My Puppy Chews a Lot - Mostly on Me
Puppies who chew are normal. Chewing is a natural and necessary
puppy behavior. Puppies at about four months of age are more
prone to chewing because this is when they usually start
teething. Other dogs that chew, especially when you are not at
home, may be suffering from separation anxiety. Separation
anxiety requires an entire new behavior treatment plan. In this
newsletter, I want to give you a few tips for your typical,
normal-behaving puppy chewer!
Some things you can do is try to teach your puppy not to chew
inappropriate items. You can sit on the floor with him, casually
place an object before him like a shoe, or a pencil (something
he has chewed on inappropriately). As puppy approaches the
object, give a firm "No," and replace the item with appropriate
chew toy. When puppy takes the appropriate chew toy, praise him.
You might even offer him a treat to try and reenforce the
appropriate behavior and also.....that chewing on treats is
alright too.
Have a variety of chew toys on hand. Give him no more than 3 or
4 chew toys at a time. Rotate the chew toys to provide variety
and to help stimulate interest. Puppies can be compared to
children who enjoy a new toy or returning to a toy they have not
played with in a while.
Keep plenty of Bitter Apple Spray on hand and use it on spots
where you find puppy has chewed or is about to chew. This has
been the absolute best trick I have ever found in keeping
puppies/dogs away from objects I don't want them chewing on.
My Puppy Bites my Hands When we Play!
If you have ever watched puppies playing together or moms
playing with their puppies, you will notice how they nip and
bite each other sometimes to the point of what sounds like a
blood curling scream.....Very Normal Behavior, however. Not so
pleasant though when puppy plays with you and attempts the same
kind of antics. You will need to teach puppy not to play biting
games with you. Try screaming: "Ouch!" Walk away from her for
several minutes. You don't want to give her attention for this
behavior. You want to plainly tell her "THAT HURTS," and I do
not like it!!! If she just barely touches your skin with a
little nip, just gently say "No." Try feeding her treats
straight from your hand and do not throw them on the floor or
leave them out for her to nibble on. Sort of like, puppies/dogs
will not bite the hands that feed them, most usually, unless
they have some kind of severe psychological disorder. You can
also grab her mouth, hold it together firmly and say "NO BITE."