Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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Congratulations on your new addition! You mentioned twice that when the dogs are together without your involvement (before the car ride and outside at home), they get along fine. This shows me that they will do fine together, you might be the unwitting catalyst for the problems.
I just have a couple of thoughts. Giving Miah extra attention could add to the problems rather than help them; dogs don't think or feel the same as people and they often interpret our actions in ways other than what was intended. By giving Miah extra attention, you are trying to reassure her that she hasn't lost your love. In Miah's mind, however, it could signal that something HAS changed - you are acting differently. She may feel that you are appointing her "the boss" and when you correct her for "taking charge", that could be confusing.
Also, it isn't really Miah's house that Ripley is joining - it's your house of which both dogs are members. You say who does what, not Miah. If you want Ripley on the bed and Miah growls, I would make Miah get off the bed until you invite her back on the bed. It isn't her bed, it's yours. If Ripley is annoying Miah on the bed, I would make Ripley get off. If you tell Miah to come and she doesn't, I'd snap the leash on her and give a mini "come" lesson. I wouldn't make her look at you while you talk to her. I've seen people do this but I don't consider it effective, in fact, I think it is probably threatening to the dog.
I have 3 dogs and I've always allowed my dogs to growl at each other. Growling is one way that dogs communicate - it's an important social skill. I've seen dogs get nipped because they didn't understand to back off when another dog growled. Ripley is an annoying puppy and Miah needs to tell him to leave her alone. If Ripley has been with his mother and littermates, he's been growled at, snapped at, and nipped - trust me. I would not allow Miah to growl at Ripley because she is being possessive of you, but if the interaction is just between the 2 dogs, I'd allow growling. My Charlotte still growls occasionally at Tessa, that's okay, I growl at my family too sometimes ;-)
I would not let Ripley take a toy that Miah has and I would not let Miah take something that Ripley has. Unless Ripley is showing dominant behavior, I would not always feed Miah food or treats first, I would alternate. Miah needs to know that they are equals. If Miah goes off to "pout", don't worry about it - she's a dog not a person. She's not thinking up evil plans, she's just finding a nice place to sleep. Don't personalize what is going on, dogs don't think that way. I think you are feeling sorry for Miah and she is taking advantage of that. She's a smart girl but I know you can out-smart her!
I agree with Jennifer. I think they need to be treated as equals other than how they figure out themselves.
A little late to the party but for what it's worth, our experience was very similar to Lucy/Annabelle. We had Tank and Sully who were 4 months apart in age and grew up together. Tank was alpha, Sully was very mellow and they loved each other from the minute we brought Sully home. Being naive, I thought that same thing would happen when Beau came a year later. Not so much. Sully gave in after a few hours. Tank hated Beau, growled for no reason and could not stand to be near him or for Beau to be near me. I spent several nights crying and worried that we had made the wrong decision. I finally decided this was my house/my rules. We hired a trainer who came to the house so the boys were in their regular environment and set out to remind Tank who made the house payments. I refused to tolerate growling/snapping for no reason. I knew that Tank was the alpha and deserved respect and, as a puppy, Beau had to learn manners. When that was happening, I said nothing. When Tank was being a bully, he got a firm (but in no shape form or fashion hurtful) tug on his scruff and a firm "no". The rules started to be enforced. When it came time to sit with me, it was first come, first serve. No cutting in front because you're alpha (it took one day to learn the first come first serve rule) and everyone got their turn. I noticed some changes almost immediately. In a few weeks, I wasn't crying and the boys were happy. Everyone found their place in the pack. Sully is a couch potato and never liked Tank's rough play. Beau loves rough play. Now, Sully sits on the chaise watching Tank and Beau play for hours. Beau knows that Tank is alpha and give him that respect. But, they are now BFFs and will curl up together on the same doggie bed to sleep. Something I never in my dreams thought I would see.
The best advise I can give really echoes everyone else's', you are the pack leader. Your house/your rules. Just like when my kids were young. I figured out when to let them work it out on their own and when to step in. I found it important to make it clear that everyone got some of my time, but again there were rules. Good luck
I really wouldn't know how to deal with this since we have basically the opposite. We always have at least two dogs and they are very bonded with each other. This has been especially true with doodles. I don't feel that there has been an alpha dog among my doodles and they love to have the company of another dog. We had a standard poodle when our old shepherd died, and he was beside himself with grief. I got him a doodle puppy and he came right out of it. When the poodle was getting old, I got the doodle a goldendoodle puppy so he would not go through the same thing. He took right over with that puppy and they were very bonded. He did not even seem to notice when the poodle passed away. However, when the labradoodle died, the goldendoodle went through the same grief and would not even look out the window. We got him an ALD puppy and the same when the goldendoodle died. The ALD would just walk behind us with his head down (obviously grieving) and we had to get him a companion. So, I would say if a dog is raised with another dog from puppyhood, they are very bonded. We thought Harpo would be a fine only dog, but he definitely was not. Only dogs, alpha dogs, and little packs. I guess they each have their own dynamics.
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