tigerlily46514
Honored Member
I really think, that in time, these two dogs WILL find their way with each other, i do. I could be wrong, but it could just be the adjustment thing of new dog in my house kinda thing..
It might be easier, to teach Chance an alternate behavior, and REWARD that, rather than punish him.
One option might be:
'Go to your MAT'. It's fine if Chance has frozen kongs, chewbones, etc, and puppy can't be allowed to approach Chance if he is on his mat, and if Chance corrects the pup for coming into his space, is a good chance that the JR is right.
Of course, keeping a JR on a mat for very long, is not sustainable solution
, but, it *might* be something to consider doing briefly just to interrupt escalations....make sure Chance sees his mat as "best place in the world" and NEVER ever send Chance to his mat as a punishment, or he will hate that mat.
Reward him HEAVILY for being on his mat.
only first few minutes are about one way to teach "go to your mat", rest of video is advanced stuff.
It might be easier, to teach Chance an alternate behavior, and REWARD that, rather than punish him.
One option might be:
'Go to your MAT'. It's fine if Chance has frozen kongs, chewbones, etc, and puppy can't be allowed to approach Chance if he is on his mat, and if Chance corrects the pup for coming into his space, is a good chance that the JR is right.
Of course, keeping a JR on a mat for very long, is not sustainable solution
, but, it *might* be something to consider doing briefly just to interrupt escalations....make sure Chance sees his mat as "best place in the world" and NEVER ever send Chance to his mat as a punishment, or he will hate that mat.Reward him HEAVILY for being on his mat.
only first few minutes are about one way to teach "go to your mat", rest of video is advanced stuff.
The fact that Chance inhibited his bite speaks volume of intent. Was it pretty? Absolutely not. But apparently Chance felt it was necessary. Please sit down with your roommate and have a heart to heart talk, maybe even let her/him read this thread. It's important that Chance has an opportunity to "just be Chance" - without Remi always around (as cute as he is) -- and the same is true, Remi should be allowed to "just be Remi" without Chance always right there. If Chance knows he has to deal with this puppy, but he also knows the humans have his back (so to speak), and that you'll help him out if things get too much, and give him frequent breaks from this little spit-fire, he'll most likely (over time) grow more tolerant of Remi -- and of course, this should happen as Remi matures, also.
I'll blame it on the hour ... bedtime.
Needless to say I jump in fast. Clearly the dogs should stay my responsibility
Poor thing was getting attacked by Remi and wasn't in the mood to play. Remi got a warning bite and just walked away! Its amazing that he's starting to understand when enough is enough.
It sounds like Chance is doing a good job, and Remi is now learning some good manners and 'dogspeak'. Takes time and patience. Remember Remi is a baby, you don't want him traumatized by any dog, by accident. It's fine to interact with dogs, but you don't want bad stuff happening (if avoidable) at his young age, while he's still learning good doggie manners, how to interact politely, etc. You keep doing what you're doing, cuz it definitely sounds like you're on the right track. So happy to hear that both dogs sound happier now - and your posts sound happier too. 