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  • Success stories about you shepherd pup and cat(s)?

    I have a 4 month old white Swiss shepherd who gets waaaay too excited about the cats. (and other dogs. people. kids. leaves on the ground. snow. etc etc)

    Im looking for some good stories and tips about how you got your shep to get along with the cat?

    My one cat wants to desperately be the pups friend. very curious. isn't afraid of being near her until the excitement kicks in.

    the most I’ve done is feed a churu to the cat while giving the pip treats for calm, and theyve been about a foot away. Cats always have an escape route and the dog is tethered to heavy furniture to avoid catastrophe for when she tries to chase.

    tips? Success stories? I could really use some support.

    submitted by /u/AccordingFeeling7737
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  • My puppy is relentless and I need advice

    Hey everyone

    🐾 Poppy, female, 18 weeks/4mo, 3lb maltipoo

    I’ve posted on here previously in regard to Poppy’s sudden disdain for her crate. She used to be able to sleep through the night in her crate, even go in of her own volition at bedtime, but not anymore. She will bark and dig for up to 40mins straight, on and off all night. I’ve lost so much sleep that I’m tempted to give up and let her roam the bedroom at night since she is potty trained. But I hate that idea so much, almost like I’m failing one of the core tenants of properly raising your dog. I also simply don’t want her out and about yet. She’s too little. But I am straight up suffering. Do you think I should let it go and hope she becomes normal again, or tough it out? FYI, she’s been suddenly misbehaving like this for over one week now.

    I know adolescence comes with neediness and that usually begins to dim with developing independence at the 5/6mo mark. That said, here is my situation. For context, Poppy’s bark is…. It is the most ear piercing, most echoing, most loud bark I have ever heard. It is so insanely high pitch and it just drills into your skull, and she does not give up. When I lay on my bed, she wants to climb up, but I don’t want that, so she whines and whines and whines. Does anyone have any training advice to detour this? Because I am at a loss.

    I love Poppy so much, and I know that it doesn’t help that I’m a naturally anxious person. I could really use some advice.

    submitted by /u/username2937372829
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  • Advice on getting a 6 mo old standard poodle to stop jumping

    We have a 6 mo old spoo and he is a fantastic dog overall. Happy, confident, friendly. Potty trained, crate trained, stellar in scent work already, whip smart and easy to train. He’s learning to heel and progressing well in loose leash walking. We are home all day and play with him each session he’s awake. He’s also learning to settle well.

    So my one issue is jumping and mouthing (play-biting). All the things that are supposed to work do not. I’ve tried freezing, removing myself immediately, giving him a cool down in his crate, and even using treats to teach him when he’s NOT jumping he gets rewarded. I’ve even tried putting my knee out, firmly saying no (this actually escalates him). He’s definitely getting excited and sometimes there’s humping involved (which he only does with me and not my partner).

    I usually have a house leash on him and sometimes can easily get it under control by taking the leash and leading him to his bed. But if I haven’t gotten his leash on yet or we’re in transition, he’ll be all over me even as I try to walk away. Which is incredibly frustrating to say the least.

    submitted by /u/VelvetVerbosity
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  • We disagree on crate training and I’m so tired. + crate transition

    Hi all,

    This is a vent but I’m also seeking crate advice.

    I’m raising my 5 month old Samoyed puppy alone. His training is going well, he’s well behaved in general and I did work hard on him, but I also had support from my mom since I got him. She has been helpful since the beginning, gave me good advice, and put a great perspective on a few things. There is just one thing we cannot agree on: the crate.

    I have crate trained him since day one. It took a while, but he eventually got used to his crate and he goes in it peacefully. But my mom sees the crate as a prison for him and feels pity for him that he’s caged up. It ends up with us having big fights about it every time she comes over, and she rambles about how she had dogs in the past, she never crated them and they turned up fine. Which is great but she had them 40 years ago while living on a literal farm with huge space; I live in a much smaller townhouse.

    I can understand where she’s coming from, but the crate has helped me a LOT during training and it gives my dog stability during the night. He’s still young, and while my plan is to eventually let him sleep with me full time with the crate as a choice, I feel like it’s too young for him to have access to a big space at night. Just today he had not one but three accidents in the house, and even if he’s pretty much clean, his bladder/gut system aren’t fully developed and we still are in a work in progress. She doesn’t seem to understand my point, and is trying to make me feel bad for not letting him sleep with us.

    Soon I’m going to rearrange my setup. Right now puppy is sleeping in his crate in the living room that is also used as a support for the playpen during the day. I want to make the playpen bigger, more stable, and the crate is going upstairs with me.

    I have two big questions: number one, how should I transition from the crate in the living room to the bedroom? Is it better if he’s on the same floor but in a different room? Should I let him on my bed asap?

