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| Pet Care and Health |
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Dealing with Normal Puppy Behavior: Chewing
Dealing with Puppies may be just as much work as human babies maybe more so because puppies can't wear diapers and they have very sharp teeth! It is definitely true that, similar to human infants and toddlers, puppies explore their world by putting things in their mouths. In addition, puppies are teething until theyre about 6 months old, which usually causes them some discomfort. Chewing not only facilitates teething, but also makes sore gums feel better. While it is perfectly normal for puppies to chew on furniture, shoes and shrubbery, these behaviors can be a problem for you. A puppy will not magically "outgrow" these behaviors as he matures. Instead, you must shape your puppy's behavior and teach him which objects are acceptable chew toys and which are not. Discouraging Unacceptable Behavior It is virtually inevitable that your puppy will, at some point, chew up something you value. This is part of raising a puppy! You can, however, prevent most problems by taking the following precautions:
Encouraging Acceptable Behavior
What Not To Do Never discipline or punish your puppy after-the-fact. If you discover a chewed item even minutes after hes chewed it, youre too late to administer a correction. Animals associate punishment with what theyre doing at the time theyre being punished. Dogs and puppies cannot reason that, "I tore up those shoes an hour ago and that's why I'm being scolded now." Some people believe this is what a puppy is thinking because he runs and hides or because he "looks guilty." Guilty looks are canine submissive postures that dogs show when they feel threatened. When youre angry and upset, the puppy feels threatened by your tone of voice, body postures and/or facial expressions, so he may hide or show submissive postures. Punishment after-the-fact will not only fail to eliminate the undesirable behavior, but could provoke other undesirable behaviors. Other Reasons for Destructive Behavior Although most destructive chewing by puppies is normal behavior, some puppies may exhibit destructive behavior for the same reasons as adult dogs. Examples include separation anxiety, fear related behaviors and attention-getting behavior. For help with these problems, contact our free behavior helpline at 419.891.0705 Ext. 305, or a professional animal behaviorist. |
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