Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why havent you trained recall (or literally anything) to your dog? Is it supposed to come recall trained?
Op - I do recall training but I do not have time every day to do training. She comes back in our backyard but nowhere else.
We have 3 young kids who are in sports and school and activity. I already spend 3 hours of my day with her.
If the dog returns from recall in the backyard what exactly is the problem? Your dog should not be off leash outside of your property. In most jurisdictions that is not even legal. You sound like you have unreasonable expectations for the dog.
Op - we have 100 acre property that no leash is needed (not in DC where we have a house with a backyard). I would love her to be able to be off leash but so far that has resulted in us running after her as she runs away.
Do you have a long line? I trained my dogs recall using a 50 foot leash (not a flexi). It gave the appearance of freedom while giving me control to reel the dog in if it didn’t listen.
Side note: a trainer taught me that if my dog escapes and doesn’t come back when called, rather than chase I should turn and run the other way, and the dog will usually turn and chase you. It’s a game, not necessarily an escape plan. YMMV
Anonymous wrote:I would rehome or return to the rescue. The sooner the better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why havent you trained recall (or literally anything) to your dog? Is it supposed to come recall trained?
Op - I do recall training but I do not have time every day to do training. She comes back in our backyard but nowhere else.
We have 3 young kids who are in sports and school and activity. I already spend 3 hours of my day with her.
I’m really sorry, OP, this is a lot for you and I get that. But three walks a day and consistent, daily training is absolutely normal. Those month-long intensives are kind of crap - it teaches YOU how to train and maybe kick starts it, but it’s consistency over the long haul that is needed. What you have is very typical - you just made a mistake thinking you could handle it.
It IS normal, but it’s much, much easier with a Pomeranian. We’re talking hours a day, every day. Less time for exercising them, less time for training them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Freaking pits. What a scourge.
I would definitely try to rehome. This dog is going to live another 10 years, you don't want it.
There are way too many dogs right now. Too many dog owners who can't handle their dogs (not you, you seem like a responsible dog owner who got stuck with the wrong dog, but so many people who don't hav the first clue about having a dog but have them anyway). Pits everywhere, because they have been way overbred specifically because they are aggressive. It's so frustrating. I wish we could hit a reset on dog ownership in this country. The current situation sucks.
Op - I am very disillusioned with rescues. I did not want a pit bull. Never rescued before so didn’t know they literally are all pit bull mixes. We should have just bought a dog from a breeder.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I lean more into a dog's appearance than what the rescue says about their background.
Anonymous wrote:Prong collars cause permanent damage to the neck when worn by a strong puller, it is entirely inappropriate for a puppy such as you describe.
OP you are way out of your depth. Please rehome this dog and please don’t get another one. If you put this little consideration into such a thing as bringing a young dog into a home with three small kids and then make choices like inflicting constant pain on that dog in hopes it will then learn to ‘be good’ on the leash for you, you clearly need to invest all your time into parenting. PLEASE don’t victimize another dog - it won’t matter if you get a purebred puppy or another rescue mixed breed, they ALL require serious investment of time and educating yourself on proper training and how to manage dogs and kids together and you clearly don’t have the bandwidth to meet the challenge. The problem is you, not the dog. In fairness, that is ALWAYS the problem when dogs become a problem in a home. It’s the people, not the dog.
Anonymous wrote:Op - also I completely realize I have a husband problem. He works all the time and I am responsible for the dog and the kids.
He is also the one who said we can’t rehome because she is our responsibility and it would be cruel to rehome her.
Anonymous wrote:Prong collars cause permanent damage to the neck when worn by a strong puller, it is entirely inappropriate for a puppy such as you describe.
OP you are way out of your depth. Please rehome this dog and please don’t get another one. If you put this little consideration into such a thing as bringing a young dog into a home with three small kids and then make choices like inflicting constant pain on that dog in hopes it will then learn to ‘be good’ on the leash for you, you clearly need to invest all your time into parenting. PLEASE don’t victimize another dog - it won’t matter if you get a purebred puppy or another rescue mixed breed, they ALL require serious investment of time and educating yourself on proper training and how to manage dogs and kids together and you clearly don’t have the bandwidth to meet the challenge. The problem is you, not the dog. In fairness, that is ALWAYS the problem when dogs become a problem in a home. It’s the people, not the dog.