Sunday, March 14, 2010

Female Shepherd/Labrador Puppy Troubles?

I love my female Puppy, im So Attached to her,


Shes So Adorable, Shes Just having Alot of Problems


Maybe Because Shes a Babygirl, But I Dont Want this Problems To Continue as She Grows, Shes Developing teeth, She Bites alot, I Mean Anything that Comes to Her Way She Bites, When I Tried Feeding her, She Bites my Hands, She Runs after my Shoes, and Tries to Bit it, She Doesnt Listen To me very Well, I mean i Do Everything For This Puppy, Go Sleepless Nights, Hungery Days, I Cant Even Leave her Alone


Because She Well Continue to do Alot of Biting Around the House, She Bited my New Microphone in Half, She Doesnt Listen To her Commands Such as Come Go, Sit,


She Takes Piss all Over my Room, What Should i Do, I Really need Help my Mom and Dad Wants Me To Sell her off, But i Cant, Im in Love With Her, Im Risin Her Like my Doughter, Please Help Me

Female Shepherd/Labrador Puppy Troubles?
You havent trained her correctly. A trained dog will not pee in the house... nor will it bite you or your things.





Talk to a trainer.
Reply:Puppies will chew on things - that's just what they do! Try giving her an acceptable chew toy every time she tries to chew on something she's not supposed to. Nylabones are good, so are Kong toys that you can hide treats inside to keep her busy. When my dogs were babies and would nip at my hands I would yelp loudly as their littermates would have done and that would make them stop.





As for the potty training - be patient. Make sure you take her out often and show her where you want her to eliminate. Praise her when she does. Puppies can't hold it in as long as adults can and need to go out more often. If you crate her, it might be easier to train her, as dogs don't like to make a mess where they sleep.





Don't give up on her - puppies are a lot of work, but well worth it!
Reply:You may love her, but you certainly haven't done right by her or acted like a responsible pet owner, I don't blame your parents for wanting to get rid of the dog.





Potty train her - get a book or look up on the web how to go about this - and do it consistently until she is house trained.


Obedience train her too - take her for group obedience training, that will socialize her and teach you how to train her.





Don't let her bite you - that is called "mouthing", when she tries to bite, make a sharp sound, turn away and refuse to play with her. Give her plenty of strong chew toys, Kongs, pig hoofs, etc. to chew on - she is teething, which is why she "mouths", like a baby teething.





Get a book on puppies "Puppies for Dummies" - read it, get your dog potty trained and obedience trained before your parents get rid of her. You need to take her on long walks, she needs to use up her energy.





Be a responsible pet owner - not enough to love your dog, you need to take care to train her properly too.





By the way, learn to spell and capitalize properly too, why is every word begun with a capital here??? You take far too many shortcuts with learning, both yourself and training your dog - get a grip on things so your life, and your dog's, will be happy.
Reply:you need to provide your pup with her own chew toys. you also need to set some boundaries. puppies chew anything and everything they can get away with. just like a child, they need boundaries for their own safety as well as your sanity. get her on a schedule for going outside. let her know with your voice you are upset when she pees indoors and take her outside. when she goes outside and does her business, praise her. you have to stop spoiling her and take control. cute can turn ugly and thats how a lot of animals wind up in the pound. she'll still be your baby,



HORSE

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