Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
I'll be the first to say it. I'm a bad owner and I think Stew's the boss.
He has been horrible this week.
I should title this discussion, STEW WON'T.
-go near his crate,
-come when called,
-handle brush/mat removal; he backs away when I try to brush him and screams if I hit a mat, even if I'm brushing gently and giving praise/treats
-let me leash the Easy Walk without trying to bite it
-follow me into the bedroom at bed time
-get off the couch when asked
-ask (sit/down, trick) to jump onto the couch/bed
-give up anything in his mouth with growling
-eat his stuffed kongs during the day
-stop screaming/barking when I leave for the day
-stop barking anytime he wants my attention
I've tried redirecting the barking and being firm with commands so that he follows them, but he's being totally onery. The past two days he has not eaten any of his breakfast from the Kongs and he'll eat them when my friend comes over at lunch time to play/walk him. He was getting MUCH better with being in the crate. I'd leave for work to no noise at all and come home to some crazy barking but it lasted 2 minutes tops. He's also started not following me to bed, or if he does as soon as I shut my bedroom door he cries and scratches to get out and won't listen to me when I try to redirect. There is also nothing to tether him to at night, I have ikea nightstands that he'd probably knock over and no door handles on my closet/bathroom to hook him to.
I feel like I've just been horrible to him, because I mainly redirect him then given him something to chew in hopes to quiet him. I'm sure he's not getting enough energy but he also seems lazy. He won't chase after anything or really play, he prefers to just hoard the toys and chew on them. I have to run around with the toy at his mouth level and act crazy to get him engaging with me to play. He does great on his walks and stays right by me though. I walk him at least an hour morning and when I get home, then smaller bathroom walks at night also.
I feel AWFUL being frank with a trainer and just saying that I really can't take it, even though I understand it takes time to change behaviors. I just want something to work as a basis that he just snaps right to attention and thinks "WHOA, MOM REALLY WANTS ME TO DO THIS OR STOP THIS". Even if that just happens once, then I KNOW he's listening, getting it.
My family keeps telling me I need to assert myself and have Stew think "man, I made mom really mad and she's letting me know she's the boss. They want me to just whack him once when he gets really nippy, growling, snapping and he'll learn that's not ok. I'm not ok doing that, but also not ok with how things have been going. I've started a new job and barely have time to think, let alone arrange training classes for after work. I can't find any near me on a weekend day.
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Physical correction is not always a bad thing. I'm not saying to "whack" him but a mother dog is very physical about how they correct their puppies. I am close friends with one of my dogs' breeders and I've watched many interactions between a mama dog and her babies. They combine physical and sensory correction - there is definitely touch but also sound, and that sound is menacing.
Many people will agree that a pinch collar is an effective and humane way to train a dog not to pull on a leash. The pinch is a physical correction. Many people will shake a can of pennies - this is a sensory correction. Many people will spray water - to me this is physical and sensory, the water is touch/feel but also startles the other senses.
It sounds like Stew is really testing you to see if you'll meet his challenge. I don't think redirecting is working, I think some corrections are needed. I think you need to find a correction which you are comfortable with and exerts your authority.
It so easy to avoid conflict until we explode with frustration and your must be very frustrated. This explosion undermines our confidence in our own abilities to both ourselves and our dogs and it buries us in an avalanche of guilt. I believe, however, that dogs are very forgiving of our past mistakes and long for a leader. I suggest that you experiment with different physical/sensory corrections until you find one which you can commit to, then stick with it. I had a dog who would receive a 1 finger flick as a correction - it didn't take long until I could point that finger and he'd correct himself. I use the word "QUIT!" in a deep growly voice and it works wonders (of course, I'm standing tall and imitating a grizzly when doing so :-) ).
As always, just my 2 cents. I encourage you to look for little victories and try not to take the failures personally. Stay committed and don't give up. Some dogs are more challenging to train and every human/dog partnership is a unique entity. I look forward to hearing your success stories in the future!
Your dog is resource guarding. He needs to be trained to give his valuables up to someone else...including the one he loves most! This is not an easy matter to resolve and takes patience and consistent training on the owners part...or someone is going to get bit! It doesn't matter where you give a dog a prize they do not want to give up...but in the meantime until you train him, the crate would be the safest place. The first time I gave Skadi a raw chicken wing and then tried to take it away, I got a snarly baring the teeth puppy that bit me! I was shocked at first, hurt that my darling sweet puppy would do that to me. Then I educated myself and found out I was the ignorant one and my puppy was just being an "animal". I did not know dogs needed so much training until I got Skadi...now I worry that there are so many dogs that do not get the proper training and many people end up giving them away.
I am sorry that you are still going through this. Did you ever have a trainer come to the house to work with you? It seems that many people have had great success with Doggie Dan..it can't hurt to try!
Our trainer told us once in class---a prospective client asked if he guarantees his work/what his success rate is..his reply, "I can guarantee my work, but I can't guarantee yours" Basically meaning, you need to implement what you learn 100% of the time, and be consistent..no means no…not maybe…Don't just give up on a command if he doesn't listen the first time, or the tenth time. ..keep at him, calmly, until he gets it..and he will. It just takes time.
Good luck, and please keep us posted.
I've heard it said that the difference between cats and dogs is that with a dog you pet him, feed him, play with him, care for him and the dog looks at you and thinks "you must be a god". A cat you'll pet, feed him, play with him, care for him and the cat looks at you and thinks "I must be a god". I think that Stew is thinking like a cat.
I suggested earlier that you grab him by the scruff of the neck, push him to the floor and give a shake. One of the reason this works is because you are behind his head and out of bite range.
It is going to take some work for Stew to learn impulse control. It sounds like he has a very quick arousal and it shoots to high gear immediately. When he's like this, its impossible to reason with him. That is why you see the good dog/bad dog scenarios.
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