![]() |
Puppy Problems
Hello, I had a couple posts on this page before, and some helpful responses. I do read this page quite often. I have a 5 1/2 month old lab that feels he can take total advantage of my wife with biting and nipping. Never gives me any problems, but my wife can' t take it . When he does this I' d like to kick him square in the ass right across the room, but I won' t do that. Dog gets a ton of exercise and looks like he is headed in the right direction to become a fantastic hunter. He just needs to become a better household member. Any hints?
|
RE: Puppy Problems
If he' s in the house put him in the yard for a few days. Keep a rolled up magazine or newspaper close by so she can pop him on the nose every time it happens. Don' t have to do it hard, just the hollow sound of the rolled up paper scares the crap out of them most of the time.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
if he likes the house better than the yard,do as doghunter said swat him on the nose then put him out or on a chain fore a few min.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
It the time outs or newspaper do not work you might try using an ecollar if you have one. If the dog knows the " NO" command you might try putting an ecollar on him so you can say " NO" and give him stimulation at the same time when this unwanted behavior happens. A good thing about the ecollar is you wife can hang it around her neck and use it right when negative reinforcement is needed. Good Luck!
|
RE: Puppy Problems
When he bites, take his jowls with your hand (or your wife' s), roll them under his teeth, apply pressure and essentially force him to bite himself. Say, " No biting!" in a sharp voice. It should cure the problem in a couple of weeks.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
Your pup may be trying to show dominance over your wife, he doesn' t nip you because he sees you as the pack leader. this MUST be corrected very soon before it gets to be a real HUGE problem.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
Where is the dog sleeping? In a crate, bed, dog bed? Who takes the dog out for walks and feeds the dog? Is the dog furniture trained and hangs around you? If the dog nips who does the discipline, you, your wife or both?
There may be a lot of things that you need to correct to make your wife alpha. Dan O. |
RE: Puppy Problems
The dog sleeps in a crate. I am the one who spends the most time with him outdoors, although my wife takes him for walks in the neigborhood. We both feed him. We both discipline him. Dog is not allowed on furniture, if I understood that correctly Fishface....
|
RE: Puppy Problems
Can your wife turn him over on his back and have him stay in that position for a minute? That' s the ultimate submissive position. You may want to put her in full control of the food.
Dan O. |
RE: Puppy Problems
I agree with Seattle, Sea and Dan' s advice. I do advise against the newspaper swatting as this may make the dog shy or at least shy to noise. My 17 month old female Lab tries this sort of thing with my wife. With my wife' s " no' s" and mine combined, the pup seems to get the point. I also have a 5 year old Lab that we used the rolled up newspaper on and she happens to be gunshy. I have no evidence that the paper caused it, however I have not used this technique with my pup and she is great around guns. Good luck.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
I agree with the dominance issue. She needs to show the pup who' s in charge between the two.
The rolled up paper deal is a matter of choice, but the main thing is to be the agressor. You don' t have to be crule to show a dog his place, but a good swat on the nose lets him know you ain' t gonna take it. You also have to speak the dog' s language. I' m not saying to bark and growl (unless you want to [&:]), but the tone of your voice and body language are what a dog keys in on. My GSP will be submissive to anyone, male or female, who puts their foot down, so to speak. As far as the newspaper making him gun-shy, well, I guess that depends on the dog' s own personality. If you don' t want to risk it, that' s ok. My GSP is afraid if vaccume cleaners, lawnmowers, and just about any loud machinery, but she' s not gun-shy. And I RARELY use it anymore, but just the sight of a rolled up newspaper sends her to the corner. ;) |
RE: Puppy Problems
NEVER Ever swat pet in face even with newspaper if you care about him ever retrieving to hand and other retrieving problems.IMO some dogs also learn to bite this way.
Your wife needs to establish disipline with him,He will learn quickly. |
RE: Puppy Problems
After reading what you guys/gals are saying, your right, it is always me that puts a stop to the bad behavior. I was telling my wife that there is a difference between being forceful and being abusive. She just can' t let it slide when the behavior happens. I try to not let him get away with squat, in the house or out, and he responds very well. He doesn' t range out on me, always comes to my side, doesn' t retrieve to hand but very close and drops it. He gets amped up when a shotgun goes off. She is gonna get involved in the daily routines, feedings, having the dog see her fill his water bowl. We' ll make sure that it' s her, that stops whatever he' s doing that' s bad. Of course since I posted my question he' s been pretty relaxed. What can I say. Fishface..........
|
RE: Puppy Problems
Had to think on this one,as in how/what I do . First of all dogs are wolves and wolves are dogs, therefore I use their language,place your hand over the muzzle so that it wraps around the nose and bottom of the jaw, now squeeze with light to moderate pressure and look right into their eyes while in a rough or gutteral tone saying no or whatever noise you choose.Now, DO NOT look away from the dogs eyes for whatever reason(this is called stareing the dog down and is a DIRECT challenge to the dog),as soon as the dog turns his eyes from you (this may be a slight movement or quite obvious) release your hand and walk away as if nothing happened, after oh say 15 , 20 sec. call the dog to you and and make friends again. In time all you will have to do is stare the dog down when he does something that rubs you the wrong way.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
Seadog. I like that. Up close and personal to let them know you' ve had it leaves no doubt. Will give that a shot. Fishface......
|
RE: Puppy Problems
seadog elaboratd on what I was trying to communicate earlier. This is how I would handle the problem, doing what I suggested earlier.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
seattlesetters, I took your advice and the wife did what you said and it worked like a champ. She put just enough pressure for him to wimper and he went and just sat down. When she called him over, we knew she got in his head. Now I know this was just the first time, but it was progress. Hey, I would like to thank all of you for your time and advice. I will keep you posted. Fishface...........
|
RE: Puppy Problems
This is a footnote to my last reply. PLEASE do not try this with a strange dog/ dog you do not know.If the dog is an omega you will probably have no problem BUT if the dog is an alpha you may provoke an attack (staring down a dog is powerful chit).A case in point: I was working a hunt show for a club that I belong to , sitting on a chair at the table with my dog on lead and sitting by my side minding his own business while I was talking to a breeder from the states that came up for the show, out of the corner of my eye I noticed a guy walk up to my male and crouch down to eye level with my dog, within 2 min. the dog lunged at this bobo dragging me and the chair about 2 feet across the floor ( I weigh in at about 200 lbs.),he came within inches of rearranging bobos' face or worse. When I asked bobo what did you do to my dog, he said " didn' t do a thing " , I then asked him why did you try to stare my dog down, he said " wanted to see what he would do" .The person I was talking to looked at me then said to bobo " only an a$$hole would try to stare down someone elses dog" . As I said, powerful chit.
|
RE: Puppy Problems
It' s (eye contact) supposed to work great on bears if you combine it with yelling and arm waving. I was told to never lose eye contact. Unfortunately there' s supposed to be 1% of the population that doesn' t back off. It' s probably OK to lose eye contact if they start chasing you. LOL
Dan O. |
RE: Puppy Problems
Glad to hear it, fishface. Keep us abreast of further developments.
|
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:26 PM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.