Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Ollie is 13 weeks old and have been biting and growling at us since we got him at 8 week! He will sit and go "down" (for a treat) but 15 seconds later he is back to jumping up, growling, biting. It hurts! I want us all to bond and enjoy him but he's making it very difficult. My kids are 8 and 10 and, put it this way, my son took Ollie out in the backyard to play with him yesterday and all Ollie did was bite his legs so my son put him in the garage "time out" crate. Ollie just barks his head off when you put him in there. We've tried ignoring him (stand still and look away) BUT he just keeps biting. We've tried the time out crate and the barking just grates on your nerves, it sort of works to distract him w/ a toy or treat and making him sit but he's usually back at it withing 30 seconds. He growls if we try to pick him up and snuggle. Even when he naps he's away from everyone and it just makes me sad. I wanted a nice doodle to play with, pet, brush (he also hates being brushed, acts like I'm stabbing him). We start training at a pet store this Friday but right now I am just frustrated and my husband is BEYOND frustrated (is talking about trading him in!). Which I don't want to do but I don't want him adding stress to the family either!
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I can totally understand how you feel! My puppy Angus is 14 weeks and we have been dealing with a lot of crazy puppy behaviors. Below is a link to a website that made me feel a lot better - feel free to browse around. We have been using these strategies for the biting for the past few weeks and, although Angus still gets pretty rambunctious and "bitey" he has really begun to control himself when we tell him "No biting" in a firm voice. We still occasionally have to do a "time out" in the kitchen, but we only put him in there for about a minute or two before allowing him to come back out. Sometimes he ends up right back in there a minute later, but usually by the second "time out" he has calmed down and is better able to listen and play safely.
This site helped us at our wits end:
http://www.fidosavvy.com/puppy-behavior.html
Just a thought, you may want to consider a "time out" location closer to the family - e.g. a bathroom or kitchen area that is puppy-proofed ... put some toys in there. The time outs should not be a punishment, but more a teaching and calm down area - we always make sure Angus has a couple toys in the kitchen during a time out. It's more to say, "Hey, if you bite we don't get to play.." in order to teach that biting is not an acceptable form of play and also to get a much-needed chill out (for both of you).
Hopefully reading about how normal the crazy puppy behaviors are will help you all as much as it did for us. We're already much calmer puppy parents :) Good luck!!
I agree with the exercise too! We try to get our guy out to run around in fenced in areas and lots of walks! There's also the mental energy of a very intelligent pup, so doing lots of shorter training sessions to give an outlet for all the smart doodle thinking they're doing!
A few things to mention here:
1. Dogs find hugging an act of aggression. Dont hug your dog. As for snuggling at this age well that wont happen until many months from now. My dog was over 3 when he decided that we werent a game and that we sleep and snooze together and he thought joining us might be great. Until that time, he choose to get some deep sleep on the floor.
So bottom line, picking him up and snuggling is just setting him off by exciting him or maybe even offending him.
2. Biting, growling, jumping are the most common complaints we get from new puppy owners here on DK. It is common as the sun shines and it passes in the next several months. This is puppy play. This is how they play with their littermates: Bite, Growl, Pounce, Jump, Bite, Growl.......... It's cute-not. Not on your arm. But its common and normal.
Give this pup some time outs and walk away. Take a deep breath.
DO give as much exercise as possible. One great thing about these dogs are that they are retrievers. Take this difficult time and go wear him down playing FETCH
Here is one recent discussion along with a few videos.
Your dog is playing. That's how puppies play. It is normal but not so nice when it happens to you, We get it :)
Buy several Antler Chews. Another reason dogs bite is that they are teething. In addition to teething it is nature that makes puppies bite. It is as natural as sucking in infants. YOU CANT CHANGE THIS!
