All About the American Akita Dog - Akita 101

Apologies if this didn't come out smoothly. I'm still getting used to talking to a camera, so it's not a mastered skill at this time.
I stopped for a bit on our walk at Veteran's Tribute Park to talk a little about the American Akita breed of dog.
I LOVE this breed.
I appreciate loyalty. I love how the Akita reserves their love for their family and are aloof towards others. It makes their affection feel more genuine. A lab is a loving dog, but if you had a loving lab and it got picked up by a stranger, that lab would quickly be happy in their new home. An Akita does not give their affection easily, and their bond is typically reserved for one person. Even if there is a household of people, the Akita my like the other members, but often will have one person they're very close to.
I appreciate strength, and the Akita is a very large and powerful dog that commands respect with their power. Mentally, they're very strong as well, and they don't bend easily. They have their ways, and they're very difficult to train to a high level of obedience. This just makes it more rewarding when you manage it.
I value a protector. Many other dogs are great, but I have a special place in my heart for a dog that will defend you from violence. If I had a dog that sat back and watched or ran and hid as I was dealing with an intruder, I would lose some respect for that dog. I feel a dog SHOULD be willing to fight to protect their pack. The Akita is naturally dispositioned to be a protector.
Despite how much I adore this breed, I do not recommend them. As I state in the video, too many people get Akitas because they're such gorgeous dogs, but find themselves unable to deal with the strong personality and independence of the Akita. Not to mention the dog reactivity.
Often in these cases the Akita will end up in a shelter, and I find that to be a betrayal. This isn't a breed that easily moves on from their owner. It's hard for me to forgive abandoning a dog, but especially so for the Akita.
One thing I haven't mentioned in the video... intelligence. I have two Akitas. The female is sweet as can be and is a lot different than Kinjo. She's not as smart. Kinjo is perhaps the smartest dog I've ever had. Even more so than our German Shepherd that I had growing up. Our GSD was a smart dog, but I swear Kinjo understands what I'm saying to him. It's in his eyes. It's in his response.
Kinjo isn't super obedient like my old GSD, but intelligence and obedience are not necessarily correlated.
Anyways, hope Akita fans like this video.

Пікірлер: 26

  • @voodoochild6741
    @voodoochild67416 күн бұрын

    American Akita . One of the best dogs I ever had. I will probably get one again in the near future.

  • @alexhaplau-colan5414
    @alexhaplau-colan541412 күн бұрын

    He's your 3 years old kid for the rest of his life, or yours. Everything you say is true. My Marcel, died at 18 , in my hands, he was my child. Never want to go through this again. He loved snow, and yes, he shed a lot, he didn't smell or bark, not even my wife could get close to me, is a dog that needs large spaces, try not to get him close to other big males. He will never attack a female, and the small dogs, he'll just ignore them.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    12 күн бұрын

    I'm sorry to hear about the loss of your Akita. I know I'm going to be devastated when my boy goes, but I think I would get another pup when it does. The pain of loss is terrible, but emptiness seems like it would be worse. While no dog will ever replace Kinjo, I know I can still love another dog and would want to.

  • @SteDon-xb1tp
    @SteDon-xb1tp5 күн бұрын

    I owened an American Akita and it was a pleasure to own. She was a very large bitch, more like a male dog in size but she was obedient and never ever showed any aggression to my family and loyal especially to me, yet she was aloof to strangers and had a fantastic loud bark when people knocked on the door fantastic dog, but she did not like other dogs. She was exactly how the man in this video explains the breed. I did spend a lot of time training her when she was a pup that paid dividends and every dog owner should train their dog regardless of breed.

  • @user-jg7pi6io1z
    @user-jg7pi6io1z27 күн бұрын

    I love them they are the best I've ever had

  • @m.d.d.3051
    @m.d.d.3051Ай бұрын

    My Tomo is 8-1/2 years old. I agree with everything you say here. DON'T get an Akita if you think a dog exists to please you. And yes, I take my dog out for a walk, and I continue to be amazed at how many dogs react to him. Other than some Rotties, he couldn't care less.

