Anonymous wrote:It's hard to correct a behavior you don't see happening or catch in the act, which is why crating your dog is essential. If you're not supervising, they should be crated or otherwise secured in a puppyproof location. Every time your dog "sneaks" an off-limits chewable, you increase the amount of training required to keep them from chewing your things. If all they ever have unsupervised access to are appropriate chewing materials, you prevent this problem.
They do, eventually, outgrow the urge to chew, provided they're given proper stimulation and safe materials that are acceptable chewing targets. It usually happens around 3, not 2, and some dogs are just chewers. The more you can contain your pup to chewable items and keep them away from your shoes etc. when they're not supervised, the sooner they'll catch on to the difference. And when you catch the dog in the act, quick discipline and redirect to a safe chewable, which should always be near the dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sucks. I would agree that she just can't have full freedom in the house. We kept our puppy primarily in the kitchen/family room using baby gates until she was about 18 months for this reason. She is still not allowed upstairs unless she is with one of us.
What kind of dog is she?
A retriever. She’s the best, but the chewing!
Ours still chews at 4.5 but it’s gotten less over the past few months. This is pretty typical as compared to our experience with our older one and our previous two. You just have to learn to avoid it. Crating and cleaning up. Our current method is gating off rooms where we’re not good about not leaving stuff laying around.
Anonymous wrote:You should be crating a retriever. Ours is always crated when we can't supervise her even now that she's 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sucks. I would agree that she just can't have full freedom in the house. We kept our puppy primarily in the kitchen/family room using baby gates until she was about 18 months for this reason. She is still not allowed upstairs unless she is with one of us.
What kind of dog is she?
A retriever. She’s the best, but the chewing!
Anonymous wrote:That sucks. I would agree that she just can't have full freedom in the house. We kept our puppy primarily in the kitchen/family room using baby gates until she was about 18 months for this reason. She is still not allowed upstairs unless she is with one of us.
What kind of dog is she?
Anonymous wrote:Idk but you need to crate or otherwise contain her.