Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
I think most of you are aware that among the many problems we had with Murph on vacation, probably the worst was that he snapped at our 18 month old grandson. When I talked to my trainer about this, he told me that because Murph is a "nervous guy" the erratic movements on the baby were scary to him and his snapping was meant to be a warning. He did not believe that Murph would actually bite any child, but felt we had some work to do with him to prevent this in the future. Yesterday was our first "childproofing" session, and I promised that I would share our approach. Here goes..
-When the family arrived (four grandkids and Mom), I had Murph gated upstairs to prevent any excitement as the kids came into the house. He stayed there for the first 15 minutes until things were calm.
-My DH took the three older kids swimming, leaving the baby and Mom here with Guinness, Murph and me.
-I brought out the "high power" treats and put Murph in a down/stay. We brought the baby over and let him start to crawl on Murph while I was constantly feeding him treats and giving him tons of praise and affection. We did this in very short intervals and prevented any excitement between these little "sessions"....Murph was in a down/stay in another room.
-We did this three or four times for a few minutes each time until Murph seemed totally calm with the interaction...and looking for MORE treats.
-We taught Colin (the baby) a new word..."gentle". I really think he understood it because he went from patting to petting.
-Then we let Murph just walk around and interact, watching him the entire time for any body language changes. He was a happy Dood, and followed the baby everywhere with a wagging tail. Again, more praise and treats with every positive interaction.
-When I couldn't watch them (cooking dinner), Murph was in a down/stay with me in the kitchen and the baby was gated out.
It was very successful and I feel much better. We'll do more of these training sessions as reinforcement, but I'm feeling now that we have a great handle on how to change Murph's mindset. The biggest obstacle was that my daughter (Colin's Mom) had to get over her "disgust" at Murph's big wet kisses which by the end of the afternoon he was lavishing on the baby.
Oh, and Murph ate NO DINNER.
Hope this helps others...I love it when I have a plan.
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TY for sharing this, Jane. I have done lots and lots of counter condition with Apollo and older kids like this. But Olive our 2 year old granddaughter will be staying with us for 6 days and I have been trying to figure out the right approach to use. This is just what I need to do, TY, TY.
Ben is such a fantastic trainer I wish he could help me with Miley. You are my "TRAINING IDOL!!!!!".
This all sounds so positive, Jane. I'm glad you've got a handle on this and you're feeling better about it. I think Colin is going to grow up loving dogs and big wet doodle kisses!
Wow, this is awesome advice. I am zeroxing it to show to Sheila's trainer. Love it that YOU treat, also. Murph knows YOU are in control and can take cues from you and not the child. Poor wet baby, human baby I mean. And where was Guinness during all this? Saying I am the valedictorian you goofus brother so I'll just observe and point my paw at you whenever mom looks?
I have to admit I have gotten away from training Sheila with all the surgeries, etc. And she is so small. But toward the fall, I have a trainer lined up to help me w/ Sheila and some of her fear issues, like when people come to the door. And I think a trainer can help me reinforce down stay, which is her hardest. She even does "come" better than "down stay".
I'm so glad you have found several solutions here. I KNOW how relieved you feel.
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