  • @Jay_dee915
    @Jay_dee915Ай бұрын

    I love my American 🇺🇸 Akitas 🐾

  • @solisdruid8442
    @solisdruid844210 күн бұрын

    Akitas bond so heavily. I've had 2. They are amazing, but they take work.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    10 күн бұрын

    You are absolutely correct! Thank you for the comment. I love this breed, but it does take a LOT of know-how and effort to get them to a state of mind where you can do a lot of things in public with them if there's going to be strangers and dogs around.

  • @solisdruid8442

    @solisdruid8442

    10 күн бұрын

    @@GetFitwithDogs It's very hard to get them to chill put and not spaz out when there is a lot of stimuli.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    10 күн бұрын

    Absolutely! Just this morning I sat on my front porch with both of my Akitas on a line while I drank coffee. My male, Kinjo, was calm and chill. My female. Yuki, was not being chill. A neighbor walked their dog nearby and Yuki ran to the end of her line and stared the dog down. This energy from her amped up Kinjo - who was chill - and he ran to the end of the line with her. In her excited state, she redirected her energy on Kinjo. He's a big boy, so he shrugged off her redirected bites (like a correction bite, not a fight bite), but that told me right there that she needs a lot of work. I'm getting ready to take them out to a public place and work on her specifically. Since Kinjo and I are so close, he has received the majority of my attention. That neglect needs to end, and Yuki needs a lot of work. The serious work begins today!

  • @solisdruid8442

    @solisdruid8442

    9 күн бұрын

    @GetFitwithDogs It's good that you are aware of that. I failed with my female Akita. It's a long story. She unfortunately got cancer years ago and had to let her go. I chose not to train anymore about a year after that.

  • @rf8481
    @rf84812 күн бұрын

    Own two American Akitas in St Louis County. Mine are a 130 LBS unaltered Male and 105 LBS Female. I walk mine everyday around Clayton, Ladue, U City but I don't do the long hikes that you do at parks all over the region as I hate driving on crowded roads and I like to keep it local in case it is too hot or too cold, I can get home in 15 minutes. My male likes car rides but the female really does not enjoy them plus they are giant sized dogs so it is easier to just walk them locally. Other dogs often are intimidated by them and they often react with fear based aggression which of course triggers the Akitas who view their exclusive territory as wherever they happen to be at any given moment so yes they are hyper-territorial and extremely intolerant of any dog that challenges them. You are spot on in regard to these dogs being ready to fight on sight and they like to fight so they definitely need to be leashed around other dogs and they are not doggy day care or dog park eligible dogs. But if you have coyotes, these dogs will run them down and rip them up if they get loose. Massive prey drive is an understatement, as these dogs love to fight, hunt and guard and they are really good at all three. They also hunt like cats and very stealthy and will ambush prey. They are indeed very much like cats - very clean and odorless unless very wet. Wonderful gorgeous movie star looks but they are mostly introverts and generally don't want to be mobbed by strange people. Very intelligent dogs as in they are like trained bears who are very self-directed to have their human feed them, walk them, and pet them. They are incredibly vocal when playing but often their play sounds like a dog fight and when they fight, they often make no noise and simply go at it. Very powerful dogs as in they can literally tear your rotator cuff if they wanted to when leashed. Wonderful dogs but not for marshmellows as these dogs are canine commandos and need to be treated with discretion and respect at all times because these dogs can do immense damage in seconds in the wrong circumstances. Really only get along with opposite sex pairings so while I have seen people with 4 Akitas in the same home, most people can only manage 2 at a time unless they want WW III and can separate their home with gates to keep the dogs apart. Definitely the wrong dogs for 97 percent of people who cannot commit totally to responsible ownership and put in the work socializing the dogs. Socialization only takes the edge off these dogs, it never removes the instincts to fight, hunt and guard so you always have to maintain situational awareness with these dogs. Until you wrestle one and try to break up a fight, you really cannot imagine how powerful these dogs are and how much stamina they have. You really need to be a Division I collegiate wrestler to safely handle dogs like these.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    2 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the reply! All of your words are spot on! The breed-typical behavior is exactly like that. While there are exceptions, an Akita owner can expect all of those things. My male (Kinjo) and my female (Yuki) both share many of the same Akita traits, their differences in personality manifest those traits a bit differently. Kinjo used to be the most intolerant dog, but hard work has calmed him down to where Yuki is more of the concern. We have several other dogs on the street. Multiple Labs, a Golden Retriever, a Doberman, a Herman Short-haired Pointer, and a bunch of small dogs. Kinjo is fine around all of them except the Retriever who is an unaltered male like him, and a small mutt that has very weak energy owners so their 18 lbs dog feels it has to be boss dog to compensate. If left alone, Kinjo would maul these two. However, the others, he's fine with. So long as no one throws a treat between them. Yuki, on the other hand, isn't looking to fight the neighbor dogs, but she wants to control and subjugate all of them. Meaning, she will bite and pin down even dogs she knows well. She doesn't take it further, she just wants to let them know she's Queen B. The problem with this is that no neighbor wants to see their dog get a bite and a pin by my dog, so even if it's just really harsh communication from her it still - to the untrained eye - looks like she's trying to fight them. I'm not saying what she does is acceptable, just that her behavior makes it more difficult to manage her being around most dogs. Kinjo is capable of doing a lot worse than her, but if a dog is chill and ignoring him, he ignores it. It's when the dog challenges him like the Retriever or the little mutt next door that Kinjo has more issues. Thr neighbors would never understand either, because to them Kinjo is the one who wants to fight. They don't realize that their dog's are participating in the situation with hard stares or assertive body language - which Kinjo reads as a challenge or threat to him. I agree about the 97% thing. I really don't recommend these dogs. I've worked so hard on mine that they're very chill most of the time. Even in public, if we're sitting at a picnic table my dogs are just laying down at our feet and so mellow. When I tell people they're not an easy dog breed they look at me like I'm crazy because they're just so calm and chill. I have to tell them that this was achieved through a lot of work and that another dog or a weird person can set them off to where they go from 0 to 100. My two aren't fond of car rides, but they do get excited about going to a new place and to walk. I took Kinjo with me to Colorado Springs, which is 13 hours. We did camp overnight 7 hours in, so it wasn't a straight shot. He did good though.