Another discussion: Biting Us
Hugging Dogs: Why they find it as an act of Aggression
I SOO hear you here! I wondered if we'd gotten gypped with our bitey, growly puppy. I was so worried about it I had a trainer come to our house to help. That was a LIFESAVER! Within thirty minutes of observing our routine, she'd figured out he hated being touched behind his head, hated being picked up (which we have to do in our three story house to take him potty 10x a day!) and hated being touched when he needs to go potty. Her tips were avoid doing all the things that make him growl like picking him up to go potty (we put him on a leash and take him down safe stairs he can navigate), let him approach us for snuggle time (which he does a lot now!), when he's sleeping and we need to move him, coax him out with treats first, etc. One of the things that helped was to give puppy massages every day. After two days of this, he was much more used to letting us touch him. With regards to the biting when playing (we have a ten year old too so I know how hard that is), if he bites we say "AH AH!" and leave him by walking away to an area where he can't get you and ignore him for about 15 seconds. He still hates being touched behind his head, which makes it hard when every single stranger wants to pet him in public and he tries to bite them. But at 13 weeks, he's much improved and I think it was having that trainer recognize where the specific issues were. It was totally obvious after she pointed it out. And the sleeping away from you happened to us too but just last night, he woke up, found me in the house and came to sleep at my feet! For us it was worth 120.00 to have the trainer help us figure it out! We're still working on training our ten year old to be around him though. That's a work in progress! Good luck!!
Kathryn, have your doodle's ears checked for an infection. It may be nothing, but often when a dog doesn't want you to touch behind the ears it is because the ears hurt.
Hi Nancy! We did check for an ear infection and anything else that might bother him back there. I suspected it might be something along those lines but he's completely healthy. I suspect perhaps he had a traumatic incident or was handled badly before we got him. He's doing much better even a few days after I posted this. A stranger was able to stroke his head this morning while his tail wagged!
OMG!! You've just re-told the exact same story many of us on here have lived through. You are not alone!. My dad was thisclose to taking Spike to the SPCA. I'm not even joking. Thisclose. He was convinced that Spike was a vicious violent monster. I was in tears. Finding a good training school and advice on here saved our lives. Literally.
The biting, jumping, growling etc are all normal. Spike was famous for sitting like an angel then BOOM! Psyco dog. He'd do anything to get a rise out of us because to him we were "playing". If we were to yell or try to grab him the game became so much more exciting.
What helped us (like others have mentioned) was to have a time out area in another room.. but close enough that he could still hear us. In our case we used and still do use the kitchen. We have gates to block it off. When Spike goes into demon mode we very calmly remove him to it. No yelling. No screaming. Just quiet calm removal. At first we used a houseline on him at all times so we could grab that to get him. Now we keep the house line handy and have him sit, put the line on and then remove him. The kitchen area has never been used as punishment. Just quiet time outs. We always keep chew toys there along with his bed. Not to mention his food and water are there as well so the kitchen is more like a den.
Time outs never last long. But there were some nights where he was in and out of them so frequently I got tired myself!
It takes patience but you will work through it. Our demon pup days aren't that far in our past but it seems like a distant.. nightmare... Spike is now 10 months old and is a TOTALLY different dog.
Another thing that helped? Since your guy is probably teething.... have LOTS of chewy stuff. Spike LOVES the heck out of the nylabone dinosaurs and galileo's. He will chew on those for hours on end. Another favorite? Our pet store sells small nylon ropes. We soak them in water and keep them in the freezer. We pull them out as needed. Feels great of a teething mouth :)
Be patient. Be calm. You WILL get through this!
THANK YOU for this post. I have a 15 week old male GD. The same stuff in our house. Except he likes to sleep near us. Other than that, very similar behavior. I have tired EVERY single technique on the biting (and sometimes growling) and nothing has worked yet. He has ripped several of my PJ bottoms, a couple good shirts and my arms looks like I'm abused. I live with a bottle of bitter apple right near me. Not the cute, cuddly pup I envisioned..But I love him to death. Thank for all the responses...it gives hope!!
I hear ya...as tough as it is, just continue being consistent with your responses and rest assured that they will decrease and ultimately stop. Anyway, that's what everyone says and what we're banking on in my household :) Hang in there!!
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