Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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From what you've said, it sounds like your husband has established pack leadership, but Cooper sees himself as second in line, and then everyone else. Cooper is a typical doodle puppy and he will turn into a wonderful dog with consistent work. He's also at the most difficult age. Like others have said, you need to learn HOW to train him so that Cooper understands his place in the family in addition to learning commands. I urge you to check out Doggie Dan's website and look for a good trainer/training classes. The real job of a trainer is to train you to train your dog and be there to give you support and advice. I have a jumper and an ex-cat chaser :) I kept a leash on him in the house when I was around so I could quickly step on it when he'd start his chase along with a command. Now they are happy together. He's also learned to keep 4 paws on the ground. But it didn't happen overnight. A shock collar is not the answer for typical puppy behavior as you've found out. Good luck.
Hang in there! We went through this with Lloyd too for the first couple of months we had him. I wrote in other posts that he wasn't even cute to me anymore and I questioned whether we could keep him. His nipping and biting was getting to a point that I could not handle. He had torn up so many clothes of mine and my kids. My arms and hands were scratched and bitten to where I was embarrassed for anyone to see them. I was scared he would become a vicious dog. I felt like I tried everything...yelping, redirecting, time-outs, and finally I bought the Pet Corrector which is a can of compressed air that hisses. Once I started using this along with "No Bite," he stopped nipping almost completely. I can't say this would work for everyone, but it was a life saver for us.
How is he with his basic commands? How is he in his crate? We brought Lloyd to puppy class. More than anything, I liked having moral support of our trainer. She is great and we still go to see her. We'll be signing up for her adult class and Canine Good Citizen. Training keeps going. Before EVERY meal, we make Lloyd sit, lay down, and wait until we say Go before he can eat. We enter into the house before he does...EVERY time. If he tries to go in first, we lead him back out and wait for him to sit before he gets to come back in. Any treat he gets, he must do a command or two...or three. No freebies. By no means is he perfect but he has come a long way from the time I wanted to kick him to the curb.
Lloyd is also more respectful to my husband than me or my kids even though we do more for Lloyd than he does. I think it's because my husband is 6'2" with a deep voice. He also doesn't dote on him and doesn't always give him affection as an alpha shouldn't. All that is on my husband's terms.
Good luck and I hope it gets better quickly!
I so feel for you!! We have a doodle that was very much like Cooper at that age. He calmed down quite a bit after being neutered, but I believe that the training we received at that time along with starting consistent daycare was our savior. First of all DAYCARE! We are obsessed. Our pup would come home happy and exhausted 3 days a week. He still goes 3 days a week or else he gets all pent-up and crazy at 15 months. For most doodles, walks and playing is not enough to run out their energy. They need off-leash running and playing with other puppies to really tire them out.
Secondly - TRAINING! Specifically leadership training along with using either a spray bottle or an air spray canister (amazon Pet Convincer 2 was ours) to discourage any mouthing of any kind. You say "No" forcefully and then a spritz of water or puff of air to the back hip and then no eye contact or voice of any kind for 30 seconds. The other thing about training is "leadership training." We were taught to use blocking - this is literally blocking the path of your dog whenever they try to run in front of you in a small space. This includes hallways, doorways, and stairways. You literally put your let or whole body in front of the dog and then step back - if they try to get past you do this again until they stop trying and wait. This teaches the dog that you are in charge and they cannot just rush past you - puppy manners! This made a world of difference in our house with our hyper, strong-willed pup. We did this consistently for the 6 weeks of training and beyond and he doesn't try to rush past us or out doors anymore. He waits until we say "ok." This also works for feeding. I'd recommend that you make Cooper sit and wait for feeding until you say "ok" if you aren't already doing this. Frankly - we still make Angus "wait" or sit and wait until we say "OK" to go in or out any doors. Consistency is key. If you do this consistently for the next few months it'll become a habit. Stick with it!!
Oh my gosh so true about the emotions! We had a pretty tough time with our boy, Angus. He is stubborn, hyper, and suuuuper smart. Tough combination around the 4-8 month age range. We used time-outs like it was our job for the first few months we had him. If he got too crazy, excited, or bitey he went into the kitchen with a toy or two and we'd give him 2 minutes tops. This gave us a break and then he came out and we'd try to play again. Usually it took two times before he'd go in and lay down. After a couple months, he'd lay down as soon as he went in the kitchen and that was a pretty effective way to settle him. And like you mentioned, it gave us the very much-needed breather to get our emotions under control. Calm, controlled responses are key when teaching a puppy manners. Incredibly difficult, but completely necessary.
Haha it was a good thought. The timeouts were important for us....now when Angus does something ridiculous we just SIGH loudly and shake our heads lol
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