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Calm in play pen, not outside it (and play pen activities question)
My almost 6 month old puppy (got him at 4 months) is pretty chill in his play pen but becomes a typical puppy outside of it. I WFH and during the day have him in his play pen (crate for bedtime) which is also practice for when I eventually have to go into the office. I check on him a few times and we do potty breaks, etc. Mornings and evenings are pretty much all about bonding and training.
He has a bed, food and water, toys, safe items to chew on, and usually a frozen kong. When I leave the room he ignores everything and just lies there looking sad. This is still a huge improvement from when he couldn’t stand me being out of his sight, but is this okay? If I get inside the play pen with him he’s pleased to see me at first and then will finally go for his bully stick or kong and ignore me.
I’m trying to figure out the best way to give him time/privileges outside of the playpen too but he immediately starts trying to eat things he shouldn’t or jumping on furniture. Should I just not allow him out unless I can fully supervise to help correct/redirect? He’ll play with a toy or chew on a bully stick for a minute or so then for for my shoes or rug or generally need me to pay attention to him. I tried letting him out today while I made lunch but ended up putting him back because he wouldn’t stop going for things he shouldn’t.
I’m trying to work on him choosing independent activities that are appropriate but since he ignores everything while in his play pen (unless I’m in the room, sometimes) and then doesn’t usually make good choices outside of it it’s been tough to build on that. Is there anything else I can do, or is this something to continue on and with age/maturity he’ll probably get better?
I think being out of the play pen is obviously more exciting and I want to eventually trust him to roam but we’re not there yet!
submitted by /u/AbilityKey1485
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training using pee pads first may be a better way to potty train!
my little puppers is almost 6 months old. I swear the first three weeks she was home were horrendous. she peed and pooped everywhere in the house. I about had it after the first month. she never understood when/where to go outside, so I resorted to pee pads.
she got it almost instantly. the pee pads were always in one place of the house, in front of the front door. also, we kept saying “go potty!” and gave lots and lots of treats. if she missed, we would catch her immediately and put her in her crate.
after two months of that, we took her outside & since she knew what the word potty meant, she started going consistently.
just sharing my different approach to any desperate puppy parents. it gets so much better!!!
submitted by /u/dropeverythingnoww
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Puppy chasing cars, advice and tips needed
My partner and I have an almost 6 month old borador, for the most part, she’s absolutely wonderful (excluding the natural puppy problems). My biggest concern is that recently she has decided that cars are super exciting and as soon as she hears any vehicle, she starts spinning around in circles and as the car approaches and gets close, she attempts to chase it.
Whilst I can handle it and resist the pull, my partner is already struggling. I’d like to eliminate the behaviour before she ends up getting herself hurt or worse
Does anybody that has had similar issues have any tips or advice for dealing with it?
Thanks!
submitted by /u/Secret-Raspberry-459
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ankle biter…
we have a jrt almost 3 years old who is all of a sudden exhibiting nipping behavior, not at us but strangers, any advice? She was a shelter pup, we got her when she was one, super smart, a bit willful, barky ( but not too much lol), some anxiety issues, but never aggressive. Any tips? one we got was that she needs much longer walks, so will try that out. We don't want it to get worse,thanks.
submitted by /u/Ok_Yoghurt3486
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