Anonymous wrote:With our dog we distract him with a high value treat and while he is eating the treat, we praise him and take the item he is guarding. Do not give your dog a treat after he has already started guarding as you do not want him to associate getting a treat with growling or snapping at you. You basically want to completely stop the behavior while turning it into a good experience. He will eventually realize it's okay if you come near his coveted item because he gets something good in return. This will lead to him no longer feeling the need to guard it down the line. We now give our dog a treat maybe half the time. The last thing you want to do is escalate the situation by scolding or yelling. This will stress your dog out more and most likely just make it worse. Always go the way of least resistance.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, yes the difficult teen years. Or young adult years.
The very few times this happened with my 45lbs dog, I loudly said NO, and pushed him away from his food, asserting my ascendancy over his bowl. I felt I could do that safely, since I've had this dog since he was a young pup, and he knows I'm the boss. He was just trying something, and stopped doing it.
After that, I hand-fed him a few times, and experimented with taking away his bowl in the middle of feeding, plunging my hand in the bowl and taking out kibble, etc. And then I did this with toys, although he hadn't yet progressed to guarding toys. But just to be thorough.
This may be dangerous to do if your dog has progressed to more aggressive guarding.
Do not do this! If you do not get severely bitten, it is only teaching your dog that he can't get away with resource guarding with you the alpha. What about when a kid goes near him while eating? You want to teach them to no longer do the behavior for anyone at anytime. Positive reinforcement training rather than dominating gives much more consistent long term results while maintaining your dog's trust and respect in you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, yes the difficult teen years. Or young adult years.
The very few times this happened with my 45lbs dog, I loudly said NO, and pushed him away from his food, asserting my ascendancy over his bowl. I felt I could do that safely, since I've had this dog since he was a young pup, and he knows I'm the boss. He was just trying something, and stopped doing it.
After that, I hand-fed him a few times, and experimented with taking away his bowl in the middle of feeding, plunging my hand in the bowl and taking out kibble, etc. And then I did this with toys, although he hadn't yet progressed to guarding toys. But just to be thorough.
This may be dangerous to do if your dog has progressed to more aggressive guarding.
Do not do this! If you do not get severely bitten, it is only teaching your dog that he can't get away with resource guarding with you the alpha. What about when a kid goes near him while eating? You want to teach them to no longer do the behavior for anyone at anytime. Positive reinforcement training rather than dominating gives much more consistent long term results while maintaining your dog's trust and respect in you.
Anonymous wrote:Ah, yes the difficult teen years. Or young adult years.
The very few times this happened with my 45lbs dog, I loudly said NO, and pushed him away from his food, asserting my ascendancy over his bowl. I felt I could do that safely, since I've had this dog since he was a young pup, and he knows I'm the boss. He was just trying something, and stopped doing it.
After that, I hand-fed him a few times, and experimented with taking away his bowl in the middle of feeding, plunging my hand in the bowl and taking out kibble, etc. And then I did this with toys, although he hadn't yet progressed to guarding toys. But just to be thorough.
This may be dangerous to do if your dog has progressed to more aggressive guarding.
Anonymous wrote:With our dog we distract him with a high value treat and while he is eating the treat, we praise him and take the item he is guarding. Do not give your dog a treat after he has already started guarding as you do not want him to associate getting a treat with growling or snapping at you. You basically want to completely stop the behavior while turning it into a good experience. He will eventually realize it's okay if you come near his coveted item because he gets something good in return. This will lead to him no longer feeling the need to guard it down the line. We now give our dog a treat maybe half the time. The last thing you want to do is escalate the situation by scolding or yelling. This will stress your dog out more and most likely just make it worse. Always go the way of least resistance.