Greatest Instructions For Training Young Puppies Not To Bite

Submitted : Jan 18, 2011   Word Count : 611   Popularity: 99

Several owners tend not to realize that this behavior could lead to problems with dominance and aggression later on in the dog's life, no matter how adorable it might seem when your pup is rolling around on the ground.

As it is, nearly all puppies discover while they are still young that they shouldn't bite, and stop before it causes any problems. Because they have a lot of brothers and sisters in their litter, they soon learn that whenever they bite, they are bitten back. Within the initial 2 months of being born, a puppy ought to know that it should not bite. The problem is that the mother doesn't always get eight weeks to stop puppy biting.

Young Puppies

Training puppies never to bite at an early age is important. When they have been taken away from their mother before 8 weeks, or should they still have a problem with biting then this must be resolved at the earliest opportunity.

Among the key things to bear in mind when training puppies not to bite is you must not hit the puppy! When a puppy bites, it doesn't understand it hurts, it is simply playing a game. By hitting it you might cause the puppy to be frightened of you, or possibly become more aggressive.

To seriously stop puppy biting, you have to address the cause of the behavior. Simply rewarding them with treats, tummy rub or maybe a pat on the head when they are good and discouraging any bad behavior can help with this. You need to be careful to make certain that the puppy knows you're not playing games. Avoid wrestling, tug of war, or chase games that will lead to nipping by the puppy.

When training puppies not to bite, consistency is the key! When you are training puppies not to bite, don't let them off for any biting. Every time they bite, you must tell them they have done wrong. It's all for their own good.

The Training

When you start training your puppy, try to sign-up them in obedience or socialization classes. There are actual bite inhibition lessons where instructors will simulate the behaviors of the puppy's mother, teaching it that the bites are not socially acceptable. It's also good for your puppy to learn to interact socially with other dogs too. Your puppy is less likely to end up aggressive towards other dogs if it's been about other dogs at this sort of course.

Early, when you try to stop puppy biting, reroute the behavior to something constructive like a chew toy or bone. Saying "No!" and giving them something else to chew and bite will make them learn that it's not OK to bite you, but that they're allowed to bite the bone or chew toy.

Making a hurt noise when the puppy bites you can be another very good strategy. This is the kind of reaction the puppy would get when it bit a litter mate. A soft whine or yip will inform the puppy that it has caused you pain, something it doesn't want to do. This should be enough that the puppy lets go and leaves you alone.

Training puppies not to bite is one of the most crucial lessons, and one that needs to be done as soon as possible. By the point the puppy is 10 weeks old, it ought to understand that biting is not allowed. It'll make the years into the future much less stressful and the risk of potential violence in the future much lower.

Evaluation, Review, and Comment  How would you evaluate the article? Please pick one of the following.
Badly Written
Offensive Content
Spam
Bad Author Links
Mis-spellings
Bad Formatting
Bad Author Photo
Good Article!
Comments, Reviews, and Quesyions  Would you like to leave a comment, question, or review?

Author Login

Username:

Password:



Register Here
Lost user/pass Here Existing member Here

Top

Recent

Category