Anonymous wrote:He's a doodle.
To PP, some people say if you don't correct it now they won't just grow out of it. I can't have an adult dog doing this.
Anonymous wrote:Growling? Wow my dog only growled at me if she was hurt or I was bathing her.
For biting, as a puppy, gently and quickly squeeze both sides of their mouth and say NO. Firmly. Just as you would if you wanted to take something out of their mouth
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stick with it, OP. You're overthinking a very normal behavior for a very young puppy. Almost all puppies are mouthy (certainly some more than others) but the vast majority of adult dogs are not. You are teaching it limitations and the more calmly and consistently that you do it, the better. Get your kids some thick gardening gloves and make sure they are calm when they engage with the puppy. They can learn a lot from this too. There will be time for rougher, funner play when the puppy is done with this bitey stage. This shift almost always happens between 4-6 months.
In the mean time, sign up for puppy kindergarten. You'll see how normal this is and get feedback from trainers and other puppy owners to make sure you stay on track. Raising a puppy well is really not totally intuitive!
If you really don't think you can persevere, please re-home the puppy immediately while it is still cute and has a chance to find a new family with the patience to get through these normal phases.
Not really a patience thing after four weeks of your kids with broken skin bite marks. Biting is normal but without training it’s not going to magically disappear. Different training styles work for different dogs.
Anonymous wrote:Stick with it, OP. You're overthinking a very normal behavior for a very young puppy. Almost all puppies are mouthy (certainly some more than others) but the vast majority of adult dogs are not. You are teaching it limitations and the more calmly and consistently that you do it, the better. Get your kids some thick gardening gloves and make sure they are calm when they engage with the puppy. They can learn a lot from this too. There will be time for rougher, funner play when the puppy is done with this bitey stage. This shift almost always happens between 4-6 months.
In the mean time, sign up for puppy kindergarten. You'll see how normal this is and get feedback from trainers and other puppy owners to make sure you stay on track. Raising a puppy well is really not totally intuitive!
If you really don't think you can persevere, please re-home the puppy immediately while it is still cute and has a chance to find a new family with the patience to get through these normal phases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is completely normal puppy behavior. They explore the world with their mouths and he’s teething.
Hire a professional trainer to come into your home and evaluate the situation to make sure the growling isn’t actually resource guarding or fear, but otherwise you just have to wait it out. When the teething ends they won’t be trying to eat your hands.
It's not resource guarding. We can pick up food and toys easily and remove things from his mouth with no issue.
If it's a wait it out thing, then why do the trainers say you have to correct the bad behavior now as a puppy or they'll take it into adulthood? Also I'm not sure I'm wiling to wait it out while my kids get constantly bit, even if he's not drawing blood every time.
Anonymous wrote:This is completely normal puppy behavior. They explore the world with their mouths and he’s teething.
Hire a professional trainer to come into your home and evaluate the situation to make sure the growling isn’t actually resource guarding or fear, but otherwise you just have to wait it out. When the teething ends they won’t be trying to eat your hands.