still wants the food on it, but he won't mess with it till I give him food from it. When we are playing around and he starts to get to rough (I won't say aggressive, because he just starts playing harder and biting more) I can tell him that is enough, and he stops and just wants to be petted.
He is very timid, he loves people, other dogs, and other animals. Him and my ferret play all the time. Him and the cats play as well, although I don't think the cats like it as much as the ferret. I figure if someone ever broke in he would kick into guard dog mode, but I don't know. He really loves people. I often joke with my wife and tell her he may like someone to death, but that would be about it. He weighs I would say close to 100 pounds and yet he is a big baby. Not that I don't want him to be timid, I just hope if anyone ever breaks in, he knows not to be as timid with them.
But thank you again for sharing that, it is very interesting to see how different one animal is from another, yet they are still in the same family.