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  • How often to stop on a road trip for a 16 week old puppy?

    I don’t feel comfortable boarding my puppy for Christmas, so I’m considering taking him on a 14+ hour drive to bring him with me. He will have just turned 16 weeks old and gotten his final shots within days of the time we would have to leave. The boarding facility/daycare came recommended by a friend, her dog loves it. And she sends him just for fun a few times a month. But since there’s no time for him to try it a day or two prior to being left for a week I don’t want to send him there. I’m worried about how often we’ll have to stop. Will this end up an 18 hour trip? How often will we need to let him out? He holds his bladder ~7 hours at night and has since we got him at 8 weeks old. But during the day it varies on his activity level. He still has accidents in the house, but he’s improving a lot (he’s 13 weeks now). Is it our best bet to drive through the night? I’m hesitant to do that because I’d prefer us well rested. There’s only 2 of us to trade off driving. My puppy naps pretty consistently during the day. So I do think he could sleep for a bunch of the trip during the day.

    submitted by /u/unluckyjeans
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  • Anxiety inducing alerts.

    So, my dogs very quickly associated the security camera alert on my phone to someone about to knock or come in the house. This expanded to basically any of the same tone (beep) type alerts. Now they bark suddenly and seriously whenever my phone alerts to anything. I have to change the alerts for each application to a different type /sound every other week or so to keep the peace.

    Now I never recognize my own phone alerts in public. They will even send me looking around at home until I have the dawn of realization that it is a bizarre new alert. After a while, they will become familiar to me. About that time, I have to start over.

    submitted by /u/verge_ofviolence
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  • Any ‘tips’ to help dog stop shadow/light chasing?

    My Cockapoo 2 years old has developed shadow/light chasing 6 months ago.

    It’s only been 3 weeks since I really pushed hard to prevent him shadow/light chasing

    • I put up blackout blinds as we have high sunlight in back of our house

    • Anytime I see him starting to shadow/light chase I will clap my hands or “uh!” Command and move him along

    • I will walk him morning for hour and afternoon for hour (play ball in park if weather permits)

    • Hide treats in kong toys to play

    • interact with him daily playing ball, doing tricks

    He is showing improvements and feel I have 70-80% of my doggy back! But he still has that ‘urge’ to shadow/light chase even if there’s no light or shadow in the area!! It’s disheartening to see each time, I am probably over sensitive to it

    He sometimes grabs a toy and lays down eyes darting left and right to things not there? So I will shoo him off but he will Godo elsewhere within seconds before I shoo again and he may be good or relocate

    Worst days is the really sunny days Best days overcast

    Night time coming slight problem from lights in house but only certain lights affect/trigger him??

    Anyways

    Any extra tips or suggestions to help train him out these habits?

    I know a vet behaviorist is an option but medication along with what I am already doing?

    submitted by /u/ClassicComfort5744
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  • Crate Training a New Rescue ? Separation Anxiety

    Calling all dog trainers / experienced dog owners! I adopted a one year old certified good boy last week. For starters, he has not even been in our home a week. In my opinion, he has been adjusting really well! The boy LOVES his crate! He has slept through the night every night since day one with no issues. But…I did discover early on that he will not tolerate being in the crate alone without me in the room and will start with the whining and barking. I have done a disgusting amount of internet research and have taken to some training tips / suggestions, but I was hoping for more guidance (and honestly some reassurance). He seems to only feel comfortable falling asleep in the crate in my presence. He will willingly go in, I will shut the door, and he will fall asleep on his own while I fold laundry, read, or doom scroll on my phone. I have practiced exiting and entering the room a lot to reassure him I am always coming back. In the beginning, I had given him a treat when I returned. Now, I do not really acknowledge him, I just pass through. I have gotten away with leaving him alone in the crate for almost an hour today without hearing a whine or bark. I think this is good sign? The last thing I want to do is push him too quickly and then end up having a real problem. Is this actual separation anxiety or is it part of the adjustment period for a rescue? I am aware of the 3-3-3 "rule" and while I respect it, I honestly do not believe this totally applies to him. He has never been timid, shy, or hid. He is rather friendly and loves to snuggle up on us. He is also really smart and has been picking up on routine that we have (attempt) to establish so far. Please! Any and all advice welcome! Thank you in advance for the replies!

    submitted by /u/cupatronic
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  • Senior Dog Help

    Hey all,

    Myself and my partner have recently moved in together (May) and along came her furry friend Milo. He’s an 8 year old Border Collie mixed with a Kelpie that she has had since a pup. He’s a lovely dog but has absolutely zero training growing up, and it’s causing some issues that I’m hoping we can resolve before things get rough between myself and partner (were both super stressed most of the time and we’re both in agreement that it’s mainly due to Milo)

    Firstly, walks are an absolute nightmare. He pulls like a train, has zero recall and doesn’t even want to know you when outside, just wants to pull forward as much as he can, and if he sees another dog you best believe he’s going to yank you towards it barking his head off. We have tried various methods, harness back and front clips, Halti harness (seems a little better but not much) tried a slip lead but he ends up just chewing it as he doesn’t like them.

