Just an add on - I didn't realise the attention seeking aspect of this behaviour until I had seen a Greyhound that used to live in a house with a family become a very good racing dog. The dog was then moved into our training kennels to "maximise his potential on the track". His pads were a little softer than a track/kennel dog and he picked up a few scratches - not an issue when he lived at home. In kennels, the staff treated these scratches, spent more time with the dog, looked at him more often than when he had no scratches etc. Instict led the dog to connect issues with his own feet to the attention he got from humans. He ended up chewing his own feet to the point of bleeding before I realised what was happening. The vet didn't get the behavioural aspect of it and prescribed drug after drug. In an assertive dog this could lead to a leadership challenge/other behaviour problems.





Reply With Quote
and you can't wash that out, you have to wait for it to grow and then cut it off. 



Bookmarks