  • @rf8481

    @rf8481

    Күн бұрын

    @@GetFitwithDogs Indeed, a 130 LBS American Akita biting the back of the neck of a neighbor's rowdy dog and pinning it is just not going to go over very well with the neighbors who will see that kind of thing as an attempted murder rather than the social correction it was!! My male is like that but my female who is very sweet and playful is absolutely vicious around strange dogs and she will always want to rumble whereas the male will ignore most dogs which do not challenge him. Not something you can socialize out of them and God help anyone who tries to bring a new dog or cat into a home that the Akitas were not raised with from when they were puppies. These dogs are typically not good around pet rabbits, pet chinchillas or guinea pigs either so it is best to have plenty of gates and closed doors if you have multiple pets in the home. They are generally fine with cats they were raised with, but new cats, well, the cats might as well be wild rats as far as these dogs are concerned. Same with dog sitting chihuahuas for relatives - cannot let them share space as it would be a massacre. My male played well with other dogs until he hit about 2 years of age at which point he was still filling out and weighed about 125 LBS at which point he kind of instantly toggled into a much more territorial and dog aggressive beast. So they can become intolerant even of dogs they once played with and were raised with especially if the dog is unaltered and the same sex. All Akitas view themselves at the alpha - very Chow Chow like in that respect. The fighting instinct is very strong in the breed and what's worse, is that they seem to enjoy fighting and they are incredibly explosive as in they will as you stated go from zero to 100 in 2 seconds or less when triggered. My female does not go for walks, she goes on combat patrols and is always on point. The male thankfully is less dog aggressive and is more interested in marking territory. I love American Akitas, but they are just terrible with strange animals. Other than that, they are very chill dogs who almost never bark. I never heard my male bark until he was about 1.5 when some guy was getting out of a dump truck too quickly, the dog barked and it was like a lion roaring - very impressive. Yet my female will bark at strange humans while my male generally wants to say hello and get petted..so yes each dog is an individual and breed specific traits manifest differently in each dog. I owned chow chows before Akitas and Akitas are healthier, longer lived and smarter and less stubborn but equally crazy when it comes to dog intolerance and hyper-territoriality. Anyone who owns one of these dogs will tell you that they got surprised and horrified at least once when they were not paying attention and the dog redzones. Once you witness the explosive ferocity of an full grown American Akita, it is shock and awe and why most sane owners avoid dog parks, beaches and off-leash dogs because it only takes 2 seconds for an American Akita to grab another dog by the back of the neck and toss a large dog around like a rag doll. These dogs are like NFL linebackers and many owners underestimate the danger until they experience the dog red zone and then they don't know whether to be afraid of the dog or angry at themselves for permitting the dog to be in a bad circumstance. Many of these dogs need social distance and are not pack dogs. Once you experience the dog do an imitation of a tiger/grizzly bear, you never let your guard down again.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    Күн бұрын

    About that barking.... My female almost never barks. She only does in two situations. One is when she is trying to convince my male to play - and he does not play much. The second is when she sees my male outside on his line and recognizes his body language change the way it does when he sees another dog. My male, on the other hand, barks a LOT for an Akita. Not German Shepherd levels, but if he sees or hears someone outside he leaps up, rushing to investigate as he barks repeatedly. His bark shakes your soul, as I always say.

  • @dom-kennedyharris148
    @dom-kennedyharris148Ай бұрын

    Great video man. Keep them coming. I love my Akita like a son.

  • @rickytalton1914

    @rickytalton1914

    Ай бұрын

    Same here, he looks at me how we look at a baby with love, like he adores me

  • @hazelsiazon07
    @hazelsiazon0729 күн бұрын

    Ahh your Akita is so adorable. My Akita name is Kenzo. He’s been with me since he was 12 weeks. He is now 8months old (still a baby). So VERY PROUD to be his owner. Please do more of your videos! What you said in your video are all very relatable & 100% facts.!

  • @dansturman835
    @dansturman8352 ай бұрын

    I hope this video receives lots of views as you did a great job discussing the Akita and it's challenges and perks of owning one. Since my adult hood I've owned nothing but Akitas on my 4th. Would never own another breed. I will add that if people watch and do additional research and decide to become an Akita owner to continue to do research on who they will purchase from.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    2 ай бұрын

    I appreciate that! I'm not used to blabbering into a mic, and as I was doing it I felt like I said so much and should wrap it up. But then when I went back and listened to it, I thought of about 50 other things I wanted to say. The Akita truly is a remarkable breed of dog. I was gone for 2 days on a sporting event trip and just got home 45 min ago. My Akitas have been at my side and feet since I got home, just staring at me. They were excited at first but once they calmed down, now they're just sitting here gazing at me. Love these dogs.

  • @karenklein6069
    @karenklein606914 күн бұрын

    Love my Shayna. Female 1 year old. Favorite thing she loves to do is ging for rides in the car

  • @rickytalton1914
    @rickytalton1914Ай бұрын

    Only royal families could own, and they left them to watch babies also, they almost went extinct, and aufomaticly are guard dogs and take guarding very serious, samarui warriors kept them as well, Akita is a mountainous are in Japan that is osolated from society = mountain dog having a lot of wolf like traits, and wild animal characferistics, and ifs a diffrent dog outside than inside

  • @GS-in8zf
    @GS-in8zf3 күн бұрын

    dosent do much does it?

  • @DAdamTrammell
    @DAdamTrammell17 күн бұрын

    You forgot to mention one of the best things, the head tilt. Your pup gave an excellent demonstration when he heard his name, lol. Good video, but your history is a little off. Look at a picture of Hachiko, he has the bear shaped head, and that's before WWII. Look at the eyes of Helen Keller' Kamikaze-Go. It's not that JA's are more pure than AA's, is just two different attempts to revive the breed after the war.

  • @GetFitwithDogs

    @GetFitwithDogs

    17 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the info! My understanding is that the Akita was nearly extinct after WW2, with many having had German Shepherd bred into them to pass them off as service dogs during the war to save them. That line is more the American Akita line, whereas the Akita Inu project was to not go that direction and to get the Akita to be distinctly more Japanese, more like the Shiba Inu in appearance and not a mixed breed look like the American Akita. Thanks for commenting!