    Secondly, consistently barking in the house, doesn’t matter what we’re doing at the time, could be playing with him, cleaning, chilling etc he will just bark constantly.

    Being a more senior dog with a lack of guidance at younger ages, do we think he’s beyond the point of training? Or does anyone have any recommendations? Getting rid of him is an absolute no, but at the same time for the sake of our relationship we have to find improvements somehow as it’s been an incredibly tough 6 months since he has been with us.

    Any suggestions or tips would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.

    submitted by /u/Nareiked-
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  • FOMO Puppy

    My girlfriend owns a 7 month old, intact Standard Poodle puppy with severe FOMO. The other dog in the household is a rescue and has been missing out on some one-on-one time since the puppy came home. When my girlfriend tries to do some training with her first dog out in the yard, the puppy loses his marbles with incessant barking that does not stop. This is the case regardless of whether he is loose in the room indoors, crated, in the catio where he can see the yard, or tethered outside. For this reason, he also can’t be left home alone when she takes the other dog for a walk.

    I can very rarely visit the household to help, but ideas on how I could are welcome. He can’t be left to “cry it out” either (even though she also wouldn’t put him in this position) because of a fear of noise complaints. No one else in the household is able to watch the puppy while my girlfriend trains or goes for a walk.

    My suggestions have been the relaxation protocol which I need to revisit and be able to demonstrate in person to her as well as place training so he can learn to lay on a mat outside while training of the other dog is taking place. Any advice or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

    submitted by /u/nimblepickle_
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  • Dog is terrified of other dogs, so we’ve stopped taking her on walks

    It's been the same ever since she was a puppy, no matter how much socialisation we did, she's just absolutely terrified of other dogs. She's 19 months now. When we go on a walk, the moment a dog is seen it's game over – i can only describe it as terrified screaming and will pull me all the way home. We've tried to do lots of training with her, and even spoke to a vet who is a behaviourist and she basically said she's a lost cause and told us to give the dog away because we've just had a baby 🙄 (the vet has only ever seen her in the vets, where their are dogs EVERYWHERE, so obviously she's only seen her at her very worst). We've tried taking her to a private field several times, but she doesn't even want to run around, she just wants to stay right by our sides, won't play fetch or anything. We have a big garden that she loves to run around in and parkour off all the furniture and chase the birds. We've decided to stop walking her, as all is doing is making her extremely anxious, and since we've stopped walking her she's been much calmer in the house too. My question is: is stopping walking her the correct going to do? And is there anything you would suggest to make sure she's getting enough stimulation at home? I'm on maternity leave, so the back door is open for her all day every day, but obviously a lot of my time is taken up by the baby.

    Thank you

    submitted by /u/Wren575
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  • Help getting my dog to stop chewing on me?

    So, he's not my dog, he's my grandmother's, but we see each other often. I've really bonded with this dog over the past year and a half-ish that she's had him, which is something I'm proud of because he was incredibly afraid of people when he was found (he'd been dumped on a country road). But now that he completely trusts me, he always chews on my hand. And I think it's in a sweet way, but he's a big boy with big teeth and sometimes it's too hard and he doesn't understand it can hurt. I've tried redirecting his attention to the many bones and chew toys he has available, and sometimes that works, but he usually ignores the toy I'm giving him and goes back for the hand. He does this ALL THE TIME, and I hate getting onto him, so I just kind of let him do it until it hurts and then I'll yank my hand away with a dramatic "OW!" and leave, to try to show him that too hard means no more. But he doesn't get it. He'll follow me and try to take my hand again. And he'll only really stop when someone with a more authoritative voice tells him too. He just seems to see me as a playmate rather than someone in charge.

    submitted by /u/TheHermitUnicorn
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  • Most owners of dogs we come across make them sit?

    Luckily our dog isn't awful but will bark and whine a little when another dog is across the street (desperate to play). But I feel like at least half the folks we come across make their dogs sit and stay when they see another dog. I just always think, what if both owners are training their dogs, who gets to sit their dog down and wait? Because we are forced to walk quickly on most times because the other dog are sat down staring at us as a training exercise.

    Just a random thought, thinking of a stand off with both owners with their dogs sitting trying to train them. Is sitting your dog down really preferably to just walking on and not making a big deal of it?

    submitted by /u/vavavam
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  • Dog refuses to come inside after potty breaks – advice needed

    My newly adopted large dog refuses to come back in the house after potty breaks. So far, I have tried:

    • High value treats – worked only the first few times and no luck since then

    • praise – not motivating

    • toys/play – does not know how to play or engage with toys, not sure how to engage with humans

    Unfortunately I can’t be outside with him 24/7 and he can’t be outside unattended. I don’t want to drag him into the house or carry him in because I worry it will make him dislike being picked up.

    Any recommendations are welcome!

    submitted by /u/Wild_Opportunity_537
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