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PROBLEMS WITH A RUDE PUPPY Dear Jubilee: Help! My puppy is four months old, and he is stealing off the counters in the kitchen. He knows not to do it when I am looking, but as soon as I turn my back, he goes for the counters. What can I do to stop him? And he snaps at all of us, biting my husband and our child, especially when they try to feed him or touch him while he is eating. What can I do? At My Wit’s End. Dear Wit’s End, I recently heard of what sounds like an improvement on the old trick of using mouse traps to keep dogs off of counter surfaces. As long as your puppy is not fearful, you can rig up the mouse traps and convince your dog that counter surfing is not a good thing. Get the small mouse traps from the hardware store, not the large rat traps (you are not trying to actually pinch your dog; just trying to fix it so that his environment startles him. How many mouse traps will you need? The number depends on how long your counter is. For example, for a 7-foot counter, get four or five mousetraps. Place them at equal distances along the edge of the counter and set them. Then interweave sheets of newsprint along the counter on top of the mousetraps. Then put something very enticing behind this edging of mouse traps and newspapers. Your dog watches the entire process. Then leave the room. If this works, your dog will jump up to surf the counter, hit one of the newspapers, and all of the mousetraps will go off, convincing your dog that a monster has taken up residence on your counter. As for the growling and snapping, puppies are mouthy, but this sounds like your puppy is trying to take over your home and set the rules. Have you talked to your puppy’s breeder about his behavior. I suspect it is a case of the puppy is testing your limits, and good breeders will work with you on strategies for overcoming these behaviors before the puppy totally takes over your house, has your whole family buffaloed, and is in charge of your home! Your puppy needs to learn quickly that growling, snapping and biting are not appropriate or acceptable behaviors at any time. One way to do this is to have the members of the family that he is bullying be responsible for feeding him so he knows that he depends on them and they are more important than he is Then train your puppy to work for his meals. Nothing is given for free. In our house, one dog stacks; another sits, stays, comes and sits; another sits and looks me in the eye, ignoring the food dish held away from my body; and another stands and looks at me; none of the dogs is allowed to touch the dish until I tell them it is OK to go ahead and eat. So decide what you want the puppy to do, and then teach him to do it and demand it every time you feed him. You have to put an end to
the snapping and biting when you touch him while he is eating. One way that
might work is to use a conditioned aversive. A conditioned aversive is
something that does not hurt the dog, but it is something that the dog does
not like. When the puppy does something that you don’t want him to do, you
make a noise and follow up with the thing the dog does not like. In our
home, the conditioned aversive is a vocal "Eek!" followed by a squirt of
water in the face from a squirt bottle -- nothing cruel, just something the
dogs don't like. You don't have to follow through often. After the first
squirt or two, they understand. Then for a few times, we pick up the bottle
without squirting just to remind them that Eek! introduces the thing they do
not like. After that, all we have to do is make the noise, and the behavior
stops. I would not do this with a biting adult, but with a four month old
puppy, I would reach to touch him and if he snaps, I would say Eek! Very
loudly and squirt him in the face. Then I would reach to touch him again.
The behavior should stop quickly. Then I would have you husband do it, and
you stand ready with the bottle. If he snaps at your husband, I would make
the Eek! And squirt. Once he is letting you, your husband and other adults
touch him while he is eating, I would make him totally dependent on your
child for food for a couple of weeks (under your supervision, of course).
Your child should always be able to take things away from the dog and touch
him at any time without getting bit, and you have to make the puppy
understand his position in your family. Jubilee |
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