| Nipping and Rough Play
When puppies play with each other, they use
their mouths. Therefore, puppies usually want to bite or "mouth"
hands during play or when being petted. With puppies, this is rarely
aggressive behavior in which the intent is to do harm. Because puppies
are highly motivated to exhibit this type of behavior, attempts
to suppress it or stop it are unlikely to be successful unless you
give your puppy an alternative behavior. The goals of working with
this normal puppy behavior are to redirect your puppy's desire to
put something in her mouth onto acceptable chew toys and to teach
her to be gentle when a hand is in her mouth.
Encourage Acceptable Behavior
Redirect your puppy’s chewing onto acceptable
objects by offering her a small rawhide chew bone or other type
of chew toy whenever you pet her. This technique can be especially
effective when children want to pet her. As you or the child reach
out to scratch her behind the ears (not over the head) with one
hand, offer the chew bone with the other. This will not only help
your puppy learn that people and petting are wonderful, but will
also keep her mouth busy while she’s being petted. Alternate
which hand does the petting and which one has the chew bone. At
first, you may need to pet or scratch your puppy for short periods
of time, since the longer she’s petted, the more likely she
is to get excited and start to nip.
Discourage Unacceptable Behavior
• You must also teach your puppy to
be gentle with hands, and that nipping results in unpleasant consequences
for her. Teach your puppy that nipping "turns off" any
attention and social interaction with you. After a nip, look your
puppy right in the eye, and yell "OUCH" as though you’ve
been mortally wounded, then ignore her. Leave the room if you must,
but ignore her until she’s calm, then try the chew bone and
petting method again. It’s even better if you can coax your
puppy into a sitting position using food. It may take many repetitions
for her to understand what’s expected.
• Nipping and mouthing hands can also
be discouraged by loosely holding your puppy's lower jaw between
your thumb and forefinger after she’s taken your hand in her
mouth. Don't hurt her by squeezing too hard, just gently hang on
so that wherever her mouth goes, your hand hangs on. This will quickly
become tiresome and she’ll eventually pull away. After several
seconds, release her jaw, but continue to offer her your hand. If
she licks or ignores it, praise, pet and offer a tidbit. If she
closes her mouth on your hand again, repeat the procedure.
• A third alternative is to wear cotton
gloves coated with a substance with an unpleasant taste such as
"Bitter Apple." In this way, your puppy will learn that
"hands in mouth taste bad." For this method to work, every
time she nips your hand she must experience this bad taste. The
possible disadvantage to this method is that your puppy may learn
"hands with gloves taste bad and those without gloves don’t.
• Remember that any of these three methods
will probably not be effective unless you work hard to teach your
puppy the right behavior by offering her an acceptable chew toy.
Jumping Up
When your puppy jumps up on you, she wants
attention. Whether you push her away, knee her in the chest or step
on her hind legs, she’s being rewarded for jumping up (even
though it’s negative attention, she’s still getting
what she wants).
When Your Puppy Jumps Up:
• Fold your arms in front of you, turn
away from her and say "off."
• Continue to turn away from her until
all four of her feet are on the ground, then quietly praise her
and give her a treat. If she knows the "sit" command,
give the command when all four of her feet are on the ground, then
quietly praise her and give her a treat her while she’s in
the sitting position.
• When you begin to praise her, if she
begins to jump up again, simply turn away and repeat step two, above.
Remember to keep your praise low-key.
• When your puppy realizes that she
gets no attention from you while she’s jumping up, but does
get attention when she stops jumping up and sits, she’ll stop
jumping up. Remember, once you’ve taught her to come and sit
quietly for attention, you must reward her behavior. Be careful
not to ignore her when she comes and sits politely, waiting for
your attention.
What Not To Do
Attempts to tap, slap or hit your puppy in
the face for nipping or jumping up are almost guaranteed to backfire.
Several things may happen, depending on your puppy's temperament
and the severity of the correction:
• She could become "hand-shy"
and cringe or cower whenever a hand comes toward her face.
• She could become afraid of you and
refuse to come to you or approach you at all.
• She could respond in a defensive manner
and attempt to bite you to defend herself.
• She could interpret a mild slap as
an invitation to play, causing her to become more excited and even
more likely to nip.
Never play "tug-of-war" or wrestling
games with your puppy if you’re having a nipping problem.
These types of games encourage out-of-control behavior, grabbing,
lunging and competion with you. These aren’t behaviors you
want her to learn.
A Note About Children And Puppies
It’s very difficult for children under
eight or nine years old to practice the kind of behavior modification
outlined here. A child’s first reaction to being nipped or
mouthed by a puppy is to push the puppy away with their hands and
arms. This will be interpreted by the puppy as play and will probably
cause the puppy to nip and mouth even more. Dogs should never be
left alone with children under ten and parents should monitor closely
all interactions between their children and dogs.
© 2000 Dumb Friends
League. All rights reserved.
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