    And two, how should I deal with someone who doesn’t agree with my methods? I would appreciate that there is no judgment towards me or my mom. I’m just tired of feeling like my boundaries are too much to ask for, and her coming over is making me feel anxious (for context she lives far away from work, I live much closer and sometimes she sleeps at my house to avoid trafic and the long road during winter). At the end of the day, it is my dog, not hers, I do not want to feel influenced or guilt tripped for how I raise my puppy, who by the way is amazing and everyone tells me so. Not to toot my own horn but it must mean in a way that I’m doing something right.

    Thank you for reading and I appreciate the feedback 🫶

    submitted by /u/SubstantialAd4582
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  • Has anyone taught their puppy to signal to go outside from an apartment

    My 11mo pomapoo male puppy has been potty trained since he was 5 months old but he does not signal (noticeably) when he has to pee. This whole time it’s just been on me to make sure he goes out every 4-5 hours.

    Last night he had an accident (my fault- I should’ve taken him out right at 5 hours). The thing that bothers me though is that he does NOT noticeably signal at all (he doesn’t whine)- when I was potty training him the only signal he ever gave was sniffing around which is super easy to miss. I’ve taught him to ring a bell on command but I’ve kinda stopped having him ring it before we go out because it didn’t seem like he was making the connection.

    It seems like it’s WAY more difficult for a dog to make the ring bell->pee outside connection when you live in an apartment because it’s more like ring bell->put collar on->put leash on->go in elevator->walk through lobby->pee in grass instead of a more direct connection if you can just let your dog out in your yard. Has anyone been in a similar situation and do you have any tips for me?

    submitted by /u/Unfair_Minute_1595
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  • Toilet training regression after 18 months

    So my wife and I have this amazing pup we absolutely love and adore. We managed to train her really quickly with toilet training and using her doggy door. Unfortunately she has begun to regress. Last November we spent a month renovating our ensuite bathroom and thats when the regression started. It lasts for a little bit but then comes back. We even got our carpets professionally cleaned when we thought we got her back on track only for her to do it the next day. Thankfully it has now stopped happening on the carpets but its now happening whenever we leave the bathroom door open. We've resorted to keeping that bathroom door closed at all times but the second its left open she'll sneak in and pee in there.

    How do we stop this continuing even if we accidentally leave the bathroom door open?

    submitted by /u/knifeyspooney3
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  • Adolescence – positive experience

    Hello. I keep reading here all the naughty puppies stories about how they changed during adolescence, how they forgot all the training they had, all scary stories! My pup l going to be a teenager in couple months and I started being stressed about that puppy stage, so…

    Do you have any positive adolescence experience with your puppies? Maybe your dog hasn’t changed or was a perfect teenager? How were they as puppy and what did you do to help go through this phase without loosing your mind?

    I need to hear some positive stories and see if there is hope haha

    submitted by /u/Adorable-Living3487
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  • BC puppy and separation training without crate

    I have a 5-month-old border collie puppy and up until now he has always been with someone – either a sitter, at my grandmother’s countryside home or with me while I work from home. He is quite attached to me and follows me most of the time, coming with me to another room about 8 times out of 10 and always watching what I’m doing.

    I haven’t done intensive crate training because he seems more comfortable moving freely around the apartment and is able to calm down and fall asleep either in his bed or on the couch.

    Now the time has come to start training him more seriously for being alone. So far, I’ve been using a separate, puppy-proofed room in the apartment. I leave him there with a Kong and close the door behind me, usually for about 3–10 minutes. I probably couldn’t even leave for 15 minutes, because as soon as I open the front door, he starts barking and tries to open the door.

    How can I effectively train alone time without using a crate? Has anyone successfully done this? I know that I have to get him exhausted to leave him alone for even a couple of minutes but what's other tricks to train this efficiently?

    Also, how much did your bc puppy sleep during puppyhood? Mine sleeps no more than 14-15 hours per 24h.

    Thanks in advance

    submitted by /u/Initial-Sale-4570
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  • When can a puppy be outside alone/independent toileting?

    My 12 week old cocker is great about going to the toilet outside mostly. He has never had an accident in his crate or play pen. The times he has had an accident it’s been because we missed a signal/took too long opening the door. He loves being in our little garden/courtyard if we are out there with him, but will whine at the door to come in if we are inside (we’ve once or twice kept him outside to clean up his accidents by the door so he doesn’t track them around the house). I was just wondering at what point we can pop him outside to toilet by himself without being present? Is that something that can be trained or do we have to go out with him for every toilet break until he is grown up? Thanks 🙂

    submitted by /u/RavenousRoses-
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  • My dog doesn’t listen to me!

    I have a 5 year old mini dachshund (dachshund owners you know they're stubborn as heck) and recently she's stopped listening. I tell her no, she doesn't even flinch. I say her name, she doesn't respond. She'll hop up on surfaces and steal things from the coffee table, eat off of plates, she's impossible! People in my house are also undermining me by giving her table scraps. She barks all the time while outside and doesn't come back inside, even when it's snowing. I take her on walks and there's a foot of snow on the ground so I doubt that she's offended that she's not spending time outside. She's barely food motivated, unless it's people food. What do I do?

    submitted by /u/Fantastic-Dark801
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