Supporting your veterinarian! VeterinaryPartner.com
Meow











a VIN company
 
 

Back Top Bookmark this article
   
CANINE BEHAVIOR QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
By Kathy Diamond Davis
Author and Trainer

Print this article  Save this article to disk  Email this article
Destructive Puppy

Q: Hi! We have a new 10-week old black Lab who is tearing up the house! Some help, please!

A: A pup this age is too young to be loose in the house unless someone is in the same room watching the puppy. You can either use a crate when no one can watch the puppy, or a safe area such as a bathroom with a baby gate to keep him safely tucked out of trouble.

A Labrador can be expected to need this kind of supervision to around age 2 years. Housetraining is usually not complete until at least 4 months of age, and a few months later, the really serious chewing stage sets in. The chewing you see in a 10-week old pup is small potatoes compared to what comes later.

Unfortunately, if you don't crate-train your dog in puppyhood, it is sometimes impossible to crate-train the dog later on. Many dogs lose their homes by the time they are a year old, because the household destruction is just more than their owners can handle.

Crate-training saves dogs' lives because it gives you an option to take care of a dog through this stage. It also saves dogs' lives by protecting them from chewing things that will kill them. Labradors are one of the leading breeds for swallowing deadly things.

But this problem can be solved. Just get started on the supervision, spray Bitter Apple on any inappropriate item you see your pup chewing, and hand the pup its own toy instead. Praise the pup for settling to chew its own toy. You will need to do this many times, and you will need to keep up the supervision until the dog is mature enough and the teeth are settled enough -- probably around age 2 years. Punishment does not work for this problem, so be sure no one does that to your pup.

Date Published: 6/19/2002 3:08:00 PM

Feedback

Print this article  Save this article to disk  Email this article



Kathy Diamond Davis is the author of the book Therapy Dogs: Training Your Dog to Reach Others. Should the training articles available here or elsewhere not be effective, contact your veterinarian. Veterinarians not specializing in behavior can eliminate medical causes of behavior problems. If no medical cause is found, your veterinarian can refer you to a colleague who specializes in behavior or a local behaviorist.


Copyright 2002 - 2010 by Kathy Diamond Davis. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

Permanent Link: http://www.VeterinaryPartner.com/Content.plx?P=A&A=1163
 

Back Top Bookmark this article