Here's how it goes - he see another dog and barks - sometimes playfully, sometimes not so much and sometimes he growls along with it all and pulls, but after he watches the other dog for a few seconds, he starts whining and tail wagging and doing his play bark, but occasionally still growls a bit? Once he gets up close to another dog, he starts sniffing, and jumps back...like he's scared. He was raised with another female pit that he gets along with very well, his previous owners took him to a dog park once with no problems, and while I've had him, he's met a cocker spaniel (who TOLD him! he was scared tail between his legs hiding behind me till he got enough courage to sniff it's butt and got snapped at), a lhasa apso and a boxer, all of whom he initially growled at and them jumped back and acted unsure about once he got close. There was also a guy who let his dogs approach us on a walk one day - a golden, a lab, and some kind of mix - 2 of which growled a bit, but just sniffed him while Reno froze. He also met some little black fuzzy thing that ran out of some guy's house, and Reno just sniffed him, and froze up again.
SO....what can I do? How can I socialize him?
I've only once gotten him to sit calmly while another dog was around...he just freaks. I want to at least give him some confidence around other dogs, but I'm not sure where to go that I can safely allow him to meet other dogs. I've even thought of asking our neighbors to take their dog to the tennis courts so they could meet through a chain link fence, but haven't done it yet.
Any suggestions? How bad does this sound to you guys? I've had a dog previously who was neurotic and scared to go around other dogs, so I'm used to avoiding animals on walks and so on, but when you have a pit growling at a passing person with a dog, it's a bad representative of the breed and us personally as his owners.


) then I would 'mark' the correct behavior with a "GOOD!" and give her the treat. When she had it everytime, I dropped back to just pointing at my nose, and when she had that good, just the command. Then I could work on "leave it" because I knew I could get her attention. "Leave it" was fairly useless when she initially wouldn't even look at me or listen to me because she was so interested in the other dog.


We have a place out in the country and I just bought a 30 ft. lead so we could start practicing more out there with more distractions and where he can move away further before recall.