What about plastic tags? Mine both have plastic tags, I dont see how they would stain but mine don't have white fur either...Originally Posted by wolf_Q
Poor NeboDon't be so hard on yourself either...I hope he's all better now.
What about plastic tags? Mine both have plastic tags, I dont see how they would stain but mine don't have white fur either...Originally Posted by wolf_Q
Poor NeboDon't be so hard on yourself either...I hope he's all better now.
My babies: Josie, Zeke, Kiba, Shadow (AKA Butter)
my suggestion would be to wrap the tags in tape or something until Keva is about 6 months old or so, when shes stopped "teething".
the other thing is to watch her 100% of the time when shes with Nebo (if you cant watch her then take the quiet spot or nebo's collar off) and as soon as she goes to chew the quiet spot, clap your hands loudly and say "AH!-AH!" to inturrupt her, and then redirect her to an appropriate chew item, one that is similar in material to the quiet spot, so a stuffie or something.
chewing is a drive behavior, and dogs hate to be inturrupted during a drive. its similar to us being engaged in a good book or some engaging behavior- if everytime you sat down to read in the livingroom you were inturrupted, you wouldnt just stop reading, you just wont do it in the livingroom anymore. its the same thing with dogs- if everytime she chews the quiet spot she is inturrupted, she will soon learn that a.) its pointless to chew nebo's quiet spot, so she may as well just chew her toys and b.) when you say "Ah!-Ah!" she can look to you for something good to chew on. It takes a few days of this before they figure it out, but it works, you just have to be consistent.
R.I.P. Pidge, Oliver & Charlie <3
Margaret (the biped)
Sahkmet (the bunski)
Brock, Alki & Royal (the beasts)
Felix & Linus (the mewsons)
Brock - Royal - Alki
"A dog's mind is a terrible thing to waste."
"In order to really enjoy a dog, one doesn't merely try to train him to be semi-human. The point of it is to open oneself to the possibility of becoming partly a dog." -Edward Hoagland
Seattle Dogworks Training and Education Studio
May I ask where you got the little cannister? Sherman gets his tags stuck between the deck boards & rips them off a couple times a year. I now sew his flat onto his collar, but this sounds like it might work too.Originally Posted by Brody's Mum
I'm glad Nebo seems to be doing alright now, and hoping he stays that way!
Have fun with your husky pup, I hope he will listen better than Keva.Originally Posted by pessimisaurus
I've been teaching her consistantly since the day I brought her home that the front room is off limits. I clap/yell/etc and she'll run out when I do, but she always goes back later, and I catch her in the act every time. I do the same when she chews on the tag holder, and she'll stop...then do it again. I offer her toys instead and she'll chew on it for a bit, but the tag holder is much more entertaining. She's a stubborn little bugger. Nebo was a nawtee puppy in other ways, but he listened much better...she's fearless, nothing phases her.
I'm not that concerned about the tag holder, it has one hole in it, but otherwise ok. The other one I threw away was over a year old anyway, I'll just buy him a new one at Strut Your Mutt...I'm sure this one will be sufficiently destroyed by then.![]()
haha ah yes, well, Id say read this: http://jamesandkenneth.com/PDF_docs/J&KBEFOREtext.pdf
theres a section (chapter 4, starts on page 30) about chew training and good ways to manage a puppy until its trained, you may find some helpful info in there, particularly with management. the ex-pen is my best friend. lol my board & train pups spend most of their time in there so as to avoid learning bad habits (as well as to teach them how to be alone, what to chew on, and to help with house training, etc). I dont know if the quiet spot is the only "illegal" chew issue youre having, but this book has tons of awesome info, even for experienced puppy owners.
the front room is a different issue, thats more a management problem it sounds like. you can try timeouts if shes never allowed in there ever. they are pretty simple, and generally only take a few days to work. all you do is as soon as she steps one foot in the off limits area you say "Too Bad!" and then go pick her up and put her behind the nearest door (closet, bathroom, bedroom, crate, etc) for *10* seconds. after 10 seconds, open the door, say ok! and let her back out. usually it takes 4-5 time outs at a time, for just a few days, and then they figure it out. its pretty amazing!
R.I.P. Pidge, Oliver & Charlie <3
Margaret (the biped)
Sahkmet (the bunski)
Brock, Alki & Royal (the beasts)
Felix & Linus (the mewsons)
Brock - Royal - Alki
"A dog's mind is a terrible thing to waste."
"In order to really enjoy a dog, one doesn't merely try to train him to be semi-human. The point of it is to open oneself to the possibility of becoming partly a dog." -Edward Hoagland
Seattle Dogworks Training and Education Studio
I think Amy if very aware of how to train a Husky.
Oh poor Bebo! How is he doing today, Amy?
Don't feel bad, who would have known that listerine would cause that?
Keva sounds like a typical Husky pup and I know with your great knowledge and experience with Huskies she will turn out just as wonderful as Bebo.![]()
~Kay, Athena, Ace, Kiara, Mufasa, & Alice!
"So baby take a axe to your makeup kit
Set ablaze the billboards and their advertisements
Love with all your hearts and never forget
How good it feels to be alive
And strive for your desire"
-rx bandits
LOL! She sounds like my Star! Fortunately we got our destructo-puppy girl out of that phase without too much damage all around. That stubborn streak is still with her! Sherman's so much easier to deal with. Maybe you've just got a little alpha on your hands- Look out, Nebo!LOL! You've done such a wonderful job with Nebo, Keva will turn out fine too.Originally Posted by wolf_